Following Ferran: Cooking From El Practico

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El Practico

…I am grateful to him for having given me a big fat book five hundred pages long to read and learn.  A book of classic recipes, sixty-five hundred of them, a mix of traditional Spanish cooking and dishes heavily influenced by French cuisine…I still have the book.  It has a red hardback cover. It is called El Practico.  The pages are frayed.  The spine is cracked.  But I have it in a prominent place, always at hand, in my laboratory workshop in Barcelona.

–  Ferran Adria, The Big Red Book, or El Practico from How I Learned To Cook

Ferran Adria began his cooking career by landing a job in a hotel kitchen in order to save money to spend a summer partying in Ibiza.  Ibiza is a hedonist island wonderland just off the coast of Spain. It’s a wild, endless fiesta filled with bars, babes and beaches.

I know this.  I spent a weekend there about ten years ago.  My last night there I danced until dawn at Space, an indoor/outdoor club where airplanes from the nearby airport would launch overhead, sending the crowd into a frenzy.  I barely made it out alive.  Spainards are a different breed when it comes to being “a friend of the party”.  I can’t imagine an entire summer there.  Although I did try my best.

One can understand the motivation for a soccer obsessed high school dropout like Ferran. So he took the job as a dishwasher.  The cook, Miguel Moy, had a short temper and would explode at the slightest deviation from the expected way of doing things.  With his demand for excellence, he gave Ferran a copy of El Practico to memorize.

The first food Ferran ever cooked by himself for other people was a stew of flank steak and potatoes that he prepared one evening for the staff meal.

– Colman Andrews, Ferran

The first dish I learned to make was a potato stew. Miguel did not trust me at this stage to cook for the clientele. This was the food for the staff of the hotel…

–  Adria, The Big Red Book

When I read these passages, I thought I could gain an unique insight into the methods of the best chef in the world by creating his first dish. So I decided to hunt down El Practico, find the recipe for potato stew, and cook it up.  And, as always, things got more complicated than they seemed.

Hunting Down The Stew

The first step was finding the cookbook itself.  I had to hunt down the author’s names to make sure I was going to buy the right book.  I briefly lived in Madrid (around the same time as my trip to Ibiza),  so I used my connections there to find the book in a local shop.  Alas, no luck.  So I went online. It took a while but I finally found a copy, and after debating the price for a few days, finally let my culinary curiosity get the better of me and ordered it.

They had a difficult time fulfilling the order and it didn’t land on my doorstep for about six weeks.  I was very excited when it finally arrived in the mail.

One thing I noticed right away was at the beginning of the book.  A page full of symbols, representing what I gathered were elements of a professional kitchen.

Graphic Chart from El Practico

This page immediately reminded me of something I saw in A Day at elBulli: a set of symbols used to classify different product families of ingredients.

elBulli Graphic Chart

Could have this system received its original inspiration from the pages of El Practico?  I do not know, but the similarities are striking.

So there I was, holding Ferran Adria’s prized cookbook in my hands, the cookbook that inspired him to become a better cook, to become the best cook. I flipped through the pages.  A cornucopia of culinary knowledge.

If only I could read Spanish fluently.

I knew ‘potato’ was patatas in Spanish, so I looked it up in the book’s index, and flipped to page 449, where they had five and a half pages of short recipes for potato dishes.  117 dishes, to be exact.  Which was the stew?  I found that caldo means ‘broth’, so I read and re-read all 117 dishes looking for the word caldo.  I found three: Lard, Paysanne, and Savoyarde.  The only one that had meat in it was Lard, which had bacon.  OK, bacon – kind of like jamón serrano, I thought.  It’s not flank steak, but it’s close.  Perhaps this was his first dish.  But it seemed less like soup and more like a potato side dish.  Maybe I was looking in the wrong section.  So I turned to Sopas, or ‘Soups’.  Once again, as far as I could tell, no luck.

