Sunday 2 December 2012

Time for the acid test

I spy with my little eye something beginning with 'l'

It is decision time for the lemon tree in the London garden, after a third night of frost.  It is looking happy, having recovered from the red spider mite infestation contracted when taken indoors last January. See From one pot to another. The campaign of daily brushing and spraying with dilute washing up liquid, combined with acclimatising it back to the outdoors in April, was successful.  New shoots sprouted, white blossom appeared and there will be home-grown lemons for Christmas gin and tonic and smoked salmon. Rather than risking another red spider mite attack in the warm, dry atmosphere of the conservatory kitchen, the plan is to leave it outside all winter, wrapped in a duvet of horticultural fleece.

One of the strange things that happened when the lemon tree began to lose its leaves was that it started to sprout thorns - and quite sharp ones too. This reminds me of friend Meg's comments about fruit picking when she was a girl in the United States, triggered by reading about last year's foraging trip Wild and free. and the embarrassment of riches during our stay in Tuscany. Meg's parents were very early advocates of self-sufficiency,  growing every imaginable fruit and vegetable on their plot in Virginia. Meg recounted how sore her hands got from picking lemons, on account of the thorns.

She grew up in a home with several acres of land, including a small orchard with four or five sour cherry trees, several apples that ripened from late June until latish autumn, a couple of pears and a peach or two. "We also had about an acre of vegetables: radishes, carrots, potatoes, tomatoes, peas, squash, green beans, wild and domestic asparagus, black eyed peas, cucumbers, corn, onions, peppers of a few different types, collards, cabbage, cantaloupe, water melon and lettuce when it was not too hot. We had some strawberries, grapes and rhubarb plus lots of wild blackberries and across the creek were wild huckleberries. I am sure I have left something out of this long list, but you can see that I grew up eating lots of fresh vegetables and fruit.

"We also had chickens, ducks, geese and sometimes a few pigs.  Canning, pickling and preserving was always a fun time taking over life for a while each summer, so you can see that very little of our food came from the supermarket. Sometimes friends might join in these activities. We lived on the water, so we fished, clammed, oystered and crabbed too, and in the days before freezers became common, fish had to be shared if too many were caught; therefore, during the summer, fish was almost always for dinner."

Meg goes on to tell me that one lemon tree in a tub will be more than enough for our needs. Apparently she and Bob were unable to cope with the quarterly harvest from the two trees they had when living in Cap Ferrat and regret not selling some of them! I look at the four modest lemons on our precious specimen (one large and one medium yellow, plus two smaller green ones) before retrieving the unwaxed fruit from Waitrose to make a new batch of preserved lemons ready for tagines and celery salads. Maybe next year there will be enough of my own to preserve.  Or maybe we move to Provence....
All my own work, but not my own fruit - yet


Photographs by Sandi.





Saturday 1 December 2012

The goose of Christmas past

A rude awakening for Scrooge                   © Walt Disney
Working through the cottage freezer in preparation for the festive fill-up, and trying to persuade myself that it doesn't need defrosting, I discover in the depths a plastic box labelled 'roast goose in giblet gravy'. In another corner, there is a small tub labelled 'fresh goose liver.' The excitement of December 2011 comes flooding back. On Christmas morning, over traditional smoked salmon and Buck's Fizz, our youngest son and his lovely fiancee announced that they have decided on their wedding date (in three days' time) and place (Washington DC).  We are invited.  Fortunately we have passports (call it feminine intuition) and warm clothing, so air tickets are booked for 27 December.

The Cratchits sit down to dine                            © Walt Disney
We then have to address the practical consequences of a pop-up wedding in the middle of Christmas Present: what to do with the gastronomical delights and substantial left-overs. Spiced beef, salads and vegetables, cheese and fruit are distributed to family and friends. The rest is packaged for the freezer - and forgotten.

...and so did we.
Now Christmas Yet to Come is almost upon us, and as we are  living in a building site with bare concrete floors, exposed wiring, rain filled excavation trenches etc,  liberating the goose of Christmas Past is an enticing idea. The giblet gravy has done a fine job in keeping the rich gamey meat tasty and succulent. I create a sauce with shallots, dry sherry, damson jelly and the strained gravy,  then put back some of the meat and gently simmer it until thoroughly heated through. It is served with roast butternut squash and puy lentils mixed with mushrooms, peas and diced red pepper.

The next evening, after a brisk walk through the sodden countryside, the goose liver is transformed into a luxurious appetiser. Sliced into small squares, it is seared in unsalted butter,  popped on to thin pieces of crisp toast topped with scrambled Burford Brown egg and dribbled with the pan juices deglazed with a splash of brandy. Perfect with a glass of Tio Pepe.












Friday 9 March 2012

From one pot to another

Last May, a year after conceding that I would settle for one lemon tree in a pot on the patio rather than a crumbing villa in a citrus grove in Tuscany (A classical education with zest) a large and heavy container arrives. It contains  a five foot high lemon tree bearing both blossom and fruit - a present from husband Rod to mark a significant birthday.

