surviving winter
It must be a consequence of getting older (old?) that the endless parade of grey, wet, blowy days in February have a depressive effect. Our daily walks along the tow path by the river are treks along sticky vistas of mud, our faces slapped by cold drizzle. There are signs of hope, however.
It’s no longer dark when Avery comes home from school, the funny little tree in our front driveway has begun, optimistically, to put out little purple shoots that will eventually blossom into beautiful flowers. And it’s my birthday month! I could feel, way back in January, that a party would be a most welcome diversion from the dailiness of life. And so it was. My absolute favorite way to spend a day, gathering up our best napkins and napkin rings, cleaning the old Russian silver, hunting for ingredients for all my favorite foods. The sun even came out to celebrate! And how I cooked! Creamy celeriac soup, served in beautiful crystal shot glasses and topped with a crisp shard of bacon. These were such fun to hold, warm and comforting, in one hand, with a glass of bubbly in the other! Ten of my favorite ladies gathered on the cold night, bearing flowers, homemade elderflower cordial, pussy willows, champagne and an enormous stack of books, and not a single duplicate! So, so thoughtful. It was heavenly to introduce all my guests to each other — and I could have invited three times as many women, so lucky am I have such staunch and entertaining friends. But I didn’t have 30 plates! We tucked into a terrine of smoked salmon and poached salmon mousse, fragrant with tarragon, dill, chives and cilantro. Then it was onto my hands-down favorite dish of all time, chicken meatballs in a rich sour cream-brandy-paprika sauce. Served with basmati rice tossed through with sauteed broccolini and asparagus, though I say it myself, it was wonderful. The loveliest thing was watching the mix of ladies, right down the table, finding points of common interest, whether American or British, whether the mother of a newborn or the proud grandmother of twins, whether friends I have met online or friends with whom I have decorated for the school Christmas Fair, everyone chattered happily. And the nicest, most satisfying thing was that it wasn’t just chat. We discussed religion, politics, literature, charity work, travel, books. A heavenly evening.
And what could possibly say Valentine’s Day like homemade sausages? Yes, I continue in my obsession with mincing/grinding my own meat, as the Great Horsemeat Scandal continues here in Europe. Horse in IKEA sausages! I’m sure there’s a fabulous Swedish word for that phenomenon. So it was but the work of a moment to appear at the butcher’s to buy lovely pork steaks, venison and chicken breasts and haul out the mincer. Add some cheese, herbs and spices and bob’s your uncle. The first time around, we made lovely sausage patties. So fresh, so pure, so savoury! But of course I had to go one step further and approach the butcher the next time for real sausage casings. Lamb’s intestines, if you please! Slippery, latex-like tubes of unbelievable strength. “Brings back memories, eh?” the butcher leered. Our friend Sam turned up for the first batch, at an all-sausage dinner. We weren’t thrilled with the venison, rather dry. But the chicken with feta and Fox Point and pork with caramelised fennel and red onion, plus my friend Kim’s fennel seasoning, were divine. It was such a success that a few days later, we had a sausage-making party!
But sometimes you have to go the extra mile and make something completely NEW. Something exotic, foreign, thrilling. I’ve had two of those experiments lately and they were both resounding successes.
Do you like Thai flavors? I LOVE them, so refreshing, so different from American or English or Italian flavors. Just a few well-chosen ingredients and you have super aromas floating around the house. I was so in the mood for Tom Yum Soup last week, and brought in shrimp and coconut milk, as well as hot chillis and coriander. It was only when the local food shop had closed and darkness had fallen that I began to cook and I realized to my chagrin that in a kitchen clean-out, I had thrown away my jar of Tom Yum paste. Oh no, it’s only the MAIN INGREDIENT.
Never mind, if someone could make it and put it in a jar, surely I could make it! And I could. So much fresher, more intense and better than anything in a jar, I promise you. And I had everything I needed in my pantry and fridge.
