Sunday, June 25, 2006

Satan Gave Me a Taco and it Made Me Kind of Sick



I'm stumbling home, battered from the excesses of food and drink after a weekend with Sara and David in Rhinebeck. The following menu speaks for itself.

Anti-pasti Plate
assorted cheeses, watercrackers, artisan bread, proscuitto, red pepper - kalamata tapenade

Asparagus Proscuitto Bundles
baked crispy and sprinkled with parmesan cheese

Mixed Green Salad
spicy anchovy-dijon vinaigrette made with champagne-shallot reduction

Oyster Mushroom - Chevre Ravioli
Served with a garlic brown-butter sauce

Champagne Scallops
Pan-seared with an orange black-pepper sauce

Berries and Cream
minty mascerated berries with hagen-daas vanilla ice cream


The ravioli was amazing but the scallops were the best. By the time we got around to the scallops we were so drunk we didn't know what garlic was going into what and what not; so the preparation is very simple but effective. If you get a good sear on the scallops the fond with give the sauce a beautiful deep orangish-brown color. You could make it more classical by adding a small amount of brown veal stock and shallots after the chamapagne is reduced.

Champagne Scallops

1# large sea scallops
olive oil for sauteeing
salt and corse ground black pepper
1 1/2 c. brut champagne
juice from 1/2 a large orange

Heat the oil over medium-high heat. Season the scallops and sear on both sides to a deep golden brown. Deglaze with the champagne and reduce to a medium nappe. Check for seasoning, strain if solids remain. Finish with the black pepper and orange juice. Serve immediately.

Oyster Mushroom- Chevre filling

4 oz cultivated mushrooms (we used oyster and cremini)
4 oz chevre
1/4c. brut champagne or dry sherry
2 large cloves garlic
2 Tbs minced white onion
2 Tbs chopped parsley
2 1/2 egg yolks
salt and pepper
olive oil

Chop the mushrooms by hand to a small mince. Sweat the oil in a medium-large pan over low heat. Cook about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook another few minutes. Add the mushrooms and wine and cook until all the liquid is reduced down. Season with salt and pepper. Remove from heat and allow to cool. Combine the mushroom mix, chevre and egg yolks in a mixing bowl.
We used and herbed store-bought chevre so you might want to add more garlic and misc chopped herbs if using a plain chevre. We also used wonton wrappers from the grocery store, but obviously it would be better with fresh pasta. I would suggest adding the chevre in small amounts to desired consistency because it can over power other flavors. This would make a great duxelle, you could roll it up in a ballotine or use it for stuffed peppers or portobello mushrooms. As far as other pastas go it would probably be a little too intense for a manicotti but it would make a badass veggie lasagna with some tomato sauce. You could do an haute french thing and stuff it inside a boneless chicken wing and use it as a garnish. It's extremely delicious. You might consider omitting the egg yolks depending on the application.

No comments: