Margaret Costa's Four Seasons Cookery Book
By Margaret Costa and Delia Smith
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About this ebook
This volume brings the cycles of nature back to the kitchen. It is written for people who care about eating well by using fresh foods in season—and about feeding their families with good meals that are neither elaborate nor time-consuming.
Whether it’s cold soups for summer or Dutch Apple Squares for an autumn treat, this book offers an extensive collection of recipes organized by the seasons as well as by featured ingredients.
Margaret Costa
Delia Smith specializes in cooking.
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Margaret Costa's Four Seasons Cookery Book - Margaret Costa
SPRING
PANCAKES • EASTER TEAS • OMELETTES
FISH SOUPS • SCALLOPS • SALMON
PIGEONS • LAMB
NEW POTATOES • SORREL • ASPARAGUS
SALT, PEPPER AND MUSTARD
RHUBARB AND GREEN GOOSEBERRIES
PIECES OF CAKE • PART-TIME PRESERVES
COOKING WITH LIQUEURS
PANCAKES
‘There is a thing call’d wheaten flours, which the cookes do mingle with water, eggs, spices and other tragicall, magicall enchantments and then they put it by little into a frying pan of boiling suet, where it makes a confused dismall hissing, until at last by the skill of the cooke it is transformed into the form of a Flip-Jack, call’d a pancake, which ominous incantation the ignorant people do devour very greedilie.’
‘THE WATER POET’, 1620
Pancakes are really ridiculously easy to make, especially if you don’t use too large a pan and don’t fry them in fat. All you need is to have the pan really hot before you start and brush it well with oil or rub it with a piece of suet, just enough to make it look shiny all over. The batter itself should be thin – a very light cream that just coats the back of a wooden spoon. If it seems too thick or the first pancake seems too heavy, beat in a little cold water. (Thin pancakes like these are most easily made in a small pan; my own little black pan is less than seven inches [18 cm] across. I have had it ever since I can remember.)
But make the batter well beforehand if you can. As for the proportions – well, the standard batter calls for 4 oz (115 g) plain flour, ½ pint (300 ml) milk and 1 egg. My own favourite recipe is not absurdly more extravagant but it gives particularly tender, delicious and thin pancakes.
PANCAKE BATTER These are the quantities I use for it: 6 oz (175 g) plain flour sifted with a good pinch of salt and a desser tspoon (10 ml) of caster sugar, 2 large eggs and 1 or 2 egg yolks, and a scant ¾ pint (425 ml) milk or, for very crisp, light, delicate pancakes, milk-and-water. Add the liquid slowly to the flour and beat till the batter is covered with bubbles. (If they are to be served with sugar and lemon juice, stir into the batter a tablespoon [15 ml] of caster sugar and the finely grated rind of half a lemon.) Let the batter stand in a cold place for an hour or so – longer will do no harm – then stir in 3 desser tspoons (30 ml) melted butter; this is what makes all the difference to the flavour and texture of the pancakes, and it also makes them much easier to toss.
I like the pancakes themselves to be very thin, especially sweet ones, so I pour into the pan just enough batter to cover the bottom thinly and tilt it quickly this way and that till the bottom is evenly covered. Pouring from a jug makes the whole performance much easier, and if you should have too much in the pan you can just pour it back into the jug.
To toss your pancake, shake the pan to make sure it isn’t sticking, then jerk it forward till it reaches the downward-tilting edge of the pan. Flip it over with a quick movement of the wrist so that the uncooked side is underneath. If you are a butter-flngered cook, try my easy way; simply cook your pancakes in a small heavy frying pan on the right-hand burner of your cooker, and when the bottom has browned and the top is beginning to bubble, flop them over into a slightly larger pan on the left-hand burner. This never fails.
Pancakes are very good-tempered – although they are nicest served straight from the stove, they can be made beforehand and reheated quite successfully. When they are cold, stack them with a layer of greaseproof paper between each one and then store them in a polythene bag or an airtight polythene container. They will keep for several days like this in the refrigerator or in a cold larder. They can be frozen very successfully, too. Reheat them when wanted over boiling water or in a very low oven. Stuffed savoury pancakes can be arranged in a fire-proof dish and stored covered with foil. Reheat them, still covered, in a moderate oven; pour over a cheese sauce and brown them under the grill.
As for serving pancakes, if you long for a change from lemon juice there are dozens of alternatives: hot maple syrup and butter (especially nice with fat little Scotch pancakes for breakfast); warmed mincemeat; lemon curd; canned sweet chestnut purée; a filling of sweet apple slices lightly cooked in butter and sugar and served with cream; canned mandarin orange segments heated in orange juice thickened with cornflour; canned pineapple titbits soaked in rum. Sliced bananas heated in lemon juice and honey are good too, and so are canned Morello cherries used with a little sauce made from their own juice thickened with arrowroot. But I always come back to lemon pancakes in the end!
CRÊPES SUZETTE
12 thin pancakes.
For the sauce: 6 sugar lumps; rind of 1 large orange;
2½ oz (70 g) unsalted butter;
scant ¼ pint (150 ml) strained fresh orange juice;
I tablespoon (15 ml) any orange-flavoured liqueur
and/or I tablespoon (15 ml) brandy; juice of ½ lemon.
Make the pancake batter (see page 1). Beat it until it’s bubbly. Leave it to stand for 4 hours if you can. Add the melted butter just before using and beat again. (And, if you like, add a pinch of grated orange rind and a tablespoon [15 ml] of brandy.) The batter should be the consistency of thin cream; if it is too thick add a little more milk.
Cook the pancakes; they must be very thin and light. You will need a small, well-heated pan and, for the first pancake, a little butter – just enough to make the pan look shiny. (You probably won’t need any butter at all for the rest. If you do, just rub a lump of butter over the sur face of the pan.) As you make the pancakes, sprinkle them with a little lemon juice.
Make the sauce: rub the sugar lumps hard over the orange rind until they are well soaked with its aromatic oils, then put them in your largest frying pan with the butter, the strained orange juice (plus a little extra if necessary), the orange-flavoured liqueur of your choice and the brandy. If you are using only brandy, you may like to add a little extra sugar.
Heat the sauce very gently and as soon as the butter and sugar have quite melted slip in the first pancake. When it’s hot through and well coated with the sauce, fold it in four, right side out, and push it to one side of the pan. Tip the pan a little so that the sauce drains back. When all the pancakes are done, slide them about and turn them over a very low heat until they are piping hot. Just before serving sprinkle them with a little sugar and, for the flamboyant final touch, pour over a couple of tablespoons (30 ml) of brandy, Grand Marnier, or what you will, and set it alight. Escoffier didn’t flame crêpes Suzette at all, but everyone would feel cheated if you did not.
RICH ORANGE PANCAKES
For the batter: 4 oz (115 g) plain flour; 2 eggs; ½ pint (300 ml) milk;
2 oz (55 g) melted butter.
For the filling: 3 oranges; 6 fl oz (175 ml) water;
a thin strip of lemon rind; 2 oz (55 g) granulated sugar;
3 tablespoons (45 ml) orange juice; 3 dessertspoons (30 ml) lemon juice;
4 tablespoons (60 ml) Cointreau; caster sugar.
Prepare the batter in the usual way. Cook the pancakes and put them on one side, piled flat on top of one another, with greaseproof paper between them.
Prepare the filling. Peel two thin spirals of rind from one of the oranges, using a potato peeler, and cut into fine shreds. Put them in a small saucepan with the water and a thin spiral of lemon rind, also cut into fine shreds. Cook in a covered pan until tender.
Remove the strips, add the granulated sugar and simmer until syrupy; add the strained orange and lemon juice, and simmer until syrupy again. Peel all the oranges, remove the pith, divide into segments and heat them in the syrup. Add the Cointreau.
Pour a little of the syrup into a hot frying pan. Add one pancake and heat quickly. Arrange two orange segments in the centre, roll up and keep hot. Repeat with each pancake. Serve at once, sprinkled with a little caster sugar.
QUICK ‘CRÊPES SUZETTE’ Quicker, and like the previous recipe almost as glamorous as crêpes Suzette, is my own short cut; Cream 3 oz (85 g) unsalted butter with 2 teaspoons (10 ml) very finely grated orange rind. Then add 3½ oz (100 g) sifted icing sugar and beat until fluffy. Beat in 2 tablespoons (30 ml) orange juice and 2 tablespoons (30 ml) orange-flavoured liqueur.
Make the pancakes in the usual way; spread a little of the creamed mixture on each. Fold them in four and keep them warm by putting them into a frying pan in which you have already melted a little butter and sugar and a tablespoon (15 ml) of orange juice.
Dust with icing sugar when they are hot and flame with Cointreau if you absolutely must!
Cream cheese or cottage cheese is used a lot in Polish sweets, as it is in most central European countries.
PANCAKES WITH SWEET CHEESE FILLING
For the batter: 4 oz (115 g) plain flour; ½ oz (15 g) caster sugar;
7 fl oz (215 ml) milk; 2 eggs; 1 tablespoon (15 ml) brandy;
1 tablespoon (15 ml) melted butter.
For the filling: 8 oz (225 g) cream or cottage cheese;
2 oz (55 g) caster sugar; 2 egg yolks;
2 tablespoons (30 ml) grated orange rind;
2 tablespoons (30 ml) chopped or shredded almonds:
2 oz (55 g) melted butter. Vanilla sugar (see page 224).
Make the pancake batter in the usual way but add the egg yolks first, then fold in the stiffly beaten whites and let it stand overnight. Cook the pancakes in the usual way.
To make the filling, press the cheese through a sieve and blend in the sugar, egg yolks and grated orange rind. (If cottage cheese is used you can add a spoonful or two of thick cream.) Stir in the almonds. Spread this mixture over the pancakes, fold each one in four and lay them in a fire-proof dish. Pour over the melted butter and set in a moderate oven to warm through for about 10 minutes before serving. Sprinkle with vanilla sugar.
FLUFFY DESSERT PANCAKES
2 eggs; 4 oz (115 g) plain flour; ½ teaspoon (2.5 ml) salt;
2 level teaspoons (10 ml) baking powder; 1 tablespoon (15 ml) caster sugar;
¼ pint (150 ml) milk; 2 tablespoons (30 ml) melted butter.
Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs. Gently heat a griddle or a large, heavy frying pan. Whisk the egg whites up stiffly. Sift together the flour, salt, baking powder and sugar. Beat the egg yolks lightly and mix in the milk and the melted butter. Stir this liquid into the sifted flour, stirring only until the batter is mixed; do not beat. Then, with a metal spoon, lightly fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites.
When the griddle or frying pan is hot enough (a drop of water falling on it should spit and splutter) brush with a little melted butter. Drop the batter on to it by tablespoons. You should be able to cook three or four at a time, allowing room for spreading. In a minute or two, when they are puffed up and bubbly, flip the pancakes over and lightly brown the other side.
If they are not eaten as fast as they come from the pan, you can keep them warm between the folds of a clean tea towel in a low oven.
Serve the pancakes spread with butter and accompanied with warmed honey or maple syrup. (This recipe comes from America, where they would be served at breakfast and probably with sausages or unsmoked bacon.)
SAUCER PANCAKES
1 lemon; ¾ pint (425 ml) milk; 2 oz (55 g) butter; 2 oz (55 g) caster sugar; 2 eggs;
2 oz (55 g) plain flour; 3 oz (85 g) flaked almonds;
4 tablespoons (60 ml) apricot jam.
Cut the yellow peel from the lemon into very thin strips. (Use a potato peeler and you won’t get any of the bitter white pith.) Put the peel in a saucepan with the milk and infuse over a very low heat for 15 minutes. Leave to cool, then strain.
