Thursday, December 1, 2016

Petrale Sole



For a time I lived in Monterey, California. I was studying nursing and working part time at a seafood restaurant. The restaurant was in a Victorian house built by a ship captain named Perry, whose wife, it was said, used to pace the long seaward-facing balcony as she watched for the captain’s return. Now the house is a museum, but when I lived in Monterey a husband-and-wife team operated a restaurant there. The husband kept the books and managed the staff; the wife, E, ran the kitchen. I waited tables. Late weekday afternoons and early Saturday mornings, in the upstairs dining room, I polished glassware and silver, folded napkins so that they appeared tufted like birds, and set flowers on white-clothed tables. It was calming work, often done after a day of classes or hospital training, and for the most part in view of that long balcony walk overlooking Monterey Bay.

E was a marvelous cook. One Saturday for my lunch, she pan-fried Petrale sole bought that morning at fishermen’s wharf. I told her I didn’t like fish; she said I would like this one. And I did. It tasted sweet and fresh and smelled like the ocean. Years later in Honolulu, I came upon fresh Petrale sole flown in from California and brought some home. E prepared her sole simply--dusting it with flour, frying it in olive oil, and squeezing fresh lemon onto it before serving. I complicate mine a little, dipping the fillets in beaten egg (after dusting with flour), rolling them in cracker crumbs, and then frying them in olive oil.  My sole is not as delicious, not as fresh, as the sole E prepared for me that day, but it is still delightful. I look forward to having it whenever I find the fish in the market.

For two or three people, you need 1 to 1 ½ pound Petrale sole fillets (Dover sole is good too), two tablespoons flour, two beaten eggs, a half package Italian-style crushed salt-and-pepper crackers, two tablespoons olive oil, and fresh lemon or lime. Wash and dry the fillets. Dust them with the flour, dip in the beaten eggs, and turn each side of the fillets onto a dish holding the crushed crackers, pressing to coat the cracker crumbs to the fillets. Fry the fillets over medium-high heat for 2 to 3 minutes each side, until they are golden brown and cooked through. Do not overcook. Serve with the lemon or lime slices, tartar sauce (if you like), and a salad.

Here are most of the ingredients:

The fillets in the pan:


And ready to serve:



Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Cherry-pecan Baguettes


In the mid 1990s, while staying with my husband for six weeks in Horta on the Azorean island of Faial, I had trouble finding good bread. The town was bustling with European Union money--new houses, new jobs, new cars, trucks, and motorcycles. Before this time most people baked bread at home, and the local bakeries hadn’t yet caught up with demand. Our friend and my husband’s colleague, H, who lived in Horta, had trouble too and would tip us off if she found a good loaf or a package of nice papa seco rolls somewhere. One weekend we stayed across the channel on Pico Island at mutual friends’ vacant cottage (it was just down the road from H and her husband’s cottage) where I found a loaf of homemade bread in the freezer. I’m sorry to say we ate the bread--it was delicious--and the only salve to my conscience was we gave half the loaf to H.

Back in Horta I tried a pizza-dough baguette recipe from Rosie Daley’s In The Kitchen With Rosie, but the yeast and flour were stale, the oven heat was irregular, and my baguettes failed to rise. We ate them anyway. When we returned to Honolulu, I tried bread recipes by food writers Edward Espe Brown, Cass Castagnola, Alain Coumant, Michael Pollan, Chad Robertson, Laurel Robertson and Bronwen Godfrey, again Rosie Daley, and others. Slowly by slowly, I came up with a recipe for baguettes that works for me. I hope it will work for you too.

To make four cherry-pecan baguettes the ingredients are: 1 tablespoon dried yeast, 1 tablespoon honey, 1 tablespoon fine sea salt, 4 tablespoons olive oil, 2 cups whole-wheat flour, 4 cups unbleached white flour, 1 cup full-fat Greek yogurt, 1 ½ cups water, ¾ to 1 cup chopped pecans, and ¾ to 1 cup dried cherries, soaked for 30 minutes and drained well. You can use any nut or dried fruit you like, or for a savory version perhaps rosemary leaves, Parmesan cheese, or chopped olives. Or you can add nothing at all--the baguettes are excellent plain. You can also make them with all white flour if you wish. They will be lighter, but still tasty and with a nice yogurt-y tang.

Place the yogurt in a large bowl and let it come to room temperature. Add to the yogurt the yeast, honey, water, and two cups whole-wheat flour and mix well. Add the olive oil and salt and mix again. Then add the unbleached white flour, 3 cups at first, and the last cup as needed. Mix to form the dough, turn the dough onto a floured board, and knead for 5 or 10 minutes, adding flour as necessary to keep the dough from sticking. Roll the dough into a ball, put it into an oiled bowl, and cover the bowl with plastic wrap.

