Julia Child


13
Feb 12

King Arthur Charges in and has us all Round the Breakfast Table

King Arthur Gluten Free Multi-Purpose Flour (photo courtesy of King Arthur Flour)

If you follow the Smart Kitchen Blog, you may know that personally, we keep, on average, if not a Gluten-Free Household, at least a Gluten Aware Household. It is the words “on average” that bedevil easy description. 2/4 of the P Chef family are strictly, rabidly Gluten Free. If a 3 year old can’t technically be “rabidly Gluten Free” on his own, his mother’s easily helps push him up into the rabid category. Mrs. P Chef, for health reasons is a Gluten-Free zealot.The next fourth, my 6 year old daughter, is ambiguously Gluten-Free, some of the time.

As a hearty eater of everything tasty, (oops should have written Gourmand to make it sound better), it’s Dad who skews the average towards Gluten Aware from Gluten Free.

I grew up with Pancake Sundays, where family and any tag-along, sleep-over friends stood around the kitchen talking, joking, making and eating pancakes. Initially, I’d eat one or two. As I got older and into sports, I ate 3, then 4 then 8 etc. The more eating, the longer the making, the greater the number and quality of the laughs. I want to share that warm, homey tradition with my wife and little chefs.

But when 2/4ths of us went seriously Gluten-Free, the idea of Pancake Sundays, (with Dad, Spatula at the ready, attending the Cast Iron Lady) seemed lost and heading the way of the Dodo bird. Walking the aisle of the grocery store last week, shopping for Cornstarch for SK Chef’s Valentine’s Appearance on ABC 15, I thought I spied salvation for Pancake Sunday on a mainstream grocery store shelf. King Arthur on his Flour Power Charger, seemed to be riding to the rescue under a “NEW” banner proclaiming a solution for King Arthur’s Gluten-Free, All Purpose Flour.

If you have tried any Gluten-Free baking or cooking, you know that there is a difference between claims and results. But I had faith in the King Arthur brand. Perhaps because of their generations of marketing with the bluegrass, musical  King Arthur Flour Hour or just the fact that they are an employee owned company from Vermont swayed me. I added the Gluten-Flour to our cart, in a separate, non-company, personal pile of course.

At home, we have  low-grade, ongoing, tug-of-war in the kitchen between the adherents of health and the adherents of taste. The neutral foods, “The Switzerlands of the Pantry,” that both sides can agree on, are few and far between. I am in the camp that tries to make healthy decadent. My wife, and by extension my little chefs, are most often in the camp that says “Leave it alone.” I had great hopes for this new flour turning the tide towards flavor and decadence and was excited this past Sunday morning to inaugurate Gluten-Free Pancake Sunday. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

The success of our foray was really determined by the “Benchmarking.” The gluten free community, our 2/4 loved the new pancake recipe. Mrs. P Chef did her signature move and shouted  ”Great” before devouring her portion and then saying she could not have more because “the carbs would make her sleepy.”  I really enjoy her enjoying food I make and made her another single, heart-shaped, Valentine Pancake and called it a win. My 3 year old, little P Chef said “Dad How did you learn to make such good pancakes?” and asked for more. My daughter at 6, begrudgingly, when asked (no volunteering), said that they were good but the proof was that she had a big helping of seconds. A lot of the times the proof is in the eating.

As for me, I have been improvising from the Joy Of Cooking’s Pancake version for a few years now. I like the proportions and mixing the wet with the wet and the dry with the dry before combining them all. Needless to say, my benchmark is a bit higher than the Gluten-Free team when piloting our enameled skillet, The Red Warrior. The Gluten-Free pancakes bubbled up as they should and formed a nice crispy, butter-fried edge.

A Bit Doughy As Cooked and with Different Bubbling but Gluten-Free

They turned out a bit paler, and a little thicker than gluten pancakes but they had a good “Mouth Feel” which is one of the tougher things to accomplish with Gluten-Free cooking. Also, I forgot to mention that I “Cheated,” a tiny bit, in the tug-of-war competition between health and taste. I added a couple squares of melted Toberlone White Chocolate to the wet ingredients before incorporating them with the dry. This could also have made them paler and thicker.

A Bit Paler but Tasty & a Godsend for a Pancake Sunday Family

Ultimately, I will praise King Arthur, and not just because he is armored and carries a lance. They are trying to do something difficult by competing with Gluten. They mostly succeed and do it admirably. The product comes out tasting clean and a bit “ricey” which makes a very good blank canvas on which to slather butter and real Maple Syrup. Those tastes are winners that I am down for. Compared to all the other Gluten-Free preparations out there, King Arthur’s Gluten-Free Flour is a coup.

I also did not exactly follow the directions on their package, which is a “No-No” when preparing a product for the first time to evaluate it. I substituted Guar Gum for the recommended Xanthum Gum because they are close substitutes, and because honestly, we had one in our gluten-free area of the pantry. At the moment, on that Pancake Sunday, improvisation trumped getting dressed and heading for the store. And of course, I got a small lesson in continuous cooking education. Guar Gum, as Smart Kitchen will tell you, is best used mixed into the wet ingredients, not the dry. Oops but also a good reason to re-state that cooking is a continual lesson and a re-learning of things forgotten. If ever the phrase “I’ve forgotten more than X,Y or Z!” applies, it is in cooking.  So now I know for next Sunday, Guar Gum with the wet. If they are even more in demand than the last batch, which had Dad working the Spatula ambidextrously, then great. We all decided to chalk up the experience as a win and I got to head back to bed for an hour with Julia McWilliams*, who is not Mrs. P Chef.

