Vegetables

By Victoria Corrigan | APRIL 24, 2011 | BOOK & PRODUCT REVIEWS

Editor’s note: Victoria Corrigan writes about classic cookbooks for Pen & Fork, books that as she says are “worth their salt” and deserve a fresh, new look. Today, Victoria takes another look at the award-winning Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone by Deborah Madison, perhaps the definitive cookbook on vegetarian cooking — and not just for vegetarians, but for, well, everyone.

Madison Linguine Asparagus

Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone

by Deborah Madison

photos by Laurie Smith / illustrations by Catherine Kirkwood

Facts: Broadway Books (1997); Clarkson Potter for 10th Anniversary Ed. 2007); 742 pages, hardcover $40 (or Amazon.com for $23.80)

Awards: 1998 IACP Cookbook of the Year; James Beard Award of Excellence

Recipes: 1,400 (yep … 1,400)

Suitable for: Anyone seeking vegetable inspiration (best-of-class information) on selection/storing/cooking with vegetables.

Here’s the thing: I’m a carnivore. I don’t eat a lot of meat, but I require a semi-annual rib-eye gilded with béarnaise sauce, and have found few aromas to rival roasting pork (or chicken, for that matter).

So, why don’t I review the critter-cuisine classic Cutting Up in the Kitchen by celeb-butcher Merle Ellis? Here’s the (other) thing: I really do like vegetables (and legumes and grains), and I’ve been trying to up my intake (good for me, good for the planet).

What I lacked was encouragement, which I found on every page of Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone.

The 411 on Deborah Madison is this: Trail-blazing chef — respected teacher — award-winning author and columnist — passionate patron of farmers’ markets and community-based agriculture.

You won’t have to read far to find her essence. Madison’s writing rings with her devotion to the farmer, to the ingredients, and to both the cook and the diner.

Yes, the veggies are here — from acorn squash to zebra-striped tomatoes. So, why don’t we see the “vegetable” chapter until page 327?  Mystery solved:  This is not a veggiepedia.

It’s a whole cookbook, which opens with valuable insights on how food works, what it means to become a cook, and the critical role of seasonings. (An inspired start to a book seeking broad appeal.)

Next, Madison entices the veggie-wary with a suite of sauces and condiments, uniquely suited to vegetable dishes, all versatile and intriguing. Now the veggie-lore? Hold on, what’s the rush?

First, sample tasty appetizers (fried green olives), hearty sandwiches (grilled cheddar on rye), and fresh salads (carrot with parsley & mint), then try appetizing soups (sweet corn), comforting stews (cashew curry), quick stir-fries, and soul-satisfying gratins and casseroles (butternut squash) that deliciously bring veggies to the center of the plate.

Now that Madison has your attention, it’s on to the ABCs of asparagus, broccoli, and cauliflower (and mushrooms, potatoes, and squash and…).

But she keeps the veggie-pointers to the point, moving on to pasta (see recipe below), noodles, and dumplings (both hot and cold), savory tarts and pies (tomato tart), grain cookery (barley risotto), dishes featuring eggs and cheese (goat cheese flan), and a chapter devoted to “The Soy Pantry.”

Madison finishes this marvelous book with breakfast foods (good from morning to night), handmade breads, and desserts to delight everyone (brown sugar tart, polenta pound cake).

Clusters of gorgeous photos are included, and the text is enhanced by elegant line drawings of vegetables, kitchen equipment, and special ingredients. (I love the sweet pea tendrils.) Conversational sidebars provide tips, variations, and beverage pairings. (Wine with vegetables?  And how!)

Madison’s desire is to get us all into the kitchen, whether we are vegetarian, vegan, or (as she says) “you don’t attach a title to your eating style.” Truly a book for all cooks, this is your passport to a world of food worth visiting.

With asparagus bursting at the seams in the markets, we tested Madison’s linguine with asparagus, lemon and spring herbs. We did cut the cooking time for the asparagus from 3 to 4 minutes to 2 minutes, fearing we’d cut the asparagus thinner than she might have. Either way, the whole dish comes together in about 30 minutes and it’s full of flavor. We didn’t even miss the meat.

Linguine with Asparagus, Lemon, and Spring Herbs

[Deborah’s sidebar:  A minimal but true pasta primavera.  Should they come your way, stew a handful of peas or fava beans with the scallions as well.  This dish can be made with butter or olive oil or a mixture.]