The tree spends the summer in its traditional terracotta pot on the patio in London, the flowers scenting the air and the lemons growing larger. The first fruit is ceremonially picked and sliced for a celebratory gin and tonic. Three more are used to make a lemon tart. The tree is fed with citrus food, the new growth pinched out according to instructions and when the temperature finally drops in December, is brought in to overwinter under the glass roof of the kitchen extension. 

That's when we discover the challenge of cultivating this wonderful fruit.  Leaves begin to fall with alarming and increasing frequency. Consultation with the experts revealed that this could be too much water, or not enough water. Or that the tree was too warm - the temperature should not rise above 12 degrees - challenging in any room in a normal home. Or that the air was too dry. All commentators advise not to panic.

We then identify that the tree is under attack from red spider mite (a bug new to us) and we go into battle, every morning removing microscopic eggs and mites with an artist's paintbrush and a weak solution of washing up liquid followed by copious spraying with the same mixture. This seems to be working. We watch the outside temperature beginning to rise,  and look forward to returning the lemon tree to its sheltered spot on the patio - with a roll of horticultural fleece on hand for swaddling in the event of late frost.

Meanwhile the three largest fruit on the tree continue to grow larger, but remain green rather than yellow. Assured by our friend Liz, who has several lemon trees growing lustily in the Dordogne, that they will still taste good, I pick them. 

Mindful that these may be the last of the homegrown fruits for some time, I decide to make that old-fashioned preserve, lemon curd. Eggs and sugar are beaten, butter melted, lemons zested and squeezed and the mixture stirred gently over simmering water until it turns to a shining, wonderfully fragrant emulsion. The lemon curd now sits in its sterilised pots in the fridge, ready to make a special tart or transform a simple sponge cake.  Sunshine in a jar. 


Saturday 11 February 2012

Spanish sun in a winter kitchen

Even the bronze ducks look chilly......


As the snow settles thickly on stone walls,  submerging the early daffodils,  depressing the  cheerful cyclamen and causing robins and blackbirds to stop their optimistic nest building and hover, hungrily hopeful, by the kitchen window,  the time is right to warm the house with   marmalade making.  Quite apart from the pleasure of slicing orange peel and squeezing the gelatinous juice out of the muslin bag of flesh and pips, it is satisfying to know that every pot of marmalade will be eaten.

The combination of snow and marmalade brought back memories of celebrating our 40th wedding anniversary on our honeymoon island of Majorca, when we stayed in a little house amongst the orange trees on a finca in the northern hillside town of Soller.  (See Valiant Women: notes from an orange grove). 

Whilst we were there, the temperature plummeted far below the December norm and the surrounding hills were covered with snow, an occurrence so unusual that the local roads became clogged with people from Palma and other towns collecting the white stuff in cooler boxes to carry back to show their urban neighbours.

The finca is owned by a sculptor and his elegant wife, who combine farming a wide variety of oranges, grapes and other fruits with providing bed,  breakfast and dinner for up to a dozen people and producing their own marmalade in pretty hexagonal jars with stylish labels. The marmalade is delicious, but a far cry from the dark, chunky wake-up call stuff that is our breakfast preserve of choice.  The Finca Ca'Sant marmalade is more of a compote of finely minced sweet oranges, and indeed it transpired in conversation with our hosts that the Mallorquin consider the bitter Seville orange not worth bothering with - for marmalade or anything else for that matter.

Silent and snowy valley
But back to the snowy hills of Gloucestershire, where worktops are cleared, jars are brought down from the attic and the preserving pan from the top of the larder. Remembering the comment made by one son some years ago,  watching me standing hot and sticky over bubbling preserving pans at 10 pm, that 'marmalade can be bought in shops these days, mum,'  I decide to cost out the exercise this year.   

Also recalling my 5th form domestic science lessons under the rigorous eye of Mrs Blampied, I include a generous amount for fuel in addition to the cost of the organic Seville oranges and lemons and Fairtrade sugar.  I do not cost my time or the glass jars, which have been accumulated over years of  recycling duty.

The calculation is an interesting one. Taking into account the variation in jar sizes of shop marmalade (which means that supermarket own brands are almost the same price by weight as  branded products) my marmalade computes out to half the cost of top-priced Waitrose or Tesco Finest,  and the traditional Frank Cooper's Oxford. 

This means the budget could take the indulgence of lacing one batch with a generous slug of whisky. The smell that swirls up as the spirit is poured into the pan of marmalade is almost as good as drinking it. Vintage 2009 with Talisker - labelled  the Tartan Toreador - was a particularly enjoyable weekend indulgence.

The Tartan Toreador: Seville marmalade with malt whisky
However, another taste has been introduced this year,  perhaps triggered by hearing Leonard Cohen on the radio and recalling his song about the tantalising Suzanne, who "gives you tea and oranges, that come all the way from China". 

Or maybe it was remembering the Irish tea party hosted every Boxing Day by our wonderful neighbours Allen and Olive Synge, following the traditional 20-a-side (roughly) hockey match on Blackheath.  Cold and muddy protagonists and spectators were revived with  Lapsang Souchong, liberally laced with Jamesons whiskey, served in fine china cups.

