Archive for November, 2009

Back in Portland

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Arrival

I flew into Portland yesterday, on an MD-80 from Salt Lake City. On the very left is Sturgeon Lake and the northern end of Sauvies island. The Columbia flows off to the north. On the very right is Green Lake, next to it is Post Office Lake, and below that is Round Lake, which is not round.

Farmers Markets

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Brooklyn Farmers Market

I forgot to mention that I went to the DUMBO farmers market in Brooklyn on the 14th. It was small yet they covered all the essentials. There was a baker who made a very crusty loaf from Chardonnay yeast. It seems a little surreal to walk past the enormous pylons of the Manhattan bridge and then encounter a little bit of wonderful vegetables…. although New York does that thing that Paris grocery stores do, of setting up a display of produce right on the sidewalk.

Maubert farmers market

The Maubert market on Saint-Germain, certainly not unique in Paris, just offers so much more then any stateside market I’ve been to. The variety of fish, cheese, pork, lamb, beef, mushrooms, vegetables, bread…. I don’t think there’s anything you couldn’t get here. Among other items I purchased: heavy cream as thick as glue; boletes; black trumpet mushrooms; and purple, orange, yellow, and green tomatoes.

Maubert farmers market 2

Taillevent and then the Louvre

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Shrimp mouse

We went to Taillevent for lunch. There was lots of food. This is a crustacean mouse with a yuzu meringue puff.

Mushroom tarte 2

Chopped boletes, with sliced boletes, some filo crust on the bottom, and a mushroom sauce.

Scallops 2

These are raw scallop slices with apple and mango dice, a bitter fruit jam, and tarragon, parsley, and savory.

Belly

Skirt steak alongside potatoes topped with an intense eggplant/sausage/tomato/caper preparation.

Venison

These were impossibly tender veal medallions, with a very rich beef (or venison) reduction sauce, with sweet potato puree, leechee, and roasted apple.

Cheese

This is a slice of cheese with a mixed fruit jam, arugula, and a thin wafer of toast. The black dusting is pepper.

Dessert snacks

A little group of desserts, we each got one of these plates. The cube is a marshmallow, then a strawberry maccaroon, chocolate truffle, mini mango tart, and a rich chocolate cake.

Vanilla crisp

The sandwich is, from top to bottom: shortbread, chopped mangos, vanilla sugar wafer, vanilla whipped cream, and another vanilla wafer, alongside some coconut sorbet.

Picnic

After lunch I walked to the Louvre. I was looking for some dutch etchings, but ended up wandering past some decadent picnic scenes. The meal consists of: bread, a rabbit, 10 to 15 pounds of ham, a pie (most likely with meat), and several bottles of Burgundy.

Six row barley

Another exciting find. This is Egyptian 6 row barley for making lager, and it’s 3500 years old!

Thursdays Food

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Baguette for lunch

Me and Elena had lunch on the right bank, on the Rue de Rivoli. I love how simple a sandwich can be. In France sandwiches are mostly bread. It makes me think that Americans are in fact frightened of bread, we think that even when it’s great it’s still just ‘for filling up.’

Fruit stall in Metro

In the subway fruit is for sale.

Pea custard with lard foam

For dinner we went to Le Cul de Poule, (The Hen’s Ass), which was in the sex district. They actually had a taxidermied posterior of a hen on the wall. Elena ate a pea custard with pork lard foam for an appetizer.

Slicer

They had a very nifty, fully automatic meat slicer with which they prepared the charcuterie plate. The flywheel is brought up to speed on the left by hand. The mechanism in the middle, which secures the meat, is engaged. This shuttles back and forth automatically, feeding the meat into the spinning blade. Once the meat is secured in position all that is required is to spin the wheel.

Rice and salmon

Salmon tartare with creme freche on the left. Fried rice ball with carmelized onion and salmon on the right.

Smoked mojo chicken

Crispy smoked chicken leg ‘mojo’. As tender as duck confit. Meat is either rare or cooked for hours. There is no in between.

Brebis Advert

‘Pure brebis, Pure pleasure!’

I’ve been seeing adds for Brebis on the subway. Somehow the fact that the wheel of cheese and the loaf of bread are the same size blows my mind.