Tag: drewvogel

Dinner at Jean-Robert at Pigall’s, Tuesday September 25, 2007

Dinner at Jean-Robert at Pigall’s, Tuesday September 25, 2007

Jean-Robert at Pigall’s Tuesday, September 25, 2007 On Tuesday, September 25, 2007, Wendy & I ate at Jean-Robert at Pigall’s for an amazing dinner to celebrate Wendy’s birthday. The menu with wine pairings is below. Stupidly, I had my suit dry-cleaned and my notes from…

RECIPE 48: Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Walnuts and Pecorino

RECIPE 48: Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Walnuts and Pecorino

-= Exported from BigOven =- Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Walnuts and Pecorino No more wrinkled noses when people hear you’re serving Brussels Sprouts — they’ll be begging for more. Properly cooked Brussels Sprouts are sweet, nutty, and full of good flavor. In this preparation, from…

READING: The Last Days of Haute Cuisine

READING: The Last Days of Haute Cuisine

I’ve done a poor job of keeping up with my list of what I’ve read in the last several months (my last update was May 8, 2007 and it’s nearly December!). Sorry about that! I’ve been busy reading and not blogging about what I’m reading…

I recently finished The Last Days of Haute Cuisine: The Coming of Age of American Restaurants and found it to be an interesting concept executed poorly, just like Eric Oehler whose review appears on the Amazon page.

HAPPY MOUTH — November 2007

HAPPY MOUTH — November 2007

This guest article written by Ronald Lee. On Wednesday, November 27, 2007, most of the members of the Happy Mouth Supper Club cabal (Drew, Wendy, Ted, Holly, Jay, John, Angel, and Ron) met for the monthly soirée at one of ‘Johnny Robert’s’ joints in Covington,…

READING: The Brief History of the Dead

READING: The Brief History of the Dead

I am currently reading THE BRIEF HISTORY OF THE DEAD by Kevin Brockmeier. The Publisher’s Weekly describes it as: Starred Review. A deadly virus has spread rapidly across Earth, effectively cutting off wildlife specialist Laura Byrd at her crippled Antarctica research station from the rest…

RECIPE 49: Duck Confit

RECIPE 49: Duck Confit

-= Exported from BigOven =-

Duck Confit

Once esteemed as a preservation method, cooking and keeping duck in its rendered fat results in meltingly tender, moist, and extremely flavorful meat which can be used in a variety of simple preparations. Sear the duck legs in a hot skillet or shred the meat and add it to salads, or, perhaps best of all, make duck rillettes. Just remember the duck must be salted a day before you plan to cook it.

Recipe By: Tom Colichhio, Gramercy Tavern, NY
Serving Size: 4
Cuisine: French
Main Ingredient: Duck
Categories: Salads, Main Dish

-= Ingredients =-
3 tablespoons Salt
4 cloves Garlic ; smashed
1 each Shallot ; peeled and sliced
6 sprigs Thyme
to taste Black pepper ; coarsely ground
4 each duck legs with thighs
4 each duck wings ; trimmed
4 cups Duck fat ; (approximate)

-= Instructions =-
Sprinkle 1 tablespoon of salt in the bottom of a dish or plastic container large enough to hold the duck pieces in a single layer. Evenly scatter half the garlic, shallots, and thyme in the container. Arrange the duck, skin-side up, over the salt mixture, then sprinkle with the remaining salt, garlic, shallots, and thyme and a little pepper. Cover and refrigerate for 1-2 days.

After 1-2 days, preheat the oven to 225°F. Melt the duck fat in a small saucepan. Brush the salt and seasonings off the duck.

Arrange the duck pieces in a single snug layer in a high-sided baking dish or ovenproof saucepan. Pour the melted fat over the duck (the duck pieces should be covered by fat) and place the confit in the oven. Cook the confit slowly at a very slow simmer — just an occasional bubble — until the duck is tender and can be easily pulled from the bone, 2-3 hours. Remove the confit from the oven. Cool and store the duck in the fat. (The confit will keep in the refrigerator for several weeks.)

NOTES: The duck fat can be strained, cooled, and reused.

This recipe for confit is vastly superior to a few others I’ve tried, which invariably have involved way too much salt — making the duck too tough and salty to eat in anything besides stews and cassoulet! This one is perfect and allows for use in salads and other dishes where the confit isn’t being “recooked”.

Good recipe for a salad involving the confit: Mesclun (preferably on the bitter side — add some arugula), (cold) blanched green beans, (cold) cooked French lentils (cook in salted chicken stock, perhaps with some onion bay leaf, and thyme, until just tender then cool), dried cherries in a sherry-shallot vinaigrette topped with warm shredded duck confit (about 1/2 leg per salad).

** This recipe can be pasted into BigOven without retyping. BigOven.com ID= 162167 **
** Easy recipe software. Try it free at: http://www.bigoven.com **

RECIPE 50: Bill Knapp's Chicken Marinade

RECIPE 50: Bill Knapp's Chicken Marinade

-= Exported from BigOven =- Bill Knapp’s Chicken Marinade This is a delightful marinade to dress up chicken. Recipe By: http://www.cooknchat.com/recipecards/miscella Serving Size: 0 Cuisine: American Main Ingredient: Soy Sauce Categories: Sauces -= Ingredients =- 1/2 cup Honey 1/2 cup Apple Juice 2 teaspoon Garlic…