12 March 2021

Winter 2021 foods

As I wrote yesterday, for some reason I nearly completely stopped posting about food and cooking over the past year — at least as compared to all the food posts I used to do. Easing my way back into that habit, today I'm posting some photos of foods and dishes we've cooked since the beginning of January.

For example, here's a Thai curry made with red curry paste, onions, garlic, bell pepper, chicken, and broccoli. It was spicy hot and temperature hot, which is the kind of food you need and want when it's cold and damp outside. We ate it over Asian wheat noodles.


Another good wintertime dish to make and eat is called a tartiflette. It originated in the Savoy area of the French Alps, and is made with potatoes and a local cheese called Reblochon. Pre-cook the potatoes in a steamer, cut them into cubes or slices, and lightly brown them in a little bit of butter. Arrange them in a baking dish with some smoked bacon lardons, spoon on some cream (crème fraîche in France), and pour on some white wine. Cut the Reblochon cheese into two disks and lay those cut-side down (crust side up) on top of the potatoes. Bake it in a hot oven until browned. Don't let it dry out.


A French/North African dish for winter is called couscous. (It's also good in summer because it's so spicy.) I know a lot of Americans who eat couscous "grain" as a breakfast cereal — it's not actually a grain but a form of micro-pasta. The best way to serve and eat couscous is with a spicy broth in which you cook vegetables — green beans, carrots, eggplant, zucchini, turnips, onions, tomatoes, etc. — and meats including chicken, lamb, and spicy merguez beef and lamb sausages.




Finally, another wintertime treat for us is sauerkraut (choucroute), which is cabbage that has been fermented in brine. Some say it was first made and served in the Alsace region in eastern France. If you can buy it fresh, as we can here, it's better than the sauerkraut you get in cans or jars. Either way, rinse the sauerkraut well and cook it with some lardons, white wine, carrots, and juniper berries. It needs slow, low-temperature cooking.






Choucroute is usually served with steamed potatoes and smoked meats, including sausages. In February, I cooked a kilo of 'kraut and we ate it that way a couple of times. I froze the remaining 'kraut for later.



Then I had a thought: I've heard about a dish called choucroute de la mer ('kraut with seafood) for years but never made or even tried it. Smoked or salt-cured pork goes well with fish or clams, for example — my mother used to bakeflounder with slices of bacon on top, and there's usually bacon in clam chowder. Our choucroute de la mer was made with poached fish filets and shrimp... and steamed potatoes of course.

20 comments:

  1. Hard to tell which I'll order first. Probably choucroute because of my Alsatian ancestry. But all the others come close seconds. And all look appetizing and delicious thanks to the great photos.

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    1. The little Sony camera takes really good pictures of this kind.

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  2. Miam, miam! Tartiflette is my first choice, followed by the seafood, then any of the others will be fine. We needed the trip photos to help our wanderlust durning the pandemic. Thank you for it all.

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    1. It's hard to see the choucroute under the fish, shrimp, and potatoes, but it was there, and good.

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  3. Oh, those all look so delicious!

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    1. Do you remember eating couscous or sauerkraut when we were all in Paris in the early '80s? I learned to really enjoy choucroute when I spent a year (1979-80) teaching in Metz, in the Lorraine. I definitely remember couscous from a little restaurant over near Montparnasse in the late 70s and early 80s.

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  4. Thank you. I needed to renew my menus and I count on you.

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  5. I'm guessing fresh choucroute has less of that pickled taste that comes with the jar. I've always loved it, even as a child. It all looks good!

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    1. The fresh choucroute doesn't have the musty, musky smell of sauerkraut out of cans or jars. I'm luky to be able to buy it here for about 1 euro per kilo.

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  6. Everything looks delicious! I think I just gained five pounds reading this post.

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    1. Boil leeks in water and just drink the broth. A French woman wrote a book about how that diet kept her from gaining weight.

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  7. What a great post. Everything looks delicious and is so beautifully presented here.

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  8. Choucroute - I love it! And I cooked some apple sausage a couple of days ago with cooked potatoes and asparagus. I was thinking I should buy some cabbage (special prices just before St. Patrick's Day!) to have with my leftover sausage next week! From your photos, I will cook some carrots along side it! When do you add the carrots, Ken?
    I haven't repeated am African Couscous recipe with chicken that I took to one of my french class's soirées! I will need to find that recipe!
    Merci pour les suggestions!

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    1. Mary, there's at least one recipe for North African couscous on my blog — here's a link. It's not my recipe, but one that a friend brought back from Algeria when she spent a summer there in the 1970s. Her Algerian friend's mother taught her how to make couscous.

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    2. I put the carrot or carrots in the sauerkraut at the beginning. If they look like they're getting too cooked, I take them out and then re-heat them in the 'kraut just before serving.

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  9. Oh - My grandmother's family was from Alsace!

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  10. Oh the food, the good french food.
    I hope by summer we can travel freely again.
    Paris on my list.

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    1. I hope so too. I miss my annual trips to the U.S., not to mention our road trips around different parts of France.

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