The French Menu Cookbook: The Food and Wine of France - Season by Delicious Season. Richard Olney. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Richard Olney
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Кулинария
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007423057
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kitchen, but in this refrigerated age perhaps no longer indispensable.

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      A classic pastry-cook’s ROLLING PIN, without handles, which is longer and thinner than the standard American type and, once one is accustomed to it, more convenient.

      SALAD BASKET, GRATERS for cheese, nutmeg, etc., BRUSHES for buttering, basting, brushing pastry with egg, etc., SKEWERS, LADLES, LONG-HANDLED FORKS, COFFEE-GRINDER, PEPPER GRINDERS, and lots of TOWELS and PAPER TOWELS.

      ELECTRIC MIXERS and BLENDERS are certainly useful and energy-saving, but they cannot, as many people believe, do everything, and should be used only if the quality of the preparation will in no way suffer as a result.

       Shopping Sources

      With the ever-increasing popularity of French cuisine in the United States, it is possible to buy imported cooking equipment much more widely than ever before. Many department stores now carry a good stock of French utensils, as do specialty shops in large metropolitan centers. Bazar Français, 666 Avenue of the Americas, New York IOOIO, is one such specialty shop; it has an excellent catalogue and will ship mail orders to any part of the country.

      The following suggestions include also some special addresses for those who would like to order from France, or shop there when traveling.

      FRESH TRUFFLES

      Mr. Paul A. Urbani

      Tel.: 609-394-5851

      130 Graf Avenue

      P.O. Box 2054

      Trenton, New Jersey 08607

      Mr. Urbani will airmail fresh truffles to any place in the United States. The season for white truffles is from September through October, and for black truffles from December through February.

      The supply differs greatly from one year to another and the prices differ accordingly. Truffles are always expensive.

      COPPERWARE AND OTHER KITCHEN EQUIPMENT

      E. Dehillerin

      18-20 rue Coquillière

      Paris, 1er

      This famous Paris restaurant-supply house (metal and wood—no earthenware, porcelain or glass) will send its catalogue on request. It contains no prices, but, by comparison with those in America, they are astonishingly low. Copper utensils are sold by weight and not by the piece.

      Tourists in Paris should not overlook a trip to Dehillerin. It is a living museum of marvelous and useful objects. Attractive and decorative brass-handled copperware is displayed on the ground floor. Heavy utilitarian iron-handled copper utensils are all in the basement.

      Jacquotot

      77 rue Damesme

      Paris, 13ème

      Another kitchen-supply firm, particularly interesting for a wide choice of copper utensils. They have no catalogue—which is perhaps as well—since prices fluctuate constantly, so the address is of interest essentially to those readers who may be visiting Paris. They will ship, and those buyers whose addresses are outside of France are spared the recent heavy taxes (19 percent) imposed by the French government. They go out of their way to be helpful and to please the client in any way possible, which is not always the case with firms accustomed to dealing only with professionals.

      Vilmorin-Andrieux

      4, Quai de la Mégisserie

      Paris, 1er

      Vilmorin will furnish a catalogue on request. Many seeds that are difficult to obtain in America are listed. Among those particularly useful in a kitchen garden are:

      FIELD SALADS

Rocket (roquette) Purslane (pourpier)
Lamb’s lettuce (mâche)—7 varieties Mixed wild salads (mesclun)
Cultivated dandelion (pissenlit) Garden cress (cresson du jardin)

      HERBS

      Basil (basilic)—the large-leafed variety is less “peppery” and more delicate in flavor

      Chervil (cerfeuil)

      Common or Italian parsley (persil commun), finer of flavor than the curly variety

      Burnet (pimprenelle)

      Angelica (angélique)

      Hyssop (hysope)

      Oregano (marjolaine)

      Savory (sarriette)—annual and perennial are both listed; the latter is finer

      MISCELLANEOUS

      Sorrel (oseille)—3 varieties

      Leeks (poireaux)—11 varieties

      Broad beans (fèves)—3 varieties

      Gray shallots (échalotes ordinaires)—bulbs

      Wild strawberries (fraisiers de quatre-saisons)

      To import broad-bean seeds or shallot bulbs, one must fill out a form (furnished either by Vilmorin-Andrieux or by the United States Department of Agriculture at the address given below) to be sent to the following address (requesting, at the same time, special mailing labels to be enclosed, along with the permit number, in the order):

      Permit Section, Plant Importation Branch

      Plant Quarantine Division

      209 River Street

      Hoboken, New Jersey

      None of the other seeds listed above require a formal importation permit.

      TURNSPITS AND ACCESSORIES

      Ets. Giraudon

      144, Avenue Paul Vaillant Couturier

      Sainte-Geneviève des Bois 91

      France

      This old-fashioned firm deals only in turnspits, grills and related material. Although they specialize in made-to-order installations, they also stock a number of standard articles. They willingly ship to the United States and will furnish complete documentation on request.

      The type of small portable turnspit likely to interest most readers exists in 3 electric models: one capable of turning to approximately 8 pounds (about $50); one up to 16 pounds (about $54); one up to 30 pounds—strong enough to turn a suckling pig or milk lamb (about $72). A single clockwork model exists (10-pound strength, at about $76). Each includes a single standard spit. A number of others are available. The broche-filet (a cagelike spit that avoids piercing) comes to about $10. An asbestos construction (parefeu) designed to protect the mechanism from the direct flame costs about $4.

      Their standard dripping pans are constructed of thin tinned sheet metal and are totally impractical. In my kitchen I have substituted a huge skillet, which I prop at a slight tilt, permitting the juices to collect at the far side from the fire. Giraudon manufactures stainless steel dripping pans, but