This gives me an excuse to post one of my favourite pieces of food writing: a dinner party menu by the eccentric English writer & broadcaster Jonathan Meades. I love the willful impracticality of the whole thing: the fact that the saltcod MUST be rinsed under a running tap for 24hrs, that the lamb MUST be turned every 10 minutes, that fruit or celery MUST NOT be served with cheese & that Asti Spumante should be drunk with pudding:
'I served this on Sunday for 16 people. It does not require the flower arranging skills which are of such overwhelming importance to professional chefs - and I have yet to buy a blowtorch. However, the lamb does need a powerful and large grill which many domestic kitchens lack.'
Brandade
'Either buy salt cod - but not that yellowing stuff which is as hard as a board: Brindisa in Borough Market is a reliable source - and soak it under a running tap for 24 hours. Or salt your own fresh cod for 36 hours in sea salt, and then desalinate for about 12 hours.'
Poach the cod in milk for about 7 minutes. Remove skin. Pick out bones with tweezers. Put cod in Magimix with five cloves of garlic per fillet. Blitz. When the cod and garlic are reduced to a paste, add olive oil or walnut oil with the blade on max - do not add it too quickly. The resultant emulsion should be fairly stiff. You can do this the day before you're going to serve it. Serve it with slices of bread fried in duck fat, or brushed with duck fat and grilled.
Wine suggestion - White Beaujolais
Vitello Tonnato
Take all the fat off a loin of veal and poach it in chicken or veal stock. The meat should be fairly rare. This can be done the day before.
Tonnato sauce
Drain four small cans of white tuna (Brindisa at Borough market, again) and two small tins of anchovies. Throw in Magimix with capers which have been drained of vinegar and briefly washed. (Do not use salted capers.) Blitz. Add olive oil to achieve a smooth paste with the texture of mayonnaise.
Alternatively, you can make a mayonnaise and then incorporate the other ingredients. The result is notably heavier.
Slice the meat thinly and put a spoonful of sauce on each slice.
Wine suggestion - Tokay Pinot Gris
Grilled Legs of Lamb
'The best lamb in London comes from Andrew Sharp, a Furness farmer with a stall at Borough Market.'
Take all the fat off two whole legs of lamb with the bone in. Salt them. Put them under a hot grill for an hour and a half, turning them every 10 minutes. Do not place them too close to the heat. Serve them with the meat juices, and nothing else, save a salad of white chard stalks briefly boiled until they start to take on a slight transparency. Dress them with lemon and olive oil but no mustard.
Wine suggestion - Marcillac from Matha or Teulier
Cheeses
'Serve whatever's in season, and no more than two kinds. It is aberrant to serve fruit or celery.'
Wine suggestion - Wirra Wirra RSW Shiraz - unless you're eating Roquefort, in which case a poor man's Sauterne such as Loupiac or Monbazillac is more apt.
Lemon Curd Yoghurt
Mix good quality yoghurt with good quality lemon curd. (Both available from English Natural Foods at Borough Market.) Put in freezer for an hour or so.
Wine suggestion - Asti Spumante (forget its reputation and the etiquette that attaches to it).
― bham (bham), Tuesday, 23 May 2006 07:30 (nineteen years ago)
and soak it under a running tap for 24 hoursNone of that for the londoners no more.
Rick Stein does a great salt cod and chickpea stew, I'll try and dig out the recipe.
― Matt (Matt), Tuesday, 23 May 2006 21:22 (nineteen years ago)
one month passes...