As I have often remarked, one of my favorite activities here
in Paris is shopping at the open air market in Place Maubert on Tuesdays,
Thursdays, and Saturdays. I am
particularly partial to a little stall at the extreme west end of the market
where a cheerful man sells quail, duck, rabbit, and such like things. When I cook rabbit, I will ask for a “demi-lapin,
sans tête.” The patron picks up a whole skinned rabbit,
neatly splits it up the middle, and then cuts off the half-head and chops the
remainder into four or five pieces before wrapping it up for me. [I suspect real French cooks have something
they do with the head, but I am just as happy to have it gone. The quail come with heads also, which he
twists off with a quick gesture.]
For some time now this booth has been a part of the market
only on Thursdays and Saturdays, so when we arrived on Tuesday morning, I did
not expect to see him. Instead I bought a
lovely dorade royale [filet sans peau, which is to say filleted
without the skin]. But when I went to
the market on Thursday, the game man was not there! I was devastated. I mean, it is nice that the TV works – one never
knows. But this was serious.
Happily, he was there today.
I asked, and he explained that on Thursdays now he stays home and
rests. He is, to be sure, looking
somewhat older than when I first found him twelve years ago, but I think he has
a responsibility to his customers and to France! So I bought a nice coquelet [basically a small chicken midway in size between a Cornish
Hen and a roasting chicken]. I will
stuff it with a mixture of pearl onions, sliced mushrooms, chopped up nuts and
cut up prunes, and then roast it slowly in my oven until it is golden brown and
the stuffing is all cooked and merged. I
will accompany that with some courgettes
mandolined [i.e., zucchini sliced thin] and sautéed, and slices of what we call
in America an heirloom tomato. It should
do nicely.
Did you teach yourself to cook?
ReplyDeletepretty much. I ask myself what would taste good, and then put it in.
ReplyDeleteAsk ourselves what would taste good and then put it in...that's a good metaphor for how to construct socialism...
ReplyDeleteOff topic in this thread, but a recurring debate in this blog has been over whether to vote for Hillary Clinton as the lesser evil. Here is Chomsky's take: vote for Hillary because of Trump's position on global warming.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.theguardian.com/film/2016/may/20/noam-chomsky-on-donald-trump-almost-a-death-knell-for-the-human-species
God, your descriptions of Paris make me miss it so much.
ReplyDeletePOULET WOLFF(a guess)
ReplyDeleteCHICKEN
Do the normal prep stuff. Preheat 250. S&P the chicken. Stuff with a mix of chopped mushrooms, walnuts, onion, celery and prunes (substituted golden raisins 'cos that what I had). Put in dutch 0ven with 1 C Red Wine, covered. Roast 3 - 4 hours (depending on size). Cooked to about 175 (more than I usually do). Browned it a bit, uncovered. Remove to warm. Sauteed some onion & garlic then reduced the liquid from the pan for a tasty sauce.
ZUCCHINI
Julienne / slice Carrots, Zucchini, Onion. Tomato in 1" chunks. Sautee in Oil / Butter the Onion & Garlic (& a little Red Pepper flakes + Salt). Add Zucchini & Carrot. Brown a bit then add Tomato. Cook till just right; add a bit more butter & S&P to taste.
RICE
Cook the rice
SERVE
Slice the chicken; serve with Rice, Stuffing, Veggies and sauce reduction.
On review, please pardon the grammartypos! This is what I made tonight and it was delicious!
ReplyDelete