A bit of food
Apr. 10th, 2007 11:17 pmToday I did a little cooking.
While I was in Sierra Vista, I stopped at the Habitat for Humanity thrift shop.
It had a book I was looking for, and have been for ages.
The Nero Wolfe Cookbook.
Someday, just to say I did, I will make Capon Souvaroff. It calls for 1 1/2 pounds of pate de foie gras and 8 black truffles.
Truffles are amazing. Forget the comments people make of them being like mushrooms. They are to mushrooms what a modern car is to a horse-drawn carriage; related, but radically different.
A truffle is smokey, earthy and musky. It's dense, and in chunks has a fleshly solidity, it doesn't squish.
TJ's has a truffled cheese, but (for reasons of cost) have enough truffle in it.
But heat will make things more noticable. So I used it to make grilled cheese sandwiches, with buttermilk bread, the sweetness as counterpoint. To go with it I made modified some tomato soup. Some fresh oregano, and a dash of cumin.
It was very good, a pleasant, related, counterpoint to the sandwich. Some white wine would have gone well, but the Red Tail Ale I had was nice, as an afterwards.
While I was in Sierra Vista, I stopped at the Habitat for Humanity thrift shop.
It had a book I was looking for, and have been for ages.
The Nero Wolfe Cookbook.
Someday, just to say I did, I will make Capon Souvaroff. It calls for 1 1/2 pounds of pate de foie gras and 8 black truffles.
Truffles are amazing. Forget the comments people make of them being like mushrooms. They are to mushrooms what a modern car is to a horse-drawn carriage; related, but radically different.
A truffle is smokey, earthy and musky. It's dense, and in chunks has a fleshly solidity, it doesn't squish.
TJ's has a truffled cheese, but (for reasons of cost) have enough truffle in it.
But heat will make things more noticable. So I used it to make grilled cheese sandwiches, with buttermilk bread, the sweetness as counterpoint. To go with it I made modified some tomato soup. Some fresh oregano, and a dash of cumin.
It was very good, a pleasant, related, counterpoint to the sandwich. Some white wine would have gone well, but the Red Tail Ale I had was nice, as an afterwards.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 09:07 am (UTC)One of the funnest cookbooks I've ever owned.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 10:26 am (UTC)I poked through it a while ago, and was faintly ill at most of the recipes even though I usually like high fat food. I may have been overestimating how much of each dish one is supposed to eat. However, it recommends baking corn--you peel the husk back, strip off the silk, then wrap the husk back around the ear, and bake it. This works.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 03:43 pm (UTC)Most of the dishes are meant for smaller portions. I may, at some point, try to make, not a capon Souvaroff but a couple of gamecocks. That can probable be done with 1/3 lb of pate, and 2 truffles, which would still be pricey.
The only problem is whom to eat it with, as Maia likes neither of those things.
TK
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 03:16 pm (UTC)I would love to get my paws on one, even though I lack 95% of the skill necessary to be able to use it.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 03:40 pm (UTC)There have been radio series (both in the US and Canada), two television series, and the books are still in print (In part because of the most resent series).
There are elements of Wolfe in Spenser (though I've had more success deriving recipes from the latter than the former).
The skill is so-so, some things are matters of knowledge, tempered with experience, some are just tricks.
TK
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 06:30 pm (UTC)K.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 07:18 pm (UTC)Campbell's is ok, but the boxed soups of TJs have replaced it (and Swanson's chicken broth) as the ready-made stock of choice.
Maia's comfort food is cheap mac and cheese (referred to as cardboard), and tuna salad; heavy on the celery and pickles, light on the tuna and mayonnaise.
TK
no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 10:24 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-04-11 10:40 pm (UTC)There was one book set at some kind of gourmet's convention, with the dishes described in pornographic detail and a few of the recipes in the back.
Dang though, your post really set off some nostalgia for me. I was completely addicted to Rex Stout in High School, and I think he's the first person who made me interested in cooking.
no subject
Date: 2007-04-12 03:08 am (UTC)Fritz Brenner, swiss, with french affectations; keeps a boar's head he shot in the Vosges, as well as a pot which was, purportedly, used by Julius Caesar's cook on campaign.
TK
no subject
Date: 2007-04-12 02:52 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-04-12 03:06 am (UTC)TK
no subject
Date: 2007-04-13 12:04 am (UTC)