Homemade Tom Yum Paste
(makes enough for soup to serve 4)
1 stalk lemongrass, lightly crushed, or zest of 1 lemon
1‑inch knob of ginger, peeled
2 Kaffir lime leaves — 2/3 leaves sliced thinly, or zest of 1 lime
1 tbsp Thai roasted chilli paste or chilli garlic sauce
Thai bird’s eye chillies, to taste
2 tbsps Thai fish sauce — 2 tbsp
juice of 1 lime
1 banana shallot, peeled and cut into chunks
pinch sugar
handful coriander/cilantro
Simply place everything in your food processor and process till as smooth as you can get it. Dump it in a saucepan with a can of half-fat coconut milk and 2 cups/500 grams boiling water.
Now for the soup:
1 pound raw peeled shrimp
8 chestnut mushrooms, thinly sliced
1 bunch scallions/spring onions, thinly sliced both white and green part
chopped red hot chillis to taste
handful coriander/cilantro leaves, no stems
Bring the paste and milk mixture to a simmer and put in the shrimp and mushrooms. Simmer for just a couple of minutes until the shrimp are JUST cooked. Add everything else and serve hot. Divine!
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So exotic! And you made it all yourself.
Then, there is the new vegetable in our lives. We went out to the delectable local Riva, the most perfect Italian restaurant ever, for John’s birthday the last week of the month. And there we were given puntarelle, a chicory-like vegetable that contains, hidden in its core depths and covered in many pointy leaves, little asparagus-like spears. These were served in a simply heavenly anchovy-laced oily dressing.
I had to find puntarelle of my own. They were slightly crisp, but slightly wilty, and so pretty. Plus who can resist a vegetable you’ve never even HEARD of before? I certainly couldn’t. So I searched and searched and finally found this incredible food source, Natoora, who offered me many other delicious things like veal escalopes and burrata and salame, and turned up on my doorstep with puntarelle. Here they are, whole.
Then, you strip away the EXTREMELY bitter outer leaves to reveal the little spears.
Then you cut off the spears one by one and slice them into strips. This step allows more surfaces to be revealed and exposed to the cold water bath to follow, which removes all bitterness. Allow at least an hour.
Then you make a dressing of olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, black pepper and as much or as little anchovy as you want. For us, six anchovies were just right for one head of puntarelle.
How yummy, how foreign, how fun! I had ordered two heads and now I wish I had ordered loads more. They would also be good with a blue cheese dressing, I think. A Roman delicacy! I am shortly to be in possession of SEEDS, which I shall take home to my dear Connecticut friend to plant in her garden. Fingers crossed. I can report in the meantime that this anchovy dressing is addictive. I drizzled it over a fennel salad yesterday and it was a delight. Don’t forget to rinse the anchovies if they’re preserved in salt.
And there you have it, really. These adventures plus a couple of fabulous political plays — “The Audience,” all about the 60 years of the Queen’s weekly meetings with the current Prime Minister — and “This House,” chronicling the Parliamentary lead-up to the Thatcher years. We have seen so much incredible theatre this year that I feel quite surfeited, quite spoiled. But why not take advantage of living in the greatest theatre capital of the world, AND having a daughter doing a drama GCSE exam? We can write it all off to Avery’s education.
Well, the early March sun has set. I for once am not cooking dinner and await the delivery of crispy, no-work-for-me wood oven pizza. Enjoy these lengthening days…
OK, you’ve convinced me to try to locate puntarelle here in middle TN!
Good luck with that, Auntie L! Keep me posted.
There is such a sense of promised celebration in your photo of the silver napkin rings that I’d have loved to have been there. As I’ve always said, Kristen, you have an amazing sense of occasion; lucky those who move in your sphere. Not to mention the food …
xxx,
John’s Mom
John’s mom, I’d have loved FOR you to be here! You have always said about my sense of occasion. What would life be without occasions… xx