Hi,
I've been watching more French Chef episodes over the last week. From the Hollandaise episode, I blanketed poached cod with Hollandaise sauce and circled them with boiled potatoes. Next time I will drain the fish just a bit better that I did. It was good enough, because not a drop was left of the sauce.
I baked eggs in ramekins aka
ouefs en cocotte: two had minced shallot on the bottom and rich tomato sauce on top circling the yolk. Another pair of eggs had grated parmesan on top and sprinkled with minced parsley.
Today, I bought a block of Swiss cheese, because it seems to be her default cooking cheese selection. Julia's used it in a cheese soufle, filled omlettes and other egg dishes.
This evening I made a French omelette with Swiss cheese in less a minute. It would have been 30 seconds or less if my pan had been a tad bit hotter. It didn't bunch up in the pan no matter how vigorously I shifted it back and forth. I made up for my so-so technique when I transferred it to a plate causing to fold over on itself. As Julia suggested, there was a nice eggy custard in the middle and a firm outside.
I feel my freezer is a bit empty without a few packages of frozen leaf spinach. I may want to make creamed spinach at a moment's ntoice.. This will come in handy for filling crepes, as a bed for a molded egg or simply as a side dish.
Fortunately, I do have plenty of butter and parsley in the house, because what dish can be presentable without it?
I have all the books to follow the French Chef series, because they draw from
The French Chef Cookbook,
From Julia Child's Kitchen and
Mastering the Art of French Cooking, II.
When Julia's pommes Anna didn't unmold correctly, Julia was delighted because she could show you how to dress it up anyway. She used a spatula to remove the gorgeous crust from the bottom and replaced it on this potato cake. She then shoved any filling back into place and stuffed parsley on the edges to distract the eye from technical errors. Julia said, "One of the secrets of cooking is to learn to correct something if you can, and bear with it if you cannot."
From reading the introduction to
The French Chef Cookbook, I learned the series was filmed in uninterrupted 30 minute stretches. Consequently, there are gaffes you would not see in today's highly edited programs.
- Clearly hear an airplane flying over;
- Technitions speaking just under her dialogue;
- Off stage furniture and pots clattering when she was doing nothing of the kind;
- A microphone cable seen clearly coming from under her skirt as she walked over to the dining room;
- Interrupts her explanation to put a dish into the oven so it will finish by the time the program is over;
- She shows a picture of a sword fish, but the audience doesn't see it as quickly. She's moved on when we finally see it.
- A few places where she mis-spoke were left in from referring to tomatoes as mushrooms or muffling the ingredients that were quickly corrected. I liked this style of soldiering through mistakes.
While most ingredients she suggests as difficult are pretty easy to source today. A program on roasting suckling pig, she likely it easier to obtain than we would today. Unless I raised a suckling pig, it would be pretty difficult to obtain a 12-pound pig. Unless I did the deed and butchered it myself, which I have no plans, I would not have access to the pig's lungs for any culinary use. I would unlikely have the kidney, liver and other offal from this pig, either.
I have a disk of desserts I haven't watched yet. It does have one my favorite episodes when she makes a Croquembouche enrobed in sugar threads. She uses a broom handle to drip sugar threads, then lifts it up and wraps the Croquembouche with it. At least that is what I recall, I cannot wait to see the real deal.
I still hope someday to see the entire series again and not just these selected episodes. I know more today than I did when I saw them the first time around. In an episode featuring potatoes, Julia advised there are 200 French recipes for potatoes. She had demonstrated only 11 so far in the series with 189 left to show. So much to do, so little time.
Regards,