Serves 4 to 6

Ingredients
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 large bunch scallions, including half of the greens, thinly sliced
2 1/2 teaspoons grated lemon zest
1 tablespoon finely chopped thyme, sage, or tarragon
Salt and freshly milled pepper
2 pounds asparagus, tough ends removed
1 pound linguine
4 tablespoons pine nuts, toasted in a small skillet
3 tablespoons chopped parsley
2 tablespoons snipped chives, plus blossoms if available
Freshly grated Parmesan cheese, optional

Method
1. While water is heating for the pasta, heat half the oil and butter in a wide skillet over low heat.  Add the scallions, lemon zest, thyme, and a few pinches salt and cool slowly, stirring occasionally.

2. Meanwhile, slice 3-inch tips off the asparagus, then slice the remaining stalks diagonally or make a roll cut.

3. When the water boils, salt it, add the asparagus, and cook until partially tender, 3 to 4 minutes. Scoop it out, add it to the scallions, and continue cooking.

4. Cook the pasta, then add it to the pan with some of the water clinging to the strands. Raise the heat and stir in the remaining oil, the pine nuts, parsley, chives, pepper to taste, and a few tablespoons of cheese.

5. Divide among pasta plates, grate a little cheese over each portion, and garnish with the chive blossoms.

 

By Linda Avery | APRIL 18, 2011 | BOOK & PRODUCT REVIEWS

Food Trucks: Dispatches and Recipes from the Best Kitchens on Wheels
by Heather Shouse
photos by Leo Gong and Heather Shouse

Facts: Ten Speed Press, 208 pages, $20.00 (or Amazon at $11.65)
Photos: Of cooks and trucks, patrons and food: too many to count
Recipes: About 50
Give to: Road Warriors

I feel like a food truck info magnet. Days after I received Food Trucks by Heather Shouse, I received notice of a free street food app: Roaming Hunger iPhone. (You can check out the app at Roaming Hunger).

Of course I’m on high alert and this all drives me crazy because my hometown, Chicago, is so far behind the ball in this arena. A city, which holds food in such esteem that there is a Director of Culinary Affairs position in its city government, has thrown stones in the path of this culinary cavalcade.

I say “hey, it’s Chicago” (thinking that sometimes it takes a while for the grease to hit the skids – if you know what I mean) but Tom Acox is more eloquent in expressing the situation in Sanitation and Regulation: The Case for Food Trucks.

Heather Shouse (a senior food and drink correspondent for Time Out Chicago as well as Chicago reporter for Food and Wine magazine) may have roved the country in search of food trucks having been spurred by the frustration she experienced in Chicago. I envision friends commiserating with her over a few cocktails, and in a moment of inspiration Heather holds up her glass and yells “ROAD TRIP!!!” And what a road trip it was.

This book belongs in both cookbook and travel sections. If you travel on business, put it on your iPad or Kindle for quick reference.

Shouse features 19 major metropolitan areas with over 60 food trucks, and throws in a few maps and websites “to keep up with” these mobile muncheries.

The photos of the trucks and food are indicative of the creativity that abounds in this arena. Here is just one I fell for. How cute is this???

Maximus/Minimus is at 2nd Ave. and Pike St., Seattle, Washington.

Note: Coincidental with the release of this book,  Chicago’s first ever Food Truck Summit will convene on April 19th

Maximus/Minimus Pulled Pork

Serves 6-8

Ingredients
3 1/2 pounds pork shoulder
1 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1/4 cup dried oregano
1/2 cup chili powder
2 tablespoons garlic powder
1 tablespoon cayenne pepper
4 1/2 tablespoons kosher salt
Prepared barbecue sauce, for serving
6 to 8 sandwich buns, toasted

Method
1. Trim the fat from the pork, leaving 1/2-inch fat cap.

2. In a small bowl, combine the brown sugar, oregano, chili powder, garlic powder, cayenne pepper and salt. Rub the entire roast with the mixture, massaging it into the meat. Cover and refrigerate overnight.

3. Prepare a charcoal or gas grill for direct cooking over high heat. Preheat the oven to 325°F.

4. When the grill is as hot as possible, place the roast in the center. If you are using a charcoal grill, place the roast on the grill directly over the white-hot coals. Cook each side of the roast just until it is well browned but not burned, moving the meat to a new spot on the grill each time you turn it, 10 to 15 minutes total.