Next I turned to my Spanish speaking friends and asked what they would call Potato Stew with Flank Steak. Perhaps it was cocido, consome, or caldo. Maybe for meat they used churrasco, bistec, or filete.  Look for estofado or guiso. It could be in French: ragoût de pommes de terre or pot au feu.  And so I kept ‘reading’, searching for a recipe that would have all the elements I was looking for: potatoes, stew, and flank steak.

Ferran was right – a lot of the dishes in El Practico are French (and published in Buenos Aires by the way, so not really a Spanish cookbook at all).  I came up with an idea: I could use my copy of Larousse Gastronomique to read the French recipes to see if they were what I was looking for.  Finally, on page 323, I found a meat dish that could be served as a stew, which contained potatoes: Navarin.  Navarin is a French ragoût (or stew) of lamb or mutton.  I figured he could have substituted flank steak for lamb.  It didn’t have to perfect – it was for a staff meal after all, right?  It must be it.

From Spanish To English To Food

The Recipe

El Practico was first published in 1928, so the recipes reflect that: no measurements or steps, just short conversational sentences on how to put it all together.  A good set up for a dishwasher making his first stew, as it allows a lot of leeway. I translated the recipe with the help of Google and my meager Spanish cooking vocabulary.

Pedazos de pecho, paleta, etc. de cordero o carnero.  Sazonar con pimienta y sal. Saltear a la grasa de cerdo.  Escurrir.  Deglacer al vino blanco.

Brisket pieces, chuck, etc. lamb or mutton. Season with pepper and salt. Saute the pork fat. Drain. Deglaze with white wine.

Pork fat.  For most people, that would entail some research to find and purchase.  I, however, live right next to an Asian grocery store.  I knew, having never bought it before, that they would have it.  Sure enough, they did.  So I began cooking it up.

Pork Fat

Next came sauteed onions, the flank steak, potatoes and a bouquet garni (what else could give it away as a French dish?).  I also added pearl onions, turnips and carrots.  No need to follow it to the letter.  I mean, I’m just cooking a staff meal.

After it cooked for a while, I removed all the meat and vegetables to another dish, reduced the stock, and added it back to let it simmer a while longer.  And soon I had a potato stew with flank steak.  Ferran Adria’s first dish.

What I learned was his cooking, like most all Western chefs, is informed by French techniques. Having spherified coffee, root beer and melon juice earlier this year, it was enlightening to return to Ferran Adria’s roots, and see, like all artists, that he began with the basics, and it is from that foundation that he has launched his culinary innovations.

And that foundation, I might add, is pretty tasty.

Jethro

Cranberry Glass with Pure Cote B-790

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A friend of mine told me about Pure Cote B-790 and the work that Alinea was doing with it.  I looked at this link (click) and my mind started racing with ideas of the things I could do with this.

I was cooking Thanksgiving dinner and I made a cranberry puree and had the skins and the other spice residues (tonka bean, black pepper, other things) left-over from the puree that I decided to dehydrate in order to work it into the pure cote b-790.

After I dehydrated it completely then I turned the cranberry into a powder then mixed. I weighed everything then tried an 11% use per weight ratio of pure cote.  I heated the isomalt, glucose, cranberry, and pure cote to 160F then poured it over the silpat, let it dry overnight and then checked it out the next morning.

Success!  There are a couple things I want to do to clean it up a little bit (strain mixture before pouring, use acetate to make thinner sheets, etc…) and maybe increase the rigidity of the final product but that can be addressed with the Ultra-Tex as recommended in the link or maybe I’ll shoot for something else when I get some time.

The goal is to create very thin sheets of this so I can make something that resembles stained glass.  I also have an idea for a sheet of ice and see through ravioli (as seen in the link but with a different filling).

We’ll see what happens!

