Pondering the Papillote Preparation
When I was in Boy Scouts, we used to make this thing called, if memory serves, “hobo dinner,” which was basically meat (probably ground beef) and vegetables, enclosed in aluminum foil, and placed near or in a fire.
Years later, traveling with soon-to-be The Wife in New Orleans, we ate a dish more elegant though similarly prepared: legendary pompano en papillote at Antoine’s. The “papillote” style preparation basically required a lightly oiled piece of parchment (or even, as I recall, regular paper bag), into which was placed fish (sometimes chicken), broth and veggies. The whole thing was baked and presented grandly at the table.
In the early 80s, I saw “sole en sac” on several menus in Chicago, but it seems, in the last quarter century or so, that this preparation has disappeared from menus just about everywhere.
About this dish, Julia Child has said, with suave cruelty, “it’s a lot of tomfoolery. The kind of gimmicky dish a little newlywed would serve up for her first dinner party.”
Anyway, I believe this dish is no more, a food fashion come and gone. There is even some controversy as to whether even Antoine’s serves it anymore (it does not here
http://www.antoines.com/culinary.html but it does here
http://foodfest.neworleans.com/sponsor/culinary.html#fish).
One could probably achieve the Papillote Effect by simply covering a dish tightly when cooking…though getting your dish in a bag, ceremoniously cut by the waiter, steaming in your face, was a little like Xmas. In fact, I may make it next Xmas.
David “Whatever happened to Kayo?!” Hammond
Last edited by
David Hammond on August 7th, 2006, 6:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins