Monthly Archives: April 2011

I Love a Parade

Yesterday was Patriot’s Day in Lexington, Massachusetts. This day commemorates the start of the American Revolution in 1775. This is a day on which my town shines. There is a full weekend of events including reenactments, pancake breakfasts, concerts, and a good old-fashioned parade.

Monday was a state holiday, but I don’t think I’ve ever worked anywhere that gives the day off. Sometimes I take it as a personal holiday, as I did this year. Mostly, I took advantage of the day to putter. But the main event for me was the parade. It’s a real olde-timey parade with local dignitaries riding in convertibles, floats, marching bands, baton twirlers, Shriner clowns on foot and in go-carts, Clydesdales, and local organizations showing their pride. Being a celebration of history, there are many Minuteman reenactors and some from the Civil War as well. Bands come from far and wide. I saw school marching bands from Pennsylvania and Wisconsin in addition from our own towns’.

LexFarm Peas in the Pod (me in front)

Usually, I’m a parade spectator, but this year, I marched with in the parade as part of the group from LexFarm, or the Lexington Community Farm Coalition. LexFarm is a local grassroots organization working to establish a community farm here in Lexington. To increase awareness and promote their mission, a contingent of supporters carried, or in my case, wore, “absurdly large vegetables” as we followed the parade route about 3 miles from East Lexington to Hastings Park. We walked for about an hour, and it was a blast. I met some new and interesting people, enthusiastic about a cause I agree with. I’m the one in the green-covered bicycle helmet as the front pea in the pod.

On my way to the parade start, I made one other serendipitous discovery. I noticed a new storefront on Mass Ave in East Lexington, just past Wilson Farm, heading to the center. Lately, I have been obsessed with all things French, demonstrated by my participation in French Fridays with Dorie and a pile of “I moved to France” memoirs next to my bed. It was inevitable that the sign for Macaron Sweeterie would catch my eye. The shop actually opens today, Tuesday, but yesterday, they were offering preview samples of their macarons and gelato. Macarons, not to be confused with the coconut-laden macaroons, are a French delicacy. These light and whimsically-colored almond sandwich cookies come in a wide variety of flavors. I tried the Honey Lavender and Wedding Almond. I can’t wait to go back for more. What a delightful find! I wish them bonne chance in this new endeavor!

Patriot’s Day ended with a Passover seder. We were invited to join the family of some friends to share their holiday meal. If you don’t know, Passover is an eight-day long festival to commemorate the freeing of Israelites after decades in slavery to Egyptian pharaohs. On the first two nights, the story of Exodus is retold before and after the meal. Everyone at the table participates in reading a part of the story. Passover is also the holiday where you don’t eat bread or other leavened grains to remember that when the Israelites fled Egypt, they left without having time for their daily bread to rise. You eat matzah, flat unleavened bread, instead.

I offered to bring a dessert and decided to try something new. This almond-citrus torte was airy and moist. Most of its substance came from ground almonds, with just a little bit of matzo meal. It was a hit. I think I would make this any time of year, maybe using regular flour instead of matzo meal. The recipe suggested serving a strawberry sauce on the side. I did make the strawberry sauce (which looked like strawberry ketchup), but I preferred the cake plain. It would also be nice sprinkled with confectioners’ sugar.

Almond-Citrus Torte
Adapted from this recipe from Epicurious

4 Tbsp unsalted matzo meal, divided
2 cups almond meal (I get this at Trader Joes, but you can finely grind almonds in the food processor, if you can’t find this)
1 cup sugar, divided
6 large eggs, separated
2 Tbsp fresh lemon juice
1 Tbsp orange juice
Finely grated zest of one lemon
6 Tbsp olive oil (not extra virgin), plus more for brushing pan
½ tsp salt
½ cup sliced almonds

Preheat the oven to 350F. Brush a 10-inch springform pan with oil. Line the bottom with parchment paper round. Brush paper with oil. Place 2 Tbsp matzo meal in the pan and shake to coat. Tap out excess.

Whisk together the remaining 2 Tbsp matzo meal, almond meal, and 1/3 cup sugar in a medium bowl. Place egg yolks in a large bowl and egg whites in another large bowl. Add 1/3 cup sugar to the egg yolks. Using an electric mixer, beat the yolk mixture until it is thick and fluffy and pale yellow, about 4 minutes. Beat in 6 Tbsp olive oil, then add in lemon and orange juice and lemon zest. Mix in the dry ingredients. Wash and dry the beaters.

Add salt to the egg whites. Using clean, dry beaters, beat egg whites until soft peaks form. Gradually add the final 1/3 cup sugar and beat until stiff but not dry. Stir one quarter of the egg whites into the yolk mixture to lighten it. Gently fold in remaining egg whites, in three additions, until well combined. Transfer the batter to the prepared pan. Sprinkle almonds over the top.

Bake cake until gold brown and a tester comes out clean, about 45 minutes. Place pan on rack and cool completely in the pan. Once cooled, run a flat blade around the edge of the cake to loosen. Release pan sides and remove. Gently turn the cake onto a plate to remove the pan bottom, peeling off the parchment paper. Then, gently flip the cake back onto a serving plate. Optionally, sprinkle with confectioners’ sugar. (Note you can make kosher for Passover confectioners sugar by grinding together 1/3 cup granulated sugar with ½ teaspoon potato starch in a spice or coffee grinder until powdery.)

Serve plain or with fresh fruit on the side.