Eric

Savory Chorizo Meringue Tapas

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chorizo meringues
Thank you, Spain, for one of the best flavor combinations on earth: chorizo, Manchego cheese, and olives.  Any combination of the three yields an irresistible tapa (Spanish snack), and this recipe is no exception.  Turing the chorizo into a savory meringue is a nod to the textural transformations that Spanish chef Ferran Adrià pioneered, and which are now a hallmark of modernist cooking.  Plus, it’s crunchy!

Makes: about 50 pieces
Total kitchen time: 2 hours (20 minutes working time)

Shopping list:

  • 1 dry-cured chorizo (available in the deli sections of finer grocery stores)
  • 6 egg whites
  • 1/4 tsp. Cream of Tartar
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 2 tsp. cornstarch
  • 2 tsp. salt
  • 1/4 lb Manchego cheese
  • 50 Spanish olives
  1. Preheat your oven to 300°F and set the top rack in the middle position.  Line a baking sheet with parchment paper, and dust with flour (adding a little cooking spray to the parchment helps the flour stick).
  2. Cut off about 4” of the chorizo and slice thinly.  Use the remaining chorizo for a snack while you’re cooking – you deserve it.  Blend the sliced chorizo in a small food processor until it is broken apart.  This should yield about 1/2 cup.
  3. Add the egg whites and cream of tartar to the bowl of your stand mixer, with the whisk attachment installed (you can use a hand mixer, but mixing times may vary).  Beat the egg whites on medium-high for about 2 minutes, or until they hold soft peaks.
  4. Whisk together the sugar, cornstarch and salt in a small bowl.  With the mixer running on medium-high speed, slowly drizzle in the sugar, cornstarch and salt.  Continue mixing until the egg whites are glossy and hold stiff peaks.  Finally, mix on high speed for 45 seconds until the egg whites are stiff.
  5. Carefully fold the ground chorizo into the egg white mixture.  Spread the mixture in an even layer on the prepared baking sheet until it is about 1/2” thick (this will occupy nearly the whole baking sheet).
  6. Bake at 300°F for 90 minutes, or until the top is light brown and firmly spongy to the touch.  Remove the meringue and transfer to a cooling rack.  Let cool 10 minutes.
  7. Slice the meringue into 1 1/2” squares and top with a thin slice of Manchego and an olive.

I was hoping to find a way to make the meringue using my whip cream charger instead of the stand mixer.  I did come close by rendering the oil from the chorizo and adding it to egg whites and cream of tartar.  It foamed on its way through the charger, but without the sugar, the foam just wasn’t strong enough to hold up in the oven.  Oh well, that’s the fun of experimenting!

Scott

Modernist Cuisine At Home: Smooth Purees, Part I

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Apple and Beet Purees

Last month I began to cook my way through the upcoming Modernist Cuisine cookbook by using their PDF excerpt they made available for download.  Out of the three recipe examples given, only two have enough information to make them in their entirety.  First I created their recipe for instant hollandaise.  Next up: their selection of recipes for smooth purees.  Out of the five fruits and vegetables listed, three are prepared sous vide.  I decided to do those first, because any chance to use my vacuum sealer makes it worthwhile for it to take up a huge chunk of my counter space.  The saute recipes will be covered in Part II.

The recipe

Let's Get Smooth

The recipe for pureed fruits and vegetables is an example of what they call a parametric recipe.  This type of recipe gives a basic concept with several variations in an at-a-glance format.  This way you can understand the basic concept and run with it.  As they say in the excerpt:

We feel the parametric recipe is a strong concept for an instructional cookbook. Such a recipe does more than merely suggest methods for making one dish the same way again and again— it reveals the pattern and reasoning behind the chosen ingredients and methods, and thus makes it clearer how to apply those lessons in other circumstances. The parametric recipe thus takes the master recipe to a more detailed level, and serves as a launching point that allows you to change ingredients and quantities in a number of ways to produce dozens of variations.

That’s right up my alley – taking these new techniques and understanding the fundamental idea behind them, so they can be applied to whatever I’m cooking.  I love this book already, and it’s only a PDF file.

