February 27, 2011

we're out of bread, lunch service is over

I promised a post about Normandy. So here it is.

Last Thursday Ali, Alex, Elana and I took the two hour train ride to Trouville/Douville, Normandy. We arrived at about 1:30pm and spent the day there wandering around the precious towns.

Who sleeps like this?

First stop: Lunch. Of course. We ate at a little restaurant next to the beach that was made out of a boat. It was amazing. Well, the location. I would say the food was meh. When we first walked in they told us they were out of bread and therefore could not serve us lunch. We told them that we didn't need bread to eat and then they seated us. So, we learned how to tell when lunch service is over in France... when the bread runs out. Such an obvious concept, right? They started us with Salmon Tartare which was pretty delicious but needed salt. Then we ordered 12 oysters to share and those were really tasty. For the main course we all ordered battered and fried scallops; Coquilles St. Jacques. The plate was beautiful but the scallops were a little overwhelming. And, here in France they eat the entire scallop which includes the Roe. The Roe is an orange part of the scallop that we don't normally see in the States and I'm not a fan. The color is off putting and the taste is very rich. We had a bottle of wine and enjoyed the view so overall lunch was pretty great.


Then we took a walk on the beach and enjoyed the fresh air. I'll let the pictures do the talking..


Next, we walked around town a little and finally ended up at a brasserie drinking café au lait and eating pommes frites... 2 entire plates.

7pm rolled around and we were all ready to head home. We got on the train early and snagged a cabin for ourselves. All of us slept on the way back and were exhausted when we got home.

Normandy was a perfect little getaway and I can't wait to go back in the summer when I can really enjoy the beach!

I have my first written exam tomorrow and I should probably be studying at the moment instead of blogging/facebook stalking but those of you who know me well know that studying really isn't my style. We'll see how it goes. Wish me luck! 

Cooking is like love
It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne 

xoxo, alex


February 25, 2011

Pommes Dauphine

It's been a great week here in Paris. Ali's friend Alex was in town so we had an excuse to be a little crazier than normal. Plus we only had 4 classes.

Tuesday we were planning on going to Normandy for the Omnivore food festival and to eat oysters. But when we got to the train station we realized the latest train back was at 8pm and felt like it was a little absurd to go for only 3 hours when the train ride is 2 hours there and 2 back. So, we changed our plans and I'm so glad we did. The sun was out so we figured the only appropriate thing to do was day drink. And day drink we did.. All day. We started out at a little bar in a hipster area in Paris by a pretty little canal. Dani and Lee joined us with their Parisian friend and we had a great time.




The sun started to go away and everyone was getting cold and wanting to go nap. Besides me, Ali, and Alex... surprise. So, we ventured over to Les Halles and had dinner at Au Pied de Cochon. This restaurant is famous for their Pig but they also have very traditional french foods. We all shared a plate of bone marrow, yum & Alex had french onion soup. We also continued the day drinking with a bottle of wine, of course.






After dinner we decided we wanted to continue our adventures and somehow ended up over by the Louvre at a random Brasserie drinking yet again, more wine. This time Adam and his French friend from work, Sacha, joined us. We drank & talked for a couple hours and then decided to head home on the metro. We went to take the stop that leaves from inside the Louvre and it was closed but somehow ended up walking through the Louvre... which was really cool. The place was deserted seeing as how it was around midnight and we explored, running into the inverted part of the pyramids. It's a rough life living in Paris and drunkenly stumbling upon famous monuments. Finally we found an open metro station and all made it home safely... more or less.

This is what we saw.. only we had the place all to ourselves. 

Wednesday was a great day at school. We finally learned how to create mine and Ali's obsession... Pommes Dauphine. The best way I can describe them for you is deep fried mashed potato balls. Wanna know how to make them? Great!

Pommes Dauphine, serves: enough

2 large potatoes
Choux Pastry:
250ml water
30g butter
130g flour
3 eggs
salt/pepper
nutmeg
oil for frying

Peel the potatoes and largely dice. Put them in a pot with cold water and bring to a boil. Once the water is boiling add a good pinch of salt. (Always salt water after it boils, the salt slows down the boiling process). Once the potatoes are tender, drain well. Mash. In school we put them through a potato ricer but if you do not have this you can mash them by hand or with an electric mixer. The end goal is to have absolutely no lumps. Set the potatoes aside and keep warm under foil.

