Category Archives: French Fridays with Dorie
French Fridays with Friday: Basque Potato Tortilla
Another week of more snow. This week, two storms were forecast: a “smaller” storm bringing 6 to 8 inches on Tuesday to be followed by a whopper storm on Wednesday bringing another foot. This was on top of 61.5 inches that have already fallen. Fortunately, the smaller storm brought the bulk of what we got this time, about 8 inches. The Wednesday storm was relatively minor, though very wet.
I ended up working from home both days. I live close enough to the office to go in, but the rest of my team planned to work from home, so I stayed put. While I prefer working face-to-face with people, with today’s technology (conference calls, Live Meetings, instant messaging, and email), it’s amazing how productive we can be remotely.
When I work from home, I always think I’ll be able to do my work and also get some other things done, like doing a few loads of laundry or baking a loaf of bread. It never happens. I get my work done, and because I’m already home, it is sometimes harder to tear myself away.
The potato tortilla was perfect hearty fare for a snowy day. Being at home all day, I thought I’d get a head start on dinner. Well, it didn’t happen. But no worries. This was a fine weeknight recipe.
I love this kind of recipe. I love eggs, and eggs for dinner is a treat. The tortilla is a Spanish (or Basque) frittata: baked scrambled eggs with veggies, in this case, potatoes and onions. I just made the basic recipe, with no variations or embellishments. I thought I’d go rustic, so I didn’t bother to peel the potatoes. It was DELICIOUS. I’ll definitely try this with some of the other variations.
I had a last minute scare when I flipped the tortilla out of the skillet, and not only did the very middle stick to the pan, but it was a very underdone in the center. It was “just us” for dinner, so there was no one to impress. I just pieced it back together, and it looked fine. I was going to take a picture of the crater in the tortilla, but Howard, my ever-supportive husband, said not to, just to take the picture with the center filled back in. What do you think?
I served this warm with a salad and roasted-pepper and almond biscuits. It was great comfort food in the midst of the snowiest winter I can ever remember.
I’m sure the other bloggers from French Fridays with Dorie have creative twists on this recipe! Check out their links at French Fridays with Dorie. We don’t post the recipes for this cooking group, but if you’re tempted, buy the book, Dorie Greenspan’s Around My French Table and consider joining the cooking fun.
French Fridays with Dorie: chicken b’stilla
Another week, another recipe for French Fridays with Dorie. So far in January, the two recipes I made earlier this month were a little disappointing. I was really excited about this week’s recipe, Chicken B’stilla – and it met all my expectations.
B’stilla is a Moroccan chicken pie, wrapped in fillo dough and sprinkled with sugar. I had this dish once before, at a Moroccan restaurant in Philadelphia, where this was just one course in a multi-course meal we ate lounging on pillow-laden couches around a low table. I’ve seen recipes for it, but I never had the occasion or reason to try it at home.
I made this chicken pie over the weekend, and I think it would be too involved to make on a weeknight. I loved the lovely fragrance as the chicken simmered with the warm spices. The dish is a little unusual. Between the honey in the sauce and the cinnamon and sugar sprinkled on top of the pastry, it is a very sweet though soundly savory dish. It is definitely something different, but I liked it.
The chicken from Chestnut Farms comes as whole legs, so instead of 8 thighs, I used 4 whole legs, that I cut into separate legs and thighs. It was all dark meat that gets shredded in the end, so I don’t think this adjustment made any difference at all.
The recipe called for a 9-inch cake pan at least 2 inches high. Mine was only 1½ inches. I wasn’t sure if it would be deep enough. If it wasn’t, I’d be in trouble. I have a 9-inch springform pan which was 3 inches deep, so I used it instead. It worked out perfectly. It also was very easy to free the pie from the pan. All I had to do was unhinge!
This pie is wrapped in fillo dough, which I haven’t worked with in decades. It didn’t make me nervous because I’ve had good results before. Unfortunately, on this count, the grocery store failed me. It wasn’t that I couldn’t find fillo dough. They carried it. The issue was that, despite following all warnings and instructions about keeping the defrosted dough covered so it would stay moist, the fillo was already dried out when I unrolled it. Something went awry in their storage process.
I dealt with it. I did learn that, for me, it was easier to lay the sheets in the pan BEFORE brushing them with butter than to brush them first and THEN try to move them. I started out brush and moving, but it was disastrous. This could have been because the dough was already slightly crumbling. I ended up using two extra sheets on the top and the bottom to bandage the cracks. It all worked out in the end.
I loved the moist filling. The chicken was tender, and the honey sauce added to the texture. It reminded me a little big of pulled chicken from a BBQ restaurant, but with a completely different sauce and no smoky flavor. I enjoyed the contrast between the filling and the crispy pastry and the crunchy almonds. It was delicious. Dorie said this needed no accompaniments, though I served a green salad with vinaigrette to which I added a teaspoon of Penzey’s Turkish Seasoning.
I hadn’t planned ahead, but I should have invited friends over to share. We did get to enjoy the leftovers. It reheated better in the oven (for dinner at home) than the microwave (for lunch at work), but it still tasted good either way.
My box of fillo came with two sealed packets, and I defrosted one, which had about 20 sheets. This recipe only called for 8 sheets, and I don’t like to waste. I ended up finding a recipe for baklava in Small-Batch Baking by Debby Maugans Nakos. The recipe used 7 sheets to make a mini-baklava, in a loaf pan, making 8 pieces. There was just enough to compliment the b’stilla the first night and with the leftovers. The syrup for this recipe had a strong orange flavor which I’ll tone down when I make it again. It was excellent.
If you’d like to see how the chicken b’stilla worked out for other bloggers, check out their links at French Fridays with Dorie. If you like what you see, you can buy yourself the book and join our cooking group.