One: Artichokes

Artichokes

Well, wouldn’t you know it.  Artichokes are out of season around here at the moment (the peak season is August through October).  But we have a variety of different grocers; there must be someone who has some.  Sure enough, Whole Foods had some packaged baby artichokes available.  Is one package enough?  I eyeballed it and thought it looked OK to me.

The process was simple enough: get the hearts out and thinly slice them, vacuum seal them with vegetable stock and olive oil, and drop them in a sous vide bath.  The scaling directions are so great.  You set the veggie to 100%, and add the other ingredients in the correct proportion, no matter how big or small the quantity.  In my case, these baby artichokes didn’t give up much in the way of meat, but I dutifully went ahead and prepared them.

Sliced Artichoke HeartsSealed artichoke hearts

After sitting in the water bath for 45 minutes, I put them in the blender, and promptly had my first puree fail.

Puree Fail

Does This Look Smooth To You? Yeah, Me Either.

Turns out that you really need more than a few baby artichokes to create the volume necessary for the blender to blend well.  I’m just a guy cooking at home and this recipe is aimed at culinary professionals who need to crank out 400 covers a night.  The recipe just doesn’t account for single servings.  Fair enough.  I’ll have to wait until they’re back in season and try it again. It was a decent enough spread and I ate it within a few bites.

Two: Beets

Undaunted, I moved ahead to the next one on the list (and conveniently needing the same temperature water bath). Once again, the first part of the directions was simple enough: peel and thinly slice some beets.

BeetsSliced Beets

The next ingredient was interesting: cooked beet juice.  Why cooked beet juice?  As the book isn’t published yet, I don’t know.  Well, OK then. I juiced a beet and cooked the juice.  All this fuschia foam developed and floated on the juice.  Should I discard it?  Probably.  So I skimmed the top, added the juice to the beets with butter (all carefully measured with a digital scale of course) and sealed it up.

Beet JuiceSealed Beets

After an hour in the sous vide bath, I pulled it out and put it in the blender, where unlike the artichokes, it did its magic well.

Beet Spin

I had my first puree of sous vide beets.  It definitely had that earthy beet flavor, and an intense bright color , but the texture was a bit…oh, grainy?  Maybe sandy is a better word.  Somehow I was expecting a texture like pudding – perfectly smooth.  Is this the correct texture?  Perhaps when the recipe calls for a commercial blender, they mean a Vitamix or Blendtec mixer.  Most likely it’s meant as a base for something else, and not meant to be eaten alone. I don’t know for certain, but certainly, it isn’t bad at all – just not what I was expecting.  As a matter of fact, I see a borscht in my near future.

Beet Puree

A Beautiful Beet Puree

Three: Apples

So the final recipe that called for sous vide was the apples.  These required no other ingredients.  Just slow cooked apples.  I like the simplicity.  I chose a mix of Red Delicious and Granny Smith apples.  Peeled and quartered, I sealed them up and put them in.

Sealed Apples

Apples Sous Vide

After they were done I blended them together and…wow.  Sous vide apple sauce.  So smooth, so creamy.  Just ridiculously good.

Smooth Apple Puree

This Tastes So Good. Whoa.

It’s funny how the texture improved with each progressive recipe.  I felt like Goldilocks – “Ahhh, this porridge is just right!” And now, because of the parametric recipe, I know how to apply it to other fruit and vegetables like pears and carrots as well.  I am loving this cookbook that isn’t published yet.  Awesome.

Apple Puree

Jethro

elBulli At Home: Pumpkin Oil Sweet

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Pumpkin Oil Sweet

A lot of modern cooking techniques call for exact temperatures and measurements.  This is more akin to baking rather than cooking, where a pinch here, a dash there, and phrases like “until a golden brown” is sufficient to get you where you need to go.  I tend to paint with broad strokes over the detail of a single-hair brush, but I always try to do the hard stuff, if only to challenge myself.  This endeavor was no exception.

