The Rambling Epicure Voices

Published by Monday, February 7, 2011 Permalink 0

Food writer, Culinary Chemistry, The Rambling EpicureJenn Oliver writes our column Culinary Chemistry. She has a Ph.D. in science, where she explains the scientific aspects of what really goes on when you cook (the next Harold McGee?). She’s been running a gluten-free blog, Jenn Cuisine, since 2008 and her kitchen is more like a laboratory than a kitchen. She’s focuses her chemical calculations and experiments on figuring out how to make traditionally glutinous food gluten-free.

Esmaa Self writes the Wild Woman on Feral Acres column. She lives on a small farm in Colorado where she employs organic and sustainable methods to grow fruits, vegetables and herbs, raise chickens, bees and fish and where she routinely turns out imaginative, healthy, guilt-free meals from scratch. One of her numerous blogs recounts her farming adventures: Backyard Eggs. She also writes novels and contributes to numerous organic farming and green publications, and runs a sustainable living site, Homeostasis.

Simon de Swaan is Food and Beverage Director at the Four Seasons hotel in New York City. He studied at the Culinary Institute of America and has an incredible collection of antique cookbooks and books about food and eating, from which he often posts interesting and unusual quotes. In his column Simon Says, he gives us daily food quotes from his tomes.

Jean-Philippe de Tonnac is an essayist, editor and journalist. He directed the special editions of the Nouvel Observateur for almost ten years and and has published twenty books. As preparation for publication of his Universal Dictionary of Bread (Dictionnaire universel du pain, Bouquins Laffont, 2010), he obtained a baker’s certificate (CAP) at the Ecole de Boulangerie et Pâtisserie de Paris in 2007, and traveled worldwide to countries where bread held a particular cultural significance.

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Mediterranean Food Connection: Bagels, Smoked Salmon, Goat Cheese and Leek Shoots

Published by Wednesday, January 26, 2011 Permalink 0

by bagel

Click here for French version.

Ingredients

Click Bagels, Smoked Salmon, Goat Cheese and Leek Shoots for metric-Imperial recipe converter.

4 bagels (click here for Christophe’s bagel recipe)
4 slices smoked salmon
200 g / 7 oz.  creamy fresh (not fermented) goat cheese

50 g / 2 large tablespoons leek shoots, or failing this, scallions, chives or chopped shallots
Freshly ground white pepper

Instructions

  1. Cut bagels in half crosswise. Toast.
  2. Mix goat cheese and white pepper to taste.
  3. Spread inside bottom surface of bagels with goat cheese.
  4. Put one slice of salmon on each bagel.
  5. Evenly distribute leek shoots on bottom half of bagels.
  6. Put top half of bagels back in place.
  7. Serve immediately.

Bagels, Smoked Salmon, Goat Cheese and Leek Shoots

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Mediterranean Food Connection: Bagels au saumon fumé, chèvre frais et pousses de poireaux

Published by Wednesday, January 26, 2011 Permalink 0

de Christophe Certain

Click here for English version.

Ingrédients

4 bagels (voir la recette de base des bagels)

4 tranches de saumon fumé

200g de fromage de chèvre frais

50g de pousses de poireaux, ou à défaut cives, ciboulette ou échalotes hachées

Poivre blanc

Mode d’emploi

  1. Mélangez le fromage frais avec un peu de poivre blanc.
  2. Coupez les bagels en 2 et passez-les au toaster.
  3. Tartinez les bagels avec le fromage frais, ajoutez une tranche de saumon fumé et terminez avec une couche de pousses de poireaux.

Bagels, Smoked Salmon, Goat Cheese and Leek Shoots

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Recipe: Spicy Fish Tajine, a Recipe by Christophe Certain

Published by Thursday, January 20, 2011 Permalink 0

by Christophe Certain

Recipe translated and adapted by Jonell Galloway

Click here for French version

Tajine or tagine, as the Berbers call it, is a oven-stewed dish baked in a heavy clay pot. It is found in North African cuisines, in particular in Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and Libya.

The name “tajine” actually refers to the clay pot in which it is cooked, because it has a very particular shape. The bottom part is flat and circular with low sides. The cover is dome-shaped and rests inside the base while baking. A tajine dish is usually painted or glazed and is quite decorative, so it can put directly on the table.

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Mediterranean Food Connection

Published by Tuesday, December 14, 2010 Permalink 0

Christophe Certain’s Recettes de Pieds Noir site contains an abundance of recipes from North Africa and the Mediterranean.

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