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Can You Throw Away Your Cookbooks? 2

My sister Joan is a cookbook person. As kids growing up, I can remember her coming home from school and poring over a cookbook with a glass of milk. Today she spends her summers on her   island in New York’s Thousand Islands. She still has lots of cookbooks, but like most of us, she gets most of her recipes online. That is why Joan is questioning of the need to keep her collection. My answer was: Of course you need to keep your cookbooks. I don’t think people will be throwing away their family bible simply because they go to the Internet to check out Facebook in the morning. Books, cookbooks in particularly, are part of Joan’s DNA. And, that is a good thing.

Joan and her husband Brian are wonderful hosts. They spend their summers on the St Lawrence River, right on New York border with Canada. Their little island has been in Brian’s family for generations and is a wonderful place to visit, but it isn’t exactly easy to get to. Joan and Brian have been going there for years, but it was only when our daughter moved to Ottawa Canada a few years back, that we  made it there. The pace of life on the river is low key. One can sit on the veranda and stare across the river and see Canada while watching very large ocean going vessels pass. With all the noise in the media about the southern wall with Mexico, one has to wonder where the northern wall will go? LOL.

Joan, Brian, Susan and I were probably our original supper club. We all went to college together In Plattsburgh NY which was also close the Canadian border. Back in the 1970’s there certainly wasn’t any wall. You  didn’t need a passport to get across the border. I don’t think we even had to show an ID. We would drive to Montreal for an evening. My buddy Ron Iles used to claim that the drunker you were, the easier it was to get across the border. His line was: “The Lord protects fools and drunks. That gives us double coverage.”

Back then we didn’t have much money for our supper club dinners. I can remember one late summer meal where I made Zucchini Parmesan with over-ripe squash from Joan and Brian’s garden. Iles, always a wizard with words, quickly began to shout praise for my Seeds Parmesan. Once you got past the larger seeds, the parmesan was pretty good and the price was right for hungry college students.

The menus for our dinners on Joan and Brian’s last summer were a lot closer to Joan’s cookbook standards.

If you enjoyed this blog and similar other stories/supper club lessons follow me on Facebook and Twitter and subscribe to get future blogs at www.impromptufridaynights.com/blog and check out my book Impromptu Friday Nights a Guide to Supper Clubs. Published by Morgan James Publishing and available through most channels where books are sold.

French Fries…A War Story 2

The culinary history of the United States has been greatly impacted by what soldiers brought back from war. From WWI the soldiers brought back French fries. From WWII they brought back pizza (and many other items). Funny how they didn’t bring back real Kimchi from Korea(?).

My grandfather fought in the First World War. I remember his story about he and his buddies getting potatoes and bringing them to a French farmhouse where the farmer’s wife would make them Pommes Frites. Gramps brought back a love for French Fries from the war. Unfortunately, he didn’t bring back his leg. Gramps got shot in the leg during the battle for the Argonne forest. He told the story about the wound not being so bad, but because of triage, he didn’t get treatment right away and the wound led to gangrene and eventually the loss of his leg.

My Grandmother and Grandfather at their engagement party before Gramps left for World War I

Gramps was a hero. He received the Purple Heart, but his biggest accomplishment was how he dealt with adversity and went on to to live a full life. Gramps had gotten engaged to my grandmother before the war. After losing his leg he wrote, telling her that the engagement was off, as he wasn’t the same man. Of course, she wrote back telling him it didn’t matter. When I was in college, I went to visit Gramps and he took me to the Historic Richmond Town site on Staten Island NY. My grandmother’s house is part of the site. We sat in the car in front of the house and Gramps told me about how when he came home from the war, he arrived on Staten Island late at night. He walked across the island on one leg with crutches and arrived at the house at 4 in the morning and sat quietly on the porch afraid to wake anyone and afraid that the family wouldn’t accept him. I cry every time I tell this story. Gramps will always be my hero.

My Grandmother’s Home where my gramps was afraid they wouldn’t welcome him as a wounded veteran

My grandfather’s Purse Heart, Helmet and Dog Tags from World War I

Ironically, French fries became a favorite of our family growing up. My mom made French fries in a small fryer on the stove top for years. There were two problems:

  1. The fries were never crispy enough.
  2. She could never make enough fries to keep a family of five happy.

The key to making the fries crispy is to do what the French farmers wife did. The French know that to get a crispy fry you need to cook them twice. The answer is to precook the fries and then finish them off with a second cooking in really hot oil (over 300 degrees). This also helps my mother’s second problem because when you precook the fries it only takes a few minutes in hot oil to get them to the perfect crispiness and you can churn out a targeted quantity pretty quick. It is no coincidence that precooking the fries is the key to McDonalds success with fries. I’ll never forget my first trip to France and having fries and thinking: “These are even better than McDonalds!

If you enjoyed this blog and similar other stories/supper club lessons follow me on Facebook and Twitter and subscribe to get future blogs at www.impromptufridaynights.com/blog and check out my book Impromptu Friday Nights a Guide to Supper Clubs. Published by Morgan James Publishing and available through most channels where books are sold.

Appetizers – The One Bite Rule 2

Many of us prefer appetizers to the main course. Canapés are a great solution. Easy to make. Easy to serve. And most importantly, easy to eat. You have to love Canapés.

I have a “One Bite Rule” for eating while standing at a party. The rule is to stay away from anything that takes more than one bite to eat. The reason is simple, multiple bites of just about anything can get sloppy when trying eat, drink and converse while standing. The genesis of this rule dates back to a corporate cocktail party when I was thirty. A pesky BBQ chicken wing slipped out of my mouth and onto my tie. From that embarrassing moment on, I have lived by the one bite rule and still avoid chicken wings. Canapés are a simple solution to the “One Bite Rule”.”

If you can come up with a low carb solution for Canapés, you will have a winner. The problem with Canapés is that they are usually served on bread. I have tried serving them on cucumber and zucchini rounds with mixed results. Recently, I have worked on using Parmesan Crisps and low carb crackers. The parmesan crisps were a winner. Low carb crackers (based on almond flour) are pretty good. Combine with delicious toppings and you can’t go wrong.

We have been to a few weddings lately. The staple of every good wedding cocktail hour is an array of good Canapés. Those weddings inspired the following menu.

Flora Wedding Canapés

Canapés Menu

Parmesan Crisps

Low Carb Crackers

Shrimp Salad on Parmesan Crisp Rounds

Smoked Salmon Spread on Low  Carb Crackers

Smoked Salmon with Wasabi Cream and Capers on Parmesan Crisp Squares

Seared Sea Scallop with Wasabi Cream and Dill on Parmesan Crisp Rounds

Seared Beef Fillet Mignon with Cucumber/Celery/Scallion Melange and Dill on Parmesan Crisp Rounds

Poached lobster with Wasabi Cream and Dill on Parmesan Crisp Rounds

Two versions of Parmesan Crisps (Rounds & Squares

Low Carb Crackers

We had a neighborhood supper club dinner party this week and a Canapés with a Spicy Shrimp Remoulade. The Canapés were a big hit. One of the reasons were the excellent texture of the pumpernickel round baked with a molasses butter. Not exactly low carb, but boy were they tasty. Once again, low carb is trendy, but sometimes the combination of carbs and fat can’t be beat.

 

Spicy Shrimp Remoulade Canapés

If you enjoyed this blog and similar other stories/supper club lessons follow me on Facebook and Twitter and subscribe to get future blogs at www.impromptufridaynights.com/blog and check out my book Impromptu Friday Nights a Guide to Supper Clubs. Published by Morgan James Publishing and available through most channels where books are sold.