Caramelo de Aceite de Calabaza: Pumpkin Oil Sweet

The Cast Of Characters

The Cast Of Characters

I really wanted to tackle a dish from elBulli, voted Best Restaurant in the World five times.  Paging through my copy of A Day At elBulli, everything required six detailed components or access to exotic equipment like freeze dryers and superbags.  I wanted to start simple, and found the pumpkin oil sweet: two ingredients.  Exotic ingredients to be sure – Isomalt and pumpkin oil – but I could work with that.  Yes, this should be interesting.

Isomalt is a sugar substitute derived from beets.  It is half as sweet as sugar and has remarkable properties for molding, and most sugar sculptures are made using it.  Pumpkin oil is just that, and found mostly in Eastern Europe.  Neither can be found easily.  I ordered the Isomalt online but found the pumpkin oil here in a specialty store in Seattle.  Seattle is good like that most of the time.

The process is simple:

  1. Melt the Isomalt.
  2. Dip a pastry cutter into the Isomalt so a thin film covers the bottom.
  3. Pour a teaspoon of pumpkin oil onto the film.  The weight will force the film to wrap around the oil and drip down below.
  4. Cut off the thin strand of Isomalt attached to the pastry cutter.

So I began.

Melt the Isomalt in a pan over a medium heat until the temperature reaches 120 C/250 F.

I dumped the Isomalt into the pan and turned on my new induction cooktop  (Did I say new?  I meant to say used.  On Craigslist.  For $60 – less than half the price for a new one.  There’s rarely a reason to pay full price for anything – even weird kitchen equipment.  Just keep your eyes peeled and who knows what you’ll find.). Now it doesn’t hit 250F exactly.  It has ten settings, and each setting increases the temperature by 30F.  So I could get to 240F or 270F, but not 250F.  Close enough, though. Right?

Melting Isomalt

Wrong.  In order to create a thin film on the pastry cutter that is still pliable enough to drip down after the oil is added, the Isomalt needs to be at exactly 250F.  If it was warmer, it was too liquid, and no film would form.  If it was colder, it would thicken up and no film would form.

Film of Isomalt

My Kingdom For A Thin Film

Of course, since I couldn’t maintain this exact temperature, I had to play this game of Heat Up and Cool Down to get it just right.  Sometimes, the temperature would be where I could make a thin film, but within a second it would harden, and the oil would just sit in it.

Sometimes, it was too weak, and wouldn’t hold the oil and just collapse immediately into a pool of oil and sugar shards.   So, most of the time, I just made a frickin’ mess.

And another challenge: if I tried to let the pastry cutter sit for a moment in the Isomalt so I could get a decent film, it would heat up and burn my fingers.  But I persisted and managed to figure it out.  That they are able to pump out dozens of these a night perfectly shaped at elBulli is quite humbling.  Trying it myself just heightens my admiration for their creativity and execution.

Pumpkin Oil Sweet Closeup

I ended up with a rouge’s gallery of misshapen candies as well.  They reminded me of the artwork of H.R. Giger, who designed the alien in Alien.  They would have made very creepy candies to give out on Halloween.  “Eat these right now, my pretties!”  I don’t think their parents would go for it.

The Rogue's Gallery

How to eat:
Pick up a sweet carefully with your fingers and place in your mouth. Without chewing it, let the sugar melt and the pumpkin seed oil flow out.

It is definitely tasty.  The Isomalt cracks open and the oil glides onto your tongue, with what would be an unexpected and surprising flavor, unless you’ve been trying to make them for the last hour, in which case the flavor is well known to you.  This happens.  But the pumpkin matches well with the leaves falling from the trees here in Seattle, and becomes a perfect autumnal sweet, a half a world away from its birthplace in Roses, Spain, at elBulli.

Autumnal Sweet

Jethro

Eric: Baking, Science, and Killer Pasta

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Aw yes, lobster mushrooms. They look like cooked lobsters on the outside and they have a nice meaty texture when cooked…..