Let the dough rise 1 to 1 ½ hours, or until doubled in bulk, then place it again on a floured board. Knead the cherries and pecans into the dough (this may feel awkward--it does for me--but just add the fruit and nuts little by little and work them in as best you can; it’s hard to go wrong). Now with a knife or dough cutter, divide the dough into four equal parts. Using a rolling pin or round-sided glass, roll each part out to a roughly ½ inch thick rectangle, then roll up to form a baguette. Place the baguettes seam side down on a large baking pan lined with oiled parchment paper. With a sharp knife make crosswise slashes on the top of the baguettes (some people recommend making the slashes right before putting the bread into the oven, but when I did that my bread collapsed). Cover the baguettes with a damp cloth and let them rise 20 to 30 minutes.

Bake in a preheated 450-degree Fahrenheit oven (or 425-degree convection oven) for 25 to 30 minutes. For a crisper crust, sprinkle the baguettes with water before putting them into the oven, or place an empty pan below the baking rack and fill it with a cup of water to create steam during baking.

Here is the dough rising:

Here are the baguettes ready for the oven:

And fresh from the oven and cooling on a rack:



Friday, September 30, 2016

Lentil Curry


Manoa Valley is one my favorite places on Oahu--green, cool, deep, and wide. At the back of the valley are the Lyon Arboretum and Manoa Falls; at the mouth is the tree-lined campus of the University of Hawaii at Manoa. While in graduate school, I volunteered at one of the campus literary journals. I xeroxed files, posted and collected mail, and helped proofread stories, essays, and poems. I enjoyed my time there and made several good friends. One of them gave me the recipe for lentil curry that is subject of this post. She brought the curry to a staff potluck held high up on the side of Saint Louis Heights overlooking Manoa Valley. I don’t recall many details from the party, but I remember the warm company, the beautiful view from the livingroom window, and my friend’s delicious curry. She recommends serving it with raita and rice. It is wonderfully easy to make, it just takes a little time. As usual, I’ve adapted the recipe, but I believe the spirit remains true to the original.

To serve 4 to 6 people you need: 1 cup French green lentils, about 3 1/2 cups water, 1 tablespoon minced ginger, 1 tablespoon minced garlic, 1 cup pureed Italian-style canned tomatoes, chili powder to taste, salt to taste, 2 tablespoons olive oil, and ½ cup heavy cream or coconut milk.

Cook the lentils in a pot of boiling water for 4 to 5 minutes, then drain and return them to the empty pot. Add fresh water to the lentils to cover them by two inches and bring to a boil. Lower the heat, add 1 tablespoon of the olive oil, put the lid on the pot, and simmer for one hour. Remove the lid to the pot. Add the ginger, garlic, tomatoes, salt and chili powder to taste, and remaining tablespoon of olive oil to the curry and simmer uncovered for 45 minutes. Lastly, add the cream or coconut milk and continue cooking another 10 minutes for the flavors to meld.

I like to serve this family-style over a bowl of rice. It’s also good with chapatis or tortillas and chutney.

Here are the curry ingredients:

The curry simmering in the pan:

And alongside rice, raita, and chutney:



Friday, September 9, 2016

Twilight and Tortillas


We love soft tacos, and sometimes take them for a picnic supper at Kapiolani Park in Waikiki. I make half-and-half tortillas with half masa marina (finely ground corn flour) and half wheat flour. They are wonderfully pliable and good with most any bean, meat, or vegetable filling. I got the recipe many years ago from a San Diego friend. I still have the printout she gave me. On one side are recipes for flour tortillas, corn tortillas, half-and-half tortillas, and a syrup (to go with “Bunelos”); on the other side is the cross-hatched score of a cribbage game that my friend and I played one long afternoon while waiting for a train.

The recipe couldn’t be simpler, though rolling out the tortillas takes a bit of work. I use a tortilla press, but a rolling pin will do, as will a smooth-sided drinking glass.

To make 16 to18 half-and-half tortillas use: 1½ cups masa harina, 1½ cups wheat flour,1 teaspoon dried yeast, a pinch sugar, 1½ teaspoons fine sea salt, 1½ cups warm water (or a little less), and 2 tablespoons olive oil.

Mix the yeast with 1 cup of the water and the pinch of sugar. Add the masa harina, wheat flour, olive oil, salt, and as much of the remaining water as needed to mix the dough. Knead the dough on a floured board until smooth. Let rest (covered with a damp cloth) 1 hour. Divide into 16 to 18 balls, flatten, and let rest 20 minutes (again covered with a damp cloth). With a tortilla press, rolling pin, or smooth-sided glass, roll out the balls, adding a little flour as needed to keep the dough from sticking. Heat a dry skillet to medium-high heat. Bake the tortillas a few minutes on each side. The sides will bubble up a bit and brown in places. Once baked, place the tortillas singly on a rack to cool. Reheat as desired in a dry skillet or wrapped in foil and placed in a 375 degree F oven for 15 minutes.

Here are the balls of tortilla dough resting:

The tortillas being cooked in the skillet:

 And alongside a bowl of guacamole: