Category Archives: French Fridays with Dorie

french fridays with dorie: mussels and chorizo with or without pasta

After last’s week debacle with the Nutella tartine, this week’s selection for French Fridays with Dorie was a welcome change: mussels and chorizo with or without pasta.

Mussels are a long-time favorite at my house. I think they’re the easiest shellfish to prepare. No peeling, and if they don’t have a beard, they just need a quick scrubbing before they’re ready to go in the pot. Mussels are incredibly versatile. And they have a clean, fresh, oceany flavor.

Mussels can be farmed or wild. Whole Foods had wild mussels from Moosabec Mussels, located in Jonesport in Eastern Maine along a beautiful stretch of coastline between one of my favorite places on earth, Acadia National Park, and New Brunswick, Canada.

For this recipe, you start with a base of tomatoes, onions, garlic, white wine, and herbs (I used rosemary). Sliced chorizo gets added to the pot, to add a little bit of spice. The mussels go into the pot for a short steam, 3 to 5 minutes, and after which they pop open, begging to be eaten.

How to serve the cooked mussels? The name of the recipe offers two different options, with or without pasta. For Dinner #1, I served big bowls of mussels with warmed crusty bread to sop up the juices. The two of us ate about half the mussels for that first dinner. With the leftovers, my dear sous-chef/husband plucked the mussels out of their shells and stirred them into the tomato base left in the pot. For Dinner #2 (and Lunch #3), I cooked a box of linguine and tossed with the mussels in sauce.

Both ways were equally delicious. It would be hard to choose a favorite between them. This was a winner no matter how you look at it.

To see the other FFwD bloggers’ experience with this delicious recipe, check out their links here. As for the recipe, we’re asked not to share the recipes, so you’ll have to get your hands on a copy of Dorie Greenspan’s book.

french fridays with dorie: nutella tartine

This week’s recipe for French Fridays with Dorie is Nutella Tartine. A tartine is an open-faced sandwich, French-style. I think tartines are usually savory, but a nutella tartine is a typical after-school snack for French children.

For Dorie’s version, the main event is really orange marmalade spread on a thick slice of challah and then drizzled with nutella and sprinkled with some sea salt and chopped hazelnuts. The bread remains soft because it’s just toasted on one side, the spreading side.

The recipe was so simple, that it almost seemed like cheating. So, I thought it was a good opportunity to try out one of the recipes for homemade nutella that I’d seen. This was a good idea in theory, but when the melted chocolate cooled, it was no longer spreadable. I have to chip it out of the jar with an ice cream scoop. It gets soft and spreadable again when heated, but was not what I expected. I used bittersweet chocolate instead of milk chocolate because that’s what I prefer. I don’t know if that’s what made it harden up.

I think some of my husband Howard’s food quirks have rubbed off on me. I don’t really like chocolate mixed with fruit flavors. So the flavor combination of the orange marmalade with the chocolate-hazelnut drizzle didn’t work for me.

I had a whole loaf of challah and the jar of homemade nutella, so for round 2, I tried spreading the nutella on the bread and sprinkling with chopped nuts and salt. Time for true confessions: I don’t like peanut butter on bread. I like it on a spoon or on something wet, like celery or apples, but not on bread. I know, this post is supposed to be about nutella, but it matters. Nutella is chocolate-hazelnut spread. Sort of like peanut butter, but with hazelnuts instead plus chocolate. The conclusion, I don’t like nutella on bread either.

At the same time, I’ve always been fascinated by this European concoction. One Valentine’s Day, I used it to sandwich heart-shaped shortbread cookies together, but other than that I’ve never been able to figure out exactly how to use it on a more regular basis. Any suggestions for using up the rest of my jar of homemade (and hardened) nutella?

One more helpful tip I wanted to offer up this week. I’ve never had much luck getting the skin off of hazelnuts just by toasting and rubbing with a towel. I seem to get less than 25% of the skin off that way. I saw a different method on TV that works like magic. In a large pot, dissolve 3 tablespoons of baking soda in 2 cups of water, and bring the water to a boil. Add up to a cup of hazelnuts, and boil for 3 to 5 minutes. The mixture will bubble up and look disgusting. The water will turn black. It’s ready when you can run a nut under cold water and the skin comes off. Drain the nuts in a colander and run cold water over them to cool. Now, rub them in a towel. The skin will come right off. Just be sure to use a much bigger pot than you think. The mixture will really bubble, and you don’t want it to overflow. It’s a mess to clean up (I speak from experience).

Each Friday, I make a recipe from Dorie Greenspan’s book Around My French Table along with other bloggers. If you want to see their take on this recipe, check out the links at French Fridays with Dorie.