So as one batch of Golden Seville marmalade is left to cool in the pan before potting (to allow the peel to settle evenly) a couple of Lapsang Souchong teabags are added.  The smoky aroma released from the tea (created by drying the leaves over burning pine needles) is as fragrant as whisky - and rather less costly.   So in 2012 we will enjoy our malt whisky in the glass, rather than on our toast.

 











Saturday 4 February 2012

Flights of festive fancy



It seems extraordinary now to think that roast chicken was an annual event when I was a child, served at Christmas with that other rare treat, a bottle of wine (usually Graves). Then as rationing was phased out and food stocks and family budgets began to increase, roast chicken appeared at Easter too and then turkey became popular for larger numbers at Christmas.

But some thirty years ago, goose became our festive bird of choice. Friends would often tell us how much more meat per pound we would get with a turkey, but we are happy to savour smaller quantities of really tasty and distinctive meat on Christmas Day.  Not to mention those pots of pure fat stored in the fridge for the coming months, to transform Kind Edward potatoes into crispy, waist-ruining pleasure.

It was the cookery writer and restaurateur Robert Carrier who converted us to goose. An American fluent in French and German, Carrier came to Europe with the US army during the Second World War and stayed on, living in Paris and Rome and then London. He began writing about food for Harpers Bazaar and then the Sunday Times before becoming a television personality and  rescuing the ruined Hintelsham Hall in Norfolk to create a Michelin two star hotel. I bought The Robert Carrier Cookbook in 1969 and used it so much it fell apart. His recipes were as demanding than Elizabeth David's, but were delivered in a rather more flamboyant style (he had also worked in musical theatre).

Carrier's description of his French grandmother's roast goose, with home made sauerkraut and brandy soaked prune stuffing, was irresistible. But the real showstopper was stuffed goose neck - the long skin filled with a rich fragrant mixture of minced veal, goose liver, walnuts, apples and breadcrumbs moistened with sherry and then gently roasted to create a delicious Christmas Eve appetiser that was part sausage, part faggot, served with winter salad and cornichons. I prepared this tasty treat every Christmas Eve for years until the bureaucrats of Brussels decreed that selling geese with their complete necks was a risk to citizens. 

After experimenting with various sources, we always buy our goose from the redoubtable Judy Goodman of Worcestershire. It arrives beautifully packed in a strong box with handles, the ivory fat in packed in its own carton, the glistening liver and lights sealed in a bag, the bird exuberantly garnished with sage and lovingly swathed in crisp, white paper.

On some Christmasses Past, I would prepare a three bird roast, boning and stuffing the goose with a large chicken which was in turn boned and stuffed with a pheasant. These days you can buy such a treat ready for the oven.  But I have decided that I prefer to keep the goose fat pure, rather than filling the roasting tin with the  fat of three different birds. So I now usually cook a tasty corn-fed chicken separately to give white meat to complement the dark, gamey goose flesh, and hold its own with the slow cooked red cabbage, crisp sprouts with chestnuts and pancetta, bread sauce, cranberry sauce and roast potatoes.

However, a boned and stuffed bird - a Gresham duck or a free-range corn-fed chicken - is a regular dish for special dinners in our household.  The effort is well worthwhile, not only for the delicious flavours but also because it is a luxurious but efficient way to feed eight people from one bird (and cold left-overs are delicious).  

"First, confront the duck!"
Which brings me to another great American cookery writer and tv presenter, Julia Child, whose Mastering the Art of French Cooking describes how to bone a duck before stuffing it, trussing it and then baking it encased in pastry. 

Essentials are a sharp thin bladed knife (a filleting knife is ideal), poultry scissors, a trussing needle, butcher's sterilised thread, a thimble and plenty of time. To reduce panic, do the boning the day before you aim to do the cooking until you become adept. Anyone who has seen Julie & Julia, with the wondrous portrayal of Julia Child by Meryl Streep, will remember the moment when cooking duck en croûte becomes the crowning glory for Julie Powell  (the New York administrative assistant whose 2003 blog about her year long effort to cook all the recipes in the first Child volume helped inspire the film).


...and then flatten it.
Boned, stuffed bird
According to Julia Child, the average time to bone a duck is 45 minutes but regular practice can reduce to around 20 minutes (a gratifying discovery, as this is the time I generally take.)  There are written instructions on the web including Edward Smith's step by step guide at InterSite or the Smithsonian Museum homage to Julia Child. 

Having liberated the carcase, break the bones up a little and roast them for 20 minute or so in a little oil in the oven, to caramelise before popping into the pressure cooker with water and vegetables to make a rich stock for gravy and soup.

When it comes to filling, let your imagination run riot.  One of my favourite combinations for duck are a pork or veal forcemeat, layered with whole chicken fillets, interleaved with natural dried apricots and pistachio nuts. In a large chicken, use duck fillets in the centre and prunes and almonds.  The colours and textures of the different layers are particularly attractive when the bird is sliced (and of, course with no bones, it is a joy to carve.) 


Alas, I have just realised that a chicken stuffed with duck fillet and sherry soaked prunes has just been devoured, without a photograph being taken. So, dear readers, I will remedy that in another installment. In the meantime, bon appetit!