French Fridays with Dorie: Éclairs

This was a crazy week for me. My dear husband Howard was out of town, and I had a lot of social plans in the evenings. We usually share dog duty, with him doing the lion’s share of walking, but with him gone, I had the added tasks of an extra hour to hour and a half of walking each day (yes, my dog Bella is completely spoiled). I didn’t get around to making the éclairs last weekend, so it was a stretch to try this recipe this week.

As I mentioned last week, I approached this week’s recipe for French Fridays with Dorie with trepidation. I enjoy baking, yet other than my mastery of pastry crust, I would consider the rest of my baking skills to be basic. I tend to choose recipes that are served in the baking pan, or at least don’t require much decoration or final steps. My go-to desserts tend to be fruit tarts, fruit crisps, or simple cakes that are baked in an easy-release spring-form pan or can be served from the pan with a sprinkle of confectioners’ sugar. I’m just not into fussy desserts.

But, I do love a challenge, and am up for trying almost anything (as long as it doesn’t involve coconut). The Dorie recipe for this week is Éclairs, vanilla, chocolate, or whatever variation you fancy. Several components (cream puff shells, pastry cream, and a glaze) are prepared and then assembled for the final product.

I started with the pastry cream, which is like a very thick pudding. Because of my intimidation level with this recipe, I went with the basic vanilla recipe in the book. I didn’t branch out with chocolate or coffee flavoring or adding some kind of liqueur. The pastry cream was a snap to make. I was surprised at how thick it got (maybe a little too thick) and how quickly it happened. I was a little nervous after I tempered the egg yolks and then added the rest of the hot milk mixture because I got a strong whiff of scrambled eggs. But all went well, the cream mixture was smooth and thick and not at all curdled. I made this two nights ahead, so made the recommended air-tight seal with plastic wrap on the surface of the cream, and stashed it in the fridge.

My only previous experience with cream puff dough was the inaugural Dorie recipe for Gougères. That went successfully, so I knew I could make the dough no problem. Like the pastry cream, the pâte à choux wasn’t hard to make. It’s a warm dough, mixed on the stovetop before beating in the eggs with a standing mixer. It smelled great as it came together.

Unlike the gougères, which were spooned onto the baking sheet, these were supposed to be piped. The only thing I’d ever piped before were icing squiggles. This seemed much more challenging. Also, I didn’t have the appropriate large tip. This week, I had no free time to go in search of one (not having planned ahead), but I was happy to read Dorie’s response to a question on the FFwD website saying that a ziplock bag with the corner cut off would work just fine. I have plenty of ziplock bags. I played around with a junk mail envelope to figure out the right amount of corner to cut off to get a 2/3-inch opening (same as the ideal large piping tip). It was way more than I expected.

So with my fragrant warm pâte à choux and my ziplock bag (I used a quart size bag for a half recipe of dough), I did my best to pipe out éclairs. They looked OK, a little pasty when raw, but that’s expected. I was trying to break the recipe down into little tasks, and I knew that I was going to bake them the next morning, but I wasn’t sure whether I could just chill the piped out dough in the refrigerator. I ended up putting it in the freezer for overnight because there were instructions for freezing the éclairs when making in advance.

This morning, I put the frozen éclairs (still on their parchment) into the preheated oven. I did use a room temperature sheet because I thought the bake time would be thrown off with a freezing cold baking sheet. After 10 minutes, I turned the baking sheet around, but after 20 minutes (giving a few extra minutes because they were frozen), the éclairs were unevenly browned. A few were golden, or part golden, but some still looked pale. I didn’t want to burn them, so after another 3 minutes, I pulled them out of the oven.

I think I should have cooked them longer so they were all golden. The inside of most of the éclairs was denser than I should have been. I think they should have been more airy and light.

My grand plan had been to bring the éclairs to work as a treat for my team. The morning didn’t go as planned, and I really didn’t have time for the cooling or final assembly. The recipe wasn’t clear about whether the baked pastry could be made ahead. I took my chances and left them on the counter for the day. I figured the worst that might happen was for them to get a little stale. They fared the day just fine.

Final assembly, more piping of pastry cream onto split éclairs, followed by glazing. The pastry cream was really, really thick. Instructions said to whisk it to lighten it up. The whisk just sliced the pastry. I ended up transferring the pastry cream (it stayed in one piece) into another ziplock bag and massaging it for a minute or so to try to loosen it up. It worked well enough that I could squeeze the pastry cream from the bag onto the bottom halves of the éclair shells. It was probably a little thicker than it was meant to be.

I was torn between the simple white glaze and the classic chocolate glaze, but went with the simple white glaze and sprinkled some chocolate jimmies on some for variety.

Final results? Not as intimidating to execute as to read about on the page.
When the steps were broken down, and spread across a couple of evenings, it wasn’t even a lot of work. It’s nice to know that I could easily make a bakery treat at home. Unfortunately, a number of things went wrong so my creation was far from perfect. It tasted good, but could have been better with a lighter (and maybe flavored) pastry cream, more properly cooked éclair shells, and a chocolate glaze. Of course, this is another dessert that isn’t one I can share with my husband. As I’ve mentioned, he has strong likes and dislikes. Eclairs fall in the dislike column, but that didn’t stop me from trying them out. I can imagine that varying the flavor of the filling opens up so many possibilities, though it might be a while before I try this again.

Speaking of possibilities, I am certain that the creative bloggers from French Fridays with Dorie have come up with a myriad of variations. Check out their links for this week’s recipe here. As always, you can buy a copy of Dorie Greenspan’s Around My French Table for the recipes, and I encourage you to join us yourself. I’ve been having lots of fun.