Showing posts with label friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label friends. Show all posts

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Presentation is everything

Presenting food is sometimes just as hard as preparing it. 

We all cook, not only for ourselves and the pleasure of it, but also for friends, family and, for some, for clients.

In many ways, its just as important to take time to present your food as prepare it.  And of course, if its for clients, we want them to come back to us!

I'll admit, I am one of those annoying people who go to charity shops and flea markets buying pretty single or dual pieces of china, just because I may need it "sometime".  But of course there are always the "bargains" for 3 plates or for 5 cups without saucers, and I do refrain, most of the time.

I've only a few pieces readily available at any one time because you need space to put the regular china as well but displaying my recent recipes I have found a new lease of life for the collecting bug and then it occurred to me what do other cooks or chefs use?

Many chefs in 4 and 5* restaurants and hotels (and those who aspire to be them) will use white, but looking through my not insubstantial number of cookery books, I seem to have found at least a few themes.

If its a country style recipe (read French, Spanish or Italian country cooking etc) these seem to be brightly coloured small bowls of gorgeousness or large white platters and serving dishes of stews and baked fare.  Although the more we venture to the east of the mediterranean or to North Africa, the bowls seem to come in three varieties, silver servers, brightly coloured terracotta and beautiful white china with elaborate edging.

The more sophisticated the dishes, it would seem, would invite a layered approach with a base plate of a colour or with pretty edging and then a simple white serving plate on top.  Plain or coloured clothes are used to dress the table and, in some cases, the amount of silver out numbers the china and the food.

But it doesn't stop there, serving bowls can be anything at all, pieces of moulded metal, pressed glass or carved wood.  I have been inspired, but what to do, without space to store it all?

And then there is the question of the shape of the bowl/plate/server, oval, circular, square or something different still?

My own thought is to present food as well as it can be.  If at a dinner party, especially an informal one where the party is all about the food, at least one main part of each course should be presented on a platter or large bowl.  Or if not at a table, then in an array of baskets, servers, bowls and plates.

For a more formal setting, white tablecloths are a must, but that doesn't mean smooth and starched, and you know that antique lace one that your great aunt, grandmother, or next door neighbour gave you all those years ago, well it was made to be used.   I've seen crape paper and crushed velvet used on tables before, and I must admit, having a white base tablecloth along a plane oak table with a roll of gold wall paper down the middle as runner, may sound cheap, but add your candles, your flowers and your place settings and funnily, it can look fantastic.


Friday, April 24, 2015

My early Summer: Bruschetta, tapas and more tomatoes

Travelling around the mediterranean, most countries have their versions of topped toasted bread, whether tapas from Spain or bruschetta in Italy.  Going to Nice or Marseille, there are always a few cafes serving small morsels in a very similar way too.

Summer is for snacking, or at least that's what many of my friends say who really don't want to eat a full meal in the heat of high Summer in Spain, Italy, Malta or Greece.  Snacking, along with the these heady days, equals sustenance in small portions that will keep you fuelled for a hard day at the beach or the pool.  It just so happens that many of these small meals are quick and rather cheap to make too.

An easy topping for Bruschetta is chopped tomatoes, chopped capers and a little olive oil and a pinch of salt.  The Bruschetta can be as large or as small as you like (the smaller they are, canapĂ© sized, are called Crostini in Italian) and are perfect for a night in with friends and bottle of wine.  Just make your rounds of toast, sprinkle with good olive oil, and brush with a clove of garlic and top with the tomato mixture.  I normally grind a little black pepper just before serving.

If you want a little bite, add some chilli flakes or add some hot or smoked paprika.

If you have the time, other toppings are a sure way to get your friends attention by arranging them on a platter in an alternate pattern.  One of my other popular toppings are baked aubergine.  Halve the aubergine, sprinkle with olive oil and a scattering of sea salt, and bake in a medium oven for 30/35 minutes.  Spoon out the centres, the resultant pulp will need a little rough chopping, add some dried oregano and lemon juice.  Add these to your grilled or toasted bread and some crumbled feta is a nice finishing touch.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Kitchen Diary: a simple fish pate


Eliot was a neighbour of a friend.  He was a "theatrical bachelor" in his mid-sixties and had lived in his studio flat just off the Charing Cross Road for over twenty years when I met him in the late eighties.

He was a handsome gentleman and very well attired.  John, my friend at the time was an assistant booking agent and Eliot had been one of the actors who from time to time he had encountered along the way.  After a while they had become friends.

The studio itself was on the third floor of a Victorian mansion block, from the communal stairwell you entered directly into a large room with a recess at the back which was curtained and behind which was the sleeping arrangements.  Just to the side of this was a little inner hall with two doors, one to bathroom and the other to a little kitchen.

His kitchen was literally a large cupboard with a window, not much more than six feet square with a small service sink and drainer, a 1950's bright green pantry cupboard and a small one ring hob on a waist high shelf, lined up against a wall.  Just inside the door was a small table and chair which looked out of a window towards the stage door of a famous theatre.  John and I visited him a few times for tea, he thought me a bit of a bubble head to begin with (I was 19 when I first met him), but when he realised my love of food, he also showed an uncanny ability for imaginative preparations.  With very scarce kitchen amenities John told me later, this very small flat was routinely the centre for small scale receptions.  So handy was its location, Eliot's fellow actors would come by for impromptu theatre salons and literary discussions well into the small hours.

This quick fish pate (and a number variations on this theme) was particularly good.
  • One small fillet of skinned salmon, poached and mashed
  • One hard boiled egg, mashed well
  • Two dessert spoons of chopped parsley
  • The juice of a small lemon
  • 25 grams of softened salted butter
  • A dessert spoon of chopped caper berries
  • A good helping (of say half a teaspoon) of ground black pepper
  • A pinch of cayenne pepper
Mixed thoroughly together, with a little added vegetable or other tasteless oil if the mixture is too solid.