Make the Choux Pastry: 
Put the 250ml of water in a small pot with the butter and bring to a boil. While this is coming to a boil, break the eggs into a bowl and beat them with a fork. Remove the boiling butter water from the heat and add a pinch of salt. Then slowly add the 130g of flour to the water, incorporating it with a plastic or wooden spoon until it forms a smooth mixture. Once smooth put this mixture back on medium heat and continue stirring with a spoon, drying the dough out. Do this for no more than 3 minutes and be careful not to burn the bottom of the pan or dough. It should start to form a small ball. Take off the heat and transfer the dough to a cold or room temperature bowl. Add the eggs to the dough little by little incorporating with a spoon. Once this mixture is formed and smooth add the potatoes. Mix the dough and potatoes together.

At this point in school we put the potatoes into a pastry bag and pipe onto a baking sheet with parchment paper to form little balls. Then we cut the parchment and add each ball to the hot oil.

But, if you're at home and don't mind getting a little messy you can just form the balls yourself with your hands or an ice cream scoop. They should be about the size of a doughnut hole.

I also doubt many of you have a deep fryer in your homes and if you do.. I'm envious. For those of you who don't, just make one yourselves. Take a deep pot and fill it at least 2.5 inches deep with a neutral oil. Bring that oil to 180C or 356F. And fry away!

These little potato balls take about 5 minutes to fry up. Don't crowd your fryer, do about 5 at at time. Once you remove them, sprinkle with a little salt. (I got in trouble for doing this at school but they need that salt, I promise). And voilá! They are so delicious and if you take the time to make them you will not be disappointed!

Yesterday we had the day off of school and finally made it to Normandy but that's an entire post in itself so you'll just have to wait!

Food is our common ground, a universal experience. - James Beard

xoxo, alex

February 22, 2011

mish mosh

As you may or may not have noticed, I changed my blog. I decided it needed a little color... kind of like Paris right now. Maybe I'll inspire the sun to come out here. Or not.

Last week was very busy with a lot of class. We made the following:

Blanquette de Veau a L'ancienne avec Riz Pilaf
(Traditional Veal Stew with Rice Pilaf)

Tournedos Grillés sauce Béarnaise, Pommes Pont-Neuf
(Grilled Tournedos with Béarnaise sauce, potatoes "Pont Neuf")

Côtes de Veau Grand-Mére
(Sautéed Veal Chops, "Grand-Mére"-style Garnish (Glazed onions, mushrooms and lardons)

Canette Rôtie aux Navets
(Roast Duckling with Turnips)

I kept forgetting my camera so I don't have any pictures. Sorry! I promise this week I'll take a lot. 

This weekend was really fun. Adam had a going away party Friday night for his work friend, Amina. We were suppose to bring Vin and Tapas so I used the Roast Duckling we made at school and turned it into lettuce wraps. It was a big hit and really easy to do so I'm going to share it with you. 

Roast Duckling Lettuce Wraps with 'Special Sauce'

Principal Ingredients
1 Roasted Duck, taken off the bone and Shredded

Vegetables/Filling
1 head of butter lettuce, leafs separated
1 red bell pepper, sliced thinly into strips
1 cucumber, sliced thinly into strips
1 bunch of scallions, sliced
1 carrot, sliced thinly into strips
1 package of rice noodles, lightly fried in vegetable oil

Special Sauce
2 cups of water
4 tbl of sugar
2 tbl soy sauce
2 tbl ketchup
1/2 lemon, juiced
1 tbl hot mustard
1 tbl red chili paste
1 clove garlic, diced

You can substitute chicken or really any kind of meat for the duck or omit it entirely if you wish. Also, I found the sauce recipe online and it had about 5 other ingredients in it that I couldn't find at the store here in Paris but I loved how it turned out anyway so I'm giving you my version. Mix all the ingredients together in a sauce pan and slowly bring to a simmer to let all the flavors infuse. The measurements are mostly to taste so if you like it more spicy, obviously add more hot mustard and chili paste or vise versa for less. At the end if your sauce seems too spicy, salty or sugary feel free to add a little more water to mellow it out. 

To assemble the duck wraps take a piece of lettuce, layer it with one of each vegetable, a few pieces of duck and fold, then dip in the sauce and stuff in your mouth! It's as easy as that. 

What I love about these is you can serve them already wrapped up or lay everything out on a tray and let people do it themselves. 

I wanna give you an idea of what they are suppose to look like in the end so here's some pictures I found on the internet. Hope this helps!



