December 13, 2009

Photo du Jour - Winter Vegetables


Carrots, squash, leeks, turnips, broccoli, cabbage, pumpkins, black radishes, Swiss chard, spinach - just a sample of the tempting winter vegetables at the market.

I can't resist them.

Moroccan Carrot Salad
Pumpkin Soup
Garbure
Leek and Swiss Chard Tart
Pork Colombo
Lamb Stew Pin It

December 11, 2009

My Favorite Latke Recipe

The recipe I use isn't a cherished family one as I didn't grow up with Chanukah or a Bubbie. It comes from David (The Latke King) Firestone and is printed in The New York Cookbook.

They are perfect, in my humble opinion.
And they always get eaten before any photos are taken. So you'll just have to make some for yourself to see how fabulous they are!


Latkes (In His Own Words)
Makes about 16 latkes, which is all you should eat the first night. By the end of Chanukah, you should be able to eat twice that many.
  • 2 1/2 pounds Idaho baking potatoes, unpeeled
  • 1 large yellow onion, quartered
  • 2 eggs, lightly beaten
  • 1/4 cup matzoh meal
  • 4 to 5 teaspoons chopped fresh parsley
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 to 3 cups olive oil
  • 1 large jar (16 ounces) unsweetened applesauce
1. Pick up the potatoes and admire their heft, their pure starchiness. Then scrub them with a brush.

2. Place the onion in a food processor. Pulse the blade a few times until the onion is diced into crunchy bits. Remove the blade and scrape the onion bits into a small bowl. Return the food processor bowl to the machine. No need to wash it yet.

3. Cut the potatoes lengthwise to fit in the food processor feed tube. Find the medium-coarse food processor shredding disk, which you've never used. Put it into the machine and turn it on. Begin feeding the potato slices into the machine.

4. When the potatoes are shredded put them in a colander over a large bowl. Dump in the onion bits and mix everything around with your hands, squeezing the potato moisture out as you work. Let the mixture drip for a few minutes while you put on a recording of Kitty Carlisle singing "Beat Out That Rhythm On A Drum."

5. Pour out the potato liquid from the bowl, but leave the starch that clings to the bowl. This is good for you. Dump in the shredded potato and onion mix. Add the eggs, the matzoh meal, the parsley, the salt and the pepper. Stir the mixture eagerly. Then let it sit for about 10 minutes.

6. In a large cast-iron skillet, pour in 1/4 inch of the oil. Over high heat, get the oil very hot, but don't set off the smoke detector. Using the 1/4 cup measure or a long-handled serving spoon, start spooning the batter into the skillet. Flatten each with a metal spatula to a diameter of 4 to 5 inches. Do not try to make the latkes uniformly round. Reduce the heat to medium and cook the latkes until golden brown on one side. Then turn over and fry them some more. When crispy on the outside and most inside, about 5 minutes per side, remove and place on several thicknesses of paper towels. Keep doing this until you run out of batter.

7. Remove from the room anyone who prefers latkes with sour cream. Serve the latkes immediately. With applesauce.

(Husband prefers his with sour cream but I let him have some anyway)

. Pin It

December 9, 2009

La Fête du Fromage - Le Crémeux du Mont-St-Michel

"Cheese is probably the best of all foods, as wine is the best of all beverages." - Patience Gray 1957

Amen to that.

And amen to my most recent discovery - this little drum appropriately named Le Crémeux du Mont-St-Michel.
This cheese is so good, it deserves a shrine dedicated to it. Maybe not as big as the Abbaye du Mont-St-Michel, but I'm sure I can think of something.


Luscious butter and cream are the first two flavors that wash over your taste buds when you nibble a bit of this divine, unpasteurized cow's milk cheese from Normandy. A slight spiciness and strong mushrooms are next. And those flavors linger. And linger.
And linger.

My last bite was more than an hour ago and I can still taste them.

I'm in heaven!


Le Crémeux is made by a Fromagerie Artisanale in Isigny-le-Buat, just down the road from the famous AOC Isigny milk, cream and butter production, and the world's largest diary museum, Lactopôle. This corner of France looks like a dream destination for the cheese and dairy lover.

The soft, fluffy texture spreads perfectly on slices of baguette and tastes wonderful with apples. The rich flavor and velvety texture demand a fruity, dry white wine or hard cider.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

There's still some time to send me your cheese tasting stories for the 12th Fête du Fromage International Cheese Tasting Event.
Please get them to me by December 13. The entire round-up will be posted on December 15.

Tell us why you chose this particular cheese. Tell us how it tasted. Tell us about its texture and aroma. Did you eat it on its own? Or with something? Did you drink anything special with your cheese? Would you recommend it or not? Is there something unusual or interesting about it?
  • Photos are wonderful, but not necessary
  • Entries must contain the words La Fête du Fromage and contain a link to Chez Loulou
  • Posts should be written specifically for La Fête du Fromage and not entered in any other food blog event
  • Please send the link to your post to louloufrance (at) gmail (dot) com with the words Fête du Fromage in the subject line
Pin It

December 8, 2009

Cookbook Review: Real Simple - Best Recipes

Recently Real Simple asked if they could send me their newest cookbook to review. As a long time reader of their magazine - basically since day one - I was happy to accept!

When the editors of Real Simple magazine decided to publish this cookbook they had two requirements: the recipes must be easy and they must be memorable. I would say that they have succeeded.

As soon as I cracked open my copy of Real Simple - Best Recipes and started turning the pages, I immediately wanted to run to the kitchen and start cooking. The recipes are fresh, contemporary and require less than 10 ingredients and the huge, mouthwatering photographs that accompany each recipe are inspiring!



I was immediately attracted to the recipes for Deep Dish Polenta Pizza, Roasted Chicken, Apples and Leeks, Wheat Berry Salad with Bacon and Stewed-Vegetable Gratin. Warm weather recipes include Chicken and Peach Salad and Salmon and Fennel with Roasted-Lemon Vinaigrette.
The Easy Ice Cream Cake, which uses pre-made ice cream sandwiches, sounds like a fun, summertime dessert. More sophisticated desserts include Apricot-Coconut Cake, Roasted Apple and Walnut Tarts and Boozy Clementines with Pound Cake, which I'm making this weekend.

Though the book does sometimes rely on store bought ingredients (canned broth, rotisserie chicken, frozen pierogies, refrigerated pizza dough, frozen pie crust) it also calls for an abundance of fresh vegetables, fruit and grains in its recipes.

In almost every chapter there is an "At-a-Glance" guide to popular vegetables, how to interpret the labeling on chicken, cooking advice for common cuts of lamb, beef and pork, and what to look for when buying fish. The book concludes with practical advice: Meat cooking temperatures, Menu Suggestions and nutritional information for each recipe.

If you're the kind of person who loves to cook delicious, uncomplicated, beautiful food, but who doesn't have the time or the inclination to spend hours and hours in the kitchen, then Real Simple - Best Recipes is a cookbook that you'll love. Pin It

December 7, 2009

Photo du Jour - A Glance


Ever feel like you're being watched? Pin It