5. Remove the roast from the grill and place in a large Dutch oven or heavy pot. Cover and place it in the oven. Cook until the pork pulls apart easily with a fork, about 3 hours.

6. Break the meat into small chunks using two forks. Mix with your favorite barbecue sauce and divide the pork among the sandwich buns.

 

By Gwen Ashley Walters | APRIL 12, 2011 | NEWS & NIBBLES

Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten had just climbed Camelback Mountain, the landmark icon of Phoenix, Arizona — and a really tough hike.

“I wish we had a mountain like Camelback next to the restaurant in New York,” he said. “I’d climb it every day.”

The Michelin-starred chef and savvy restaurateur was in town to cook a dinner in his honor at J&G Steakhouse at The Phoenician resort, as part of the 33rd Annual Scottsdale Culinary Festival.

When I suggested he could take the stairs instead, he replied that there are 80 floors at the Trump Tower where his eponymous restaurant is located. Besides, he loves the outdoors, so it wouldn’t be the same.

Vongerichten oversees a vast empire of restaurants (Jeans Georges, JoJo, Vong, Spice Market, and ABC Kitchen, among others in New York) and is partnered in many more around the the country — and the world for that matter, including Jean Georges Shanghai. Another J&G Steakhouse will open at the St. Regis in Mexico City later this year.

He has another cookbook (his 5th) in the works, too, based on his cooking at home for friends and family, which will be released in October.

His Jean-Georges Cooking at Home with a Four-Star Chef (1998) is one of my favorite cookbooks by a celebrity chef. The recipes are blessedly simple considering the cuisine. Perhaps that’s because Vongerichten partnered with Mark Bittman.

“Our food is simple as it is, but Mark showed me that my recipes were really two or three recipes, so he helped me simplify it further, and make it accessible to home cooks. He helped me with my cooking, too. It was a little more elaborate before collaborating with Mark. Less is more,” he said.

His favorite recipe in that book is a sauce that he still uses today. It’s a raisin-caper sauce, made by plumping raisins and pureeing them with capers and a little sherry vinegar. It goes with most anything, especially fish and seafood.

“My favorite thing to do is create dishes. As a cook in a kitchen, working a station, you have to cook that same piece of fish or meat the same way over and over again. I did that for many years, but now I have the best job in my company, creating dishes,” he said.

For inspiration, Vongerichten walks the kitchen, tasting ingredients. That’s how the raisin-caper sauce came about. He’d just popped a raisin in his mouth from one station and picked up a caper from another. The two flavors exploded on his tongue, and he stopped in his tracks — a sauce was born.

“For me, 80% of my work is finding the best ingredients. The freshest piece of fish, the best meat, produce and eggs,” he says. “Add a little touch of chile and a little touch of acid. Use citrus or a hint of vinegar to make the flavors pop. It has to pop.”

Vongerichten loves chiles — all kinds — including serrano, poblano, Thai, Caribbean and Japanese chiles.

“For me, it is impossible to eat without chiles. I like to put a little chile in everything. The first bite should be as exciting as the last bite,” he said.

Vongerichten’s six-course Tribute Dinner at J&G Steakhouse began with three passed hors d’oeuvres, all featuring a different chile, little bites of mouth-tingling flavors.

The rest of the menu wasn’t as chile-centric but it was just as pleasing on the palate: egg toast caviar (top left); tuna tartare with avocado & ginger (top right); spring pea soup with Parmesan (bottom left); halibut with celeriac and jade emulsion; prime NY strip steak with coriander and sesame (bottom right) and a rhubarb & lychee trifle.

Vongerichten, who comes to Phoenix two or three times a year to work with the J&G Steakhouse staff, did get out to explore the Phoenix dining scene while he was here, stopping in at Pizzeria Bianco.

“It’s amazing pizza, but they gave me an antipasto with all warm, grilled vegetables. You don’t usually see warm vegetables. It’s usually served cold, but this was sublime. Really excellent,” he said.

Traveling five to seven days each month gives the chef an opportunity to return to his home base in New York refreshed and inspired by his travels.

Who knows, maybe a warm antipasto plate, in some variation, will show up on the ABC Kitchen menu, a New York restaurant focused on local farmers and producers.

And it wouldn’t surprise me one bit if a little chile was on the platter, too.

Jean-Georges.com
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