Put some salt and pepper on the oxtail and braise it with some veal stock and smoked ham hock…..yes, excellent.  It’s going to be a ragout for the pasta.

Make some fresh rosemary pasta then cut it and work on something else.  (Duck eggs, rosemary, “00″, Semolina, Contadina, Water)

Mushrooms, golden beets, and butternut squash go into bags so they can have a meeting with the immersion circulator for a while. I made a terrine with that carrot ginger soup using agar, took about 3 hours to set.

Well, I’m ready to go so let’s start cooking stuff!

First up is a brown butter brioche with sauce rouille and pickled vegetables.

Next is a carrot/ginger terrine with sous vide butter poached lobster mushrooms, golden beets, butternut squash, and shaved fennel served with a caramelized fig sauce with reduced sherry and contadina extra virgin olive oil.

Finally, an oxtail and smoked ham hock ragout over rosemary/duck egg pasta.

Another successful dinner at my place.  See you next week!

Eric

Modernist Cuisine At Home: Sous Vide Instant Hollandaise

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Earlier this month the Hunger Intervention Program in Seattle held Feeding The Soul 2010. For just a $25 donation, an eight course meal was served by chefs Brian McCracken and Dana Tough from Spur Gastropub and the culinary team from Intellectual Ventures – Maxime Bilet, Grant Crilly, Sam Fahey-Burke, Anjana Shanker and Johnny Zhu. The chefs from Intellectual Ventures are, along with Nathan Myhrvold and Chris Young, behind the upcoming “cookbook” Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking, due for release next March. A chance to eat their food and meet them as well? Done deal.

The food was delicious and I had a chance to briefly speak with all of them. I introduced myself and told them about this blog and how we at Jet City Gastrophysics are planning to cook our way through the entire cookbook. There were some eyebrows raised and a “good luck” thrown my way. True, I don’t have a freeze dryer or a rotary evaporator, but that doesn’t mean I can’t at least acquire access to one somehow. Where there is a will, there is a way.

And, true to my word, I have begun to cook my way through it.

It’s not published yet – how is that possible? On August 13th, they put out a 20 page excerpt of the massive tome available for download from their website. I’m sure like me, gastronomes across the world downloaded and quickly got to reading the first pages of the 2400 that will be available in March 2011.

The excerpt is from the fourth section of the first chapter of the first volume, entitled The Story Of This Book. It goes into detail of the origins of Nathan Myhrvold’s research into sous vide techniques online to the development of a full time cooking staff and publishing house to put out the work. Next they explain the photography, a step by step review of each volume, and then on to the recipes they developed and the special format that they are in. And to illustrate, they printed some example recipes. Recipes waiting to be used.

The Recipe

An Example Recipe. Just Waiting To Be Made.

There are three recipe examples: Sous Vide Instant Hollandaise, Making a Smooth Puree, and Monkfish with Mediterranean Flavors. Each recipe is an example of the three types of recipes found in the book: Example, Parametric and Plated Dish. Example recipes are considered the shortest and simplest, intended as components for other dishes. Parametric recipes focus on a particular ingredient or characteristic – or, as they call it, a parameter. The idea is to take a concept in its simplest form and show, at-a-glance, the variations of that concept (I was in web development for years, and their application of design for visual information is excellent. I wonder if they had Edward Tufte consult on the project). Finally, the plated-dish recipe brings it all together so you can create an entire dish from a single recipe.

From the three examples, the monkfish recipe calls for components that they did not show: Pâte à Choux, Zucchini Blossom Beignet, Fish Spice Mix and so on. So that left the other two. I decided to start with the shortest and simplest: Sous Vide Instant Hollandaise.

Making Of A Modernist Sauce

The Ingredients

The Cast Of Characters

I collected the ingredients necessary and started in. The format is really straightforward and easy to understand. Of course, that meant I had to screw it up immediately.

