Long-forgotten favourites lettuce soup, honey flummery get new twist - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 04:34 AM | Calgary | -1.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
CalgaryRECIPE

Long-forgotten favourites lettuce soup, honey flummery get new twist

In Something Old, Something New: Classic Recipes Revised, Tamar Adler reintroduces long-forgotten dishes, recognizing their potential and bringing them back into our current culinary consciousness.

Food columnist Julie Van Rosendaal tests out a cookbook of fresh versions of old recipes

Food columnist Julie Van Rosendaal tries out new takes on two long-forgotten favourites, including lettuce soup. (Julie Van Rosendaal/CBC)

New York food writer Tamar Adler became one of my favourite food writers with her first book, An Everlasting Meal:Cooking with Economy and Grace, a meditation on day-to-day cooking and eating.

In it, she makes practicality pleasurable, writing about feeding ourselves well by leaning heavily on the remnants of previous meals. Sheinspires the reader to revisit even the most familiar and mundane cooking methods with a new perspective.

In this week's column, I offer two takes on her recipes for lettuce soup and honey flummery.

In Something Old, Something New:Classic Recipes Revised, Adler reintroduces long-forgotten dishes, recognizing their potential and bringing them back into our current culinary consciousness with historical and cultural references and explanations.

Julie Van Rosendaal dug through the cookbook called Something Old, Something New: Classic Recipes Revised, by Tamar Adler. (Julie Van Rosendaal/CBC)

Beyond kitschy, trendy-again dishes like devilled eggs and cream pies, she unearths classic recipes from their fussy sauces and garnishes, rethinks their ingredients and revisits techniques and polishesthem off to in a way that makes the reader wonder why they were lost to begin with.

Lettuce soup

Chapters are devoted to specific dishes and ideas, but Adler devotes an entire chapter to soup:a staple all over the world, made frugal or fancy depending on the pantry and occasion.

"Probably the lightest of this category is cream of lettuce soup," writes Adler, "which once went by titles as regal as a tiara: lettuce lacrme, lettuce lareine, cream of lettuceBostonienne,veloutof lettuceSevign."

Yes, you can make a tasty soup out of those out-of-control heads of lettuce in the garden, or even those wiltingin your fridge, rendering them less than salad-worthy.

The whole operation is quick, Adler says, and the result even better the next day. Improvisation is welcome;a handful of English peas or asparagus give lettuce soup more substance, as do a few small new potatoes, simmered until ultra-tender along with the lettuce.

Use extra lettuce from your garden or wilting in the fridge for this dish. (Julie Van Rosendaal/CBC)

Ingredients:

  • cup salted butter.
  • 1 small onion or the white part of oneleek, chopped or sliced.
  • Kosher salt.
  • Handful of fresh parsley, chervil or cilantro, or 8to 10 fresh tarragon leaves.
  • 3 to 4 cups water.
  • 2 or 3heads of Boston, romaine or other green leaf lettuce, about 340 g,chopped.
  • 2 tbsp heavy cream, optional.
  • Little croutons, for optional garnish.

Preparation:

Melt half the butter and saut the onion, adding salt at the start. Usemedium-low heat until completely tender, adding a little water if it threatens to brown.

Add the herbs and mix through.

Add the water, bring to a boil, then add the lettuce and lower the heat to a simmer. Cook for twominutes.

After cooking the lettuce, you puree it before adding butter. (Julie Van Rosendaal/CBC)

Pure in batches in a blender until completely smooth. Be careful; it will be hot.

Return to the pot over low heat and add the remaining two tablespoons of butter and the cream, if using.

Season with salt.

Serving:Hot or cold and garnishedif you likewith little croutons.

Honey flummery

Another of my favourite chapters in this book tackles dessert, from Charlotte Russe to Baked Alaska, including the history of each.

But I couldn't resist making a honey flummery. This version of the 17th century British moulded pudding is set with plain gelatin. That'slike an Italian panna cotta, although there are versions that are more like packaged puddings, thickened with cornstarch, flour and eggs.

It's light and summery, and could be topped with seasonal fruit in place of the meringues and pistachios, although the latter options add a satisfying saltiness and crunch.

If the flummery in my photo looks a bit firm, it's because in the heat and my rush to pack for summer holidays, I left the stand mixer beating the cream for too long, turning it to butter.

So pictured is a firmer flummerywithout the whipped cream folded in. It still tasted fine.

This recipe is from Something Old, Something New: Classic Recipes Revisedby Tamar Adler.

Honey flummery is light and seasonal, and you can choose the toppings. (Julie Van Rosendaal/CBC)

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups whole milk
  • 1 envelope unflavoured gelatin.
  • cup cold water.
  • 2 egg yolks.
  • cup honey.
  • 2 tbsp sugar.
  • 1 cup heavy cream, whipped.
  • Vegetable oil for greasing mould, optional.
  • Crushed pistachios.
  • Crushed meringues.
  • Orange or tangerine zest, optional.

Preparation

Heat the milk in a saucepan over low heat.

Sprinkle gelatin over water in a wide bowl to bloom.

In a small bowl, whisk together the egg yolks, honey and sugar. Once the milk is just hot, ladle a little into the yolk mixture to temper, then add the yolk mixture to the pot of milk.

Stir over low heat until creamy. Move from the heat and add the bloomed gelatin.

Fold in the whipped cream before pouring into a well-oiled mould. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

Transfer to a large bowl and chill if you like over a bowl of ice, until it's the consistency of cream.

Fold in the whipped cream and pour into a well-oiled one-to two-quart mould. Alternatively, as I did, pour into individual serving bowls and then you don't have to worry about taking it out of the mouldto serve.

Chillcoveredovernight. Take it out of the mouldand topwith crushed pistachios, meringues and zest.

Serving:Six people.

Listen to Julie Van Rosendaal on her experiments with fresh takes on old dishes:


With files from the Calgary Eyeopener.