Saturday I met up with Ali and her two friends who were in town; Alex and Nina. We had coffee and a early dinner in the 14th e. It was pouring down rain and pretty cold but kind of beautiful. And we sat outside at this café that had blankets for us which was precious. Then we went next door and got crepes. As we were waiting for the man to finish our crepes, Ali struck up a conversation with the man at the bar. He just happened to be a huge foodie who sells innovative kitchen equipment to famous Chef's and restaurants all over the world. He was having dinner with Thomas Keller that night. We tried to get the invite.. we were unsuccessful. But, we did get his phone number, a list of his favorite restaurants in Paris, and an invite to the Omnivore Food Festival in Normandy that is taking place Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. We are going tomorrow and I am so excited. I'll be sure to let you know how it goes.




Luigi made hot chocolate tonight. Jealous that I live with a pastry Chef in the making? I know. 

In France, cooking is a serious art form and a national sport. - Julia Child

xoxo, alex



February 16, 2011

anthony est parisian

I just created an amazing blog post that took me 2 hours and google deleted it. I'm on the verge of tears so this probably won't be that enthusastic and not nearly as amazing as it would have been if the real one would have been posted. Blame google blogger.

This week was pretty eventful; Anthony came to visit, class soirée, and beef week at school.

School Pictures
Slice of bone marrow.. way better than butter on steak.




Hard and soft boiled eggs.

Fried Shrimp and Tartare Sauce



DEEP FRIED EGGS... yum!

Cheese Soufflé 


How to order Arabic food in French

Ali, Elana, Dani and I went to an amazing authentic Arabic restaurant where we had no idea what/how to order. Dani told them in Arabic to just bring us whatever they wanted. They proceeded to have us go pick out meat from a coolor that had been put on sticks like kababs and then brought us amazing side dishes like couscous, meat soups, bread, hot peppers, and other things that I'm still not sure what they were. The locals were even helping us figure out how to eat it all. This is my favorite way to eat. 












LCB Soirée

We had our class party on Wednesday night, the same night Anthony arrived. I took him as my date. We had a great time. It was at Alcazar, a club in Paris and LCB rented out the downstairs for us. They provided all you can drink beer and wine from 9pm til 2am. This only lasted about half the time because apparently Chef's in training are binge drinkers and we ran out. It was overall a really great time and it was fun to see the whole school out of uniform and in a different scene. 






Anthony came to Paris... and ate McDonald's

Anthony was here all week! It was so much fun. Like I said, he came with me to the class party and ended up drinking more than he could handle. He locked himself in the bathroom at his hotel and was hungover the next day til 3pm. I feel semi-responsible for this but it's so funny to think about now. He's going to kill me for putting that information on the internet! That night at the party I lost my cell phone.. Surprise, surprise. So, the next day Anthony and I couldn't get a hold of each other. I left a note at this hotel and eventually we reconnected. That night after his throwing up and dehydration he needed some good food so I took him to L'As du Falafel and he loved it. Here's some reviews on it: http://www.virtualtourist.com/travel/Europe/France/Ile_de_France/Paris-99080/Restaurants-Paris-LAs_du_Falafel-R-2.html

Friday Anthony went to class with me in the morning and then we ate brunch at Coco & Co. which is a precious little place that specializes in eggs. After I took him to Les Halles and Delherin, the culinary supply store. He loved it. Then I had to venture back to class. It was such a beautiful day so Anthony went sight seeing and walked to Notre Dame. He said he had a lovely afternoon. That night we went to the Tour Eiffel and got nutella bananna crepes and sat by the Siene. It was a good evening. 





The next day Anthony went to Sacre Coeur while I was in class and then I showed him the Arc de Triomphe and the Champs Élyseés. We had a very Parisian lunch on the Champs and then walked to the Tuileries Garden and the Louvre. That night we met my friends for dinner and went to club Rex. I've never been to a club in Paris so it was a first for both of us. It was really expensive but we had a great time. It was filled with lots of beautiful Parisians and dancing. We stayed until 4am and then had the worst time ever getting a cab home. 


Sunday we met Adam at the Bastille market and bought lots of fresh things to make for dinner at his place. It was fun trying to speak french and figure out how to tell them we wanted a half kilo of something. Afterwards we dropped the food off at Adam's and had a great brunch at a place near his apartment. Then we vegged out for a while and started cooking dinner around 8pm. We had a lot of fun in his small kitchen and made a great pasta. Adam's friends Sacha and Sara came over to eat with us and we spoke a lot of French/English all night. Sacha's my first real French friend and he promised me he'd only speak to me in French to help me learn. I love this! 






















Midnight rolled around and we had to leave to make it to the metro before it closed. Anthony and I had to say our goodbyes here because he had an early flight and I had 8am class. I am so glad he got to come to Paris and I could share a little piece of my experience with him. We made great memories and I can't wait for more visitors!


If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world. 
- J. R. R. Tolkien




XOXO, alex.