As per the recipe, I put together the white wine, white vinegar and minced shallots in a pan and began to reduce them down to a syrup-like consistency. But, it wasn’t getting syrupy. The liquid kept dissipating, but the onions weren’t breaking down. And soon I had a thick gop of caramelized onions and nothing else. How did this happen?

3. Strain.

Oh. Um, yeah. So I did it again, and pulled out 20g of onion flavored wine reduction.

Egg Yolks

Next up I took four egg yolks and blended them with the reduction and water. I did not measure out the egg yolks by weight. The recipe gave me an easy out by offering four large egg yolks as a measurement, and I took it. I put the mixture in a bag and vacuum sealed it. It fit in one of the small bags I have, and it sealed just in the knick of time before the ingredients boiled over into my vacuum sealer, creating both a big mess and having to start again from scratch.

Vacuum Sealing Disaster Averted

A Close Call

I plopped the sealed bag into the sous vide bath for 30 minutes. For the butter, I used what Chef Richard Blais calls one of the more underutilized kitchen instruments: the microwave. In 40 seconds my melted butter was ready. I took the packet out of the water, mixed its contents in with the butter, then added salt and malic acid.

Malic Acid

Mmmmm. Malic Acid.

What is Malic acid and what is it doing in my hollandaise sauce? Malic acid is the main acid found in unripe apples, cherries and many other fruits and vegetables. As an ingredient, it is supposed to add a distinct sourness, has a lower melting point than other acids and is more soluble than citric acid, which is also a sour flavor enhancer. Why it is specifically included in this recipe? I have no idea. We’ll all have to wait until the book comes out. But in the meantime, you can find it a your local vitamin supplement store. This means you’ll have a lot of Malic acid lying around – 100 tablets worth. It is also supposed to stimulate metabolism and increase energy production, so if you work out a lot, maybe it will help you burn calories. I don’t know, just a thought. I mean, after all this hollandaise sauce. Anyway.

Warmed ISI Siphon

I poured the mixture into my ISI Thermo Whip and placed it back in the bath to keep it warm. Next on the example recipe is something called a two-stage fried egg, which references another part of the book. So having no idea (yet) what a two-stage fried egg is about, I decided to poach an egg, fry some ham, toast a muffin, and spray some hollandaise.

Eggs Benedict

Eggs Benedict, Modernist-ish

Is is not creamy like your usual hollandaise, but a thick foam. The texture is definitely different and calls for unique plating or pairing. When you have a traditional dish like the one above and one of the textures is not what you expect, it jumps out at you. I’m curious how it will taste with a two-stage fried egg.

Also, the name is a bit misleading. You can make traditional hollandaise in 10 minutes with a blender. This took 30 minutes for the sous vide alone, plus another 15-20 minutes for the rest. It is instant in the fact that you can just walk up with your cream whipper and blast out sauce on demand. At least for 90 minutes – that’s the maximum time you’re supposed to keep the cream whipper hot. Once again, the example recipe is all we have at this point – I’m sure the supporting text will provide the context.

Regardless, it is delicious. I loved it. The recipe does yield a large amount – something like 1 1/2 cups. And that’s prior to foaming up – I could have served 10 people with all that I made. I sprayed the rest into a container and put it in the fridge. Then it gave me a little surprise: it settled, cooled and made an awesome hollandaise flavored whipped butter. I had it today on some toast as a little snack. Scrumptious.

So the first step in the thousand mile journey of cooking through Modernist Cuisine: The Art and Science of Cooking has been taken. I’m looking forward to the adventure.

Jethro

Meeting Seven: Transglutaminase

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Bag of Transglutaminase

“This shit is dangerous.  You inhale it, your lungs stick together, you die.”

So Chef Ian Kleinman told me about Transglutaminase during my private cooking class with him last spring. Transglutaminase (also known as TG or ‘meat glue’) is an enzyme that bonds proteins together.  If you have ever had imitation crab meat or chicken nuggets, you’ve eaten TG.  Although safe to eat, in powder form, it can be inhaled, and then work its magic inside your lungs.  So when we met last week to work with the stuff, we decided it was best to take precautions.