*For fun, I am reading An Appetite for Life by Noel Riley Fitch. It is a very classy, literate biography of  Julia McWilliams from Pasadena, Ca. As I was reading, she was just finishing up in the OSS (the pre-cursor to the CIA) in Asia after WWII where she met Paul Child, who she married to become Julia Child, the “Julia Child.”

The SS America (photo courtesy of www.usswestpoint.com)

At this point in the biography, Julia and Paul are just getting married after a war, a bad car accident, a home fire, a job loss, and some thefts. There are a lot of plot setbacks but they’re not inventions. They are based on the actual facts of their lives. I was anxious to see what happens after they sail for France on the S.S. America bound for the port of Le Havre and have Julia’s first truly FRENCH meal in Rouen at La Couronne, which is still there.

La Couronne, The Crown in Rouen, France

They had Oysters Portugaise and Sole Meunière with French Salad and turned it all around for Julia McWilliams, now Child, who, in turn, turned it around for a lot of us. I was excited to learn what happened next.

P Chef

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3
May 11

Interview with Julie Powell of Julie/Julia

Thanks to Camp Soaring Eagle, where they give seriously ill children a chance to get out into nature and laugh and play, we had a chance to meet Julie Powell of the blog The Julie/Julia Project which turned into the book Julie and Julia that then was made into the movie Julie & Julia with Meryl Streep and Amy Adams playing Julie Powell. For those of you who don’t know Julie made and executed a plan to cook her way through Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking and the plan turned into a lot more.

a honeycrisp apple

A Honeycrisp Apple (courtesy of honeycrisp.org)

What did we learn? Julie shops weekly at the Union Square Green Market in NYC, she loves Honey Crisp Apples, her husband does most of the cooking while Julie laughs at his mishaps, she is very informed and involved in the local and sustainable food movements and she has a new book called Cleaving and is working on a post-apocolyptic comedy of manners. It also seems that the nuns from her last stop in Laredo, Texas like to have a little more fun than nuns, even Texan nuns, are known for.

Julie Powell Shares Pearls of Culinary & Social Wisdom

Working at an Online Culinary school, we are interested in cooking and how beginners take the first steps, and handle the hurdles of more advanced techniques. The video above was an attempt to learn if Julie had any cooking “epiphanies” during the Julie/Julia Project. The unstated answer, from Julie’s reply is that she became comfortable in the kitchen, and though she modestly claims to still be a home cook, we suspect she has advanced.

The other thing we wanted to know, was how the movie distorted the picture of her life at the time. In the order relayed to us, her biggest pet peeves about how the movie portrayed her are:

1. Julie does not ogle the aisle at Dean & Delucca. She is a Queens and Brooklyn girl.

2. The distilling down of her ambitions down to the dramatizable ”writing a novel.”

3. The use of only a single “F” word & we don’t mean Filet, Fry or even Fricassee. To put it delicately, Julie did not find that “representative.”

P Chef

Smart Kitchen

“The Smartest Way to Learn to Cook™”

Smart Kitchen on Facebook

@Smartkitchen1


21
Feb 11

Book Reports to Come – Courtesy of Louis Borders

With the advent of the Internet and the Kindle, Border’s found it harder and harder to survive. News of their pending demise gave rise to a personal worry about the little red gift card, I had been toting around in my wallet for the last 3 years. If that generous birthday gift from 2009 were to maintain its value I had to get in there and redeem it.

I was lucky because at our local Borders the culinary section was not that picked over. All books were 20% off and with a Borders’ membership the total discount came to 30% off on every book, with selected titles having an even higher discount. The titles are linked to Amazon, if you can’t get to a Borders to look for them near you.

The first book I picked up was The Food Lovers’ Companion by Sharon Herbst a thick reference that looked interesting. Also in the sack were some biography’s: Appetite for Life, a Julia Child biography, Ferran a bio of the acclaimed chef of El Bulli in Spain who is acknowledged as the foremost restranteur in the world and is a leading practitioner of the culinary magic called Molecular Gastronomy.

Rounding out the selection were some classics, How to Cook a Wolf by MK Fisher, noted for her food writing as literature, The Physiology of Taste by Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin and Mastering the Art of French Cooking (Volume II) by Julia Child. I have an old hand-me-down copy of the first volume and have lusted after the second volume for years now. The final purchase was Eating by Jason Epstein, a noted book publisher and gourmand.

A last work thrown into my future book report mix is Heirloom by Tim Stark. I was intrigued by a copy on a visit to the Seed Saver’s Exchange in Decorah, Iowa during the Summer Food Drive (which I have a blog post still to write about) and enjoyed reading it immensely last summer when the tomatoes were coming in. If you don’t know about the Seed Saver’s Exchange, they are a repository of as many varieties of heirloom seeds (those out of favor with the current agri-business) as they can get their hands on. They do a worthwhile service, have an intriguing catalog and are a great place to pass a summer afternoon if you happen to be all the way up in Decorah, Iowa.

Busy as we are launching Smart Kitchen the online cooking school, I am really looking forward to getting into these tomes and blogging a book report of sorts about each. The first will happen, as soon as possible, but certainly after pushing out Lesson 8 to the editor and rejiggering the health & Sanitation section of Lesson 1.

P Chef

Smart Kitchen

“The Smartest Way to Learn to Cook™”