 

The Doctor Is in the House

I'm Just Cooking. Really.

 

With safety glasses and masks on, we set about to working on some ideas.  Eric was called into work and couldn’t make it (he’s a busy guy, what with being invited to stage at Noma by Chef Redzepi among other things), so Scott and I collaborated.  With worked with three types of proteins: meat, fish and nuts. As with any experimentation, we had some success and some failures.

THe Failures

The first idea was simple enough – bind together strips of two different kinds of fish.  We made a slurry of TG with water and brushed it on the sides of the fish, and then vacuumed sealed the whole thing.

Striped Fish

Unfortunately, we didn’t apply enough TG to the fish, and the strips didn’t bond together.  It was our first attempt using the stuff, so we learned that it’s OK to be a bit more liberal in our application.

Next up was nuts.  I figured nuts have plenty of protein, so they should bond together as well, right?  I crushed up some peanuts and almonds in my coffee grinder, then added in the TG.  I formed in into a disc using a pastry cutter and vacuum sealed it.  And, as with the fish, there was not enough TG to bind it together.

Nut Disc

Crumbled Nuts

The crumbled pieces did have a bit of tension to them, so the TG seemed to have done its job somewhat.  I’ll need to add more next time and see if TG is ‘nut glue’ as well as ‘meat glue’.

The successes

I had an idea for an awesome piece of comfort food – chicken skin pork rinds.  I pulled the skin off some chicken wings and glued them together with pork skin, then rolled it up in cellophane.

Gluing Chicken and Pork Skins

It glued up nicely, though quite scary looking, like some frankenphallic nightmare.  I deep fried it and added salt and had pretty much what I was going for.  You had the delicious combination of fried chicken skin and pork rinds.  There needed to be a bit more chicken skin and a bit less pork fat, but it turned out very well.  I can see these being eaten at state fairs across America.

 

Fried Chicken Skin Pork Rind

Fried Chicken Skin Pork Rind

 

Finally, Scott had the idea of making shrimp paper. He minced the meat in a food processor and added TG, eyeballing the amount.  He added it to a vacuum bag, rolled it out flat and sealed it.

Scott with Shrimp Paper

He then placed the bag in a cookie sheet on the stove filled with water and quickly cooked the shrimp.  From there it went into the fridge to set.  It worked great.  The result wasn’t thin as paper,but a more like a tortilla. A tortilla made of nothing but shrimp meat and TG.

 

Shrimp Tortilla

Shrimp Meat Tortilla

 

I cut some rounds out of it and prepared a sweet dish and a savory dish with them.

 

Sweet Shrimp Crepe

Shrimp meat crepe with raspberries and mango in a sesame/soy glaze with mascarpone cheese

 

 

Savory Shrimp Crepe

Shrimp meat crepe with spanish rice, avocado and baby arugula with a chipotle tartar sauce

 

Both of us are very excited with the results and have a lot of ideas of what to do next.  For example, the tortilla could have easily been cut into strips for shrimp noodles instead of crepes.  As long as we avoid inhaling the stuff, TG looks to be a fun new component to cook with in the kitchen.

Jethro

How To Smoke Your Drinks

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Smoked Chardonnay
Care for a drink and a smoke?  How about a smoked drink?  After a friend inquired about a “smoked beer” she saw on a bar menu, I decided to grab my Smoking Gun* and take a shot at smoking a handful of beverages.

I smoked each of the beverages below by submerging the Smoking Gun’s rubber tube in the liquid.  In the case of the wines, it served to both smoke and aerate the drinks (BTW, I never understood why it should be impolite to blow bubbles into your wine – if someone complains, tell them you’re “helping the wine open up.”)  I ran the smoker for about 30 seconds for each beverage, then blew away any lingering surface smoke before tasting.

The results were surprising…

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