Cream the butter well and beat in the sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, adding a little of the flour with each egg so that the mixture will not curdle. When the eggs are well beaten in, add the rest of the flour and gradually stir in the cold milk. Beat hard again.
Divide the batter between six buttered saucers and sprinkle with the flaked almonds. (Don’t fill them too full.) Bake for 15 to 20 minutes at Mark 5, 375°F, 190°C. Slip them off the saucers on to a warm serving dish and hand a sauce with them, made by warming together the apricot jam, the juice from half the lemon and 3 tablespoons (45 ml) water, stirring so that it is well blended.
These are called French pancakes, but the best place to eat them is in Devon, where they serve them with warmed home-made raspberry or blackberry jam and lashings of Devonshire cream! (At a pinch, whipped cream will have to do – and the best shop jam: Elsenham’s or Baxter’s.)
EASTER TEAS
Once Christmas is over, we have no culinary traditions left to worry about for another twelve months, apart from making pancakes on Shrove Tuesday, if only to satisfy those great sticklers for tradition, the children. For who (except by accident) now eats roast leg of lamb followed by the first gooseberry pie for dinner on Whit Sunday? And who has a green gosling on Michaelmas Day?
The days of the great religious fasts and feasts are over, and with modern methods of food preservation and new sources of fresh food supplies from all over the world, the seasons have been extended and their hard edges blurred. The old customs are dead or dying. Once, every part of Britain had its own observances: there were Godcakes at Coventry on New Year’s Day, fried limpets in the Isle of Man on Good Friday, curd cheesecakes for Whitsun at Melton Mowbray, and fig pies on Figgy Sunday (Palm Sunday) all over the place.
These customs now belong to folklore. But at least you can still have Simnel cake and Easter biscuits on Easter Sunday. Actually, Simnel cake used to be associated with mid-Lent or Mothering Sunday – a gift brought by young country girls in service to their mothers on the fourth Sunday in Lent. It has gradually been moved on to become the centre-piece of the Easter tea table. And although it is no longer cooked with a crocusyellow crust of saffron bread over its ‘marchpane’ top, nor eaten with mulled ale, it is still dark and rich and spicy.
SIMNEL CAKE
For the marzipan: 12 oz (350 g) icing sugar; 12 oz (350 g) ground almonds;
3 egg yolks; 2 teaspoons (10 ml) lemon juice;
1 teaspoon (5 ml) almond essence.
For the cake: 8 oz (225 g) plain flour; ½ teaspoon (2.5 ml) salt;
1 saltspoon (1.25 ml) each nutmeg, cinnamon and allspice; 6 oz (175 g) butter;
6 oz (175 g) Demerara sugar; 3 eggs; 1 lb (450 g) currants; 8-12 oz (225-350 g) sultanas;
4 oz (115 g) chopped candied orange and lemon peel;
scant ¼ pint (150 ml) milk; 1 level tablespoon (15 ml) black treacle.
A little jam; 1 egg yolk beaten up with a little oil to glaze.
First make the marzipan. Mix the sugar and the ground almonds together in a large bowl, make a hollow in the centre and drop in the lightly beaten egg yolks, the lemon juice and the almond essence. Mix to a stiff paste, with a wooden spoon at first and then with your hands – dust them with icing sugar before you start. Knead well till the paste is smooth and free from cracks. If you can, leave it in a polythene bag in the bottom of the refrigerator overnight; you will find it more pliable and easier to handle, but it must be allowed to reach room temperature and rekneaded before use.
To make the cake; sift the flour, salt and spices together. Cream the butter and sugar well together until light and fluffy. Add the lightly beaten eggs a little at a time, sprinkling in a little of the sifted flour and beating well after each addition. When the mixture is thoroughly beaten, stir the remaining flour in lightly, and then the fruit. (If you like you can add a few chopped almonds, and some very untraditional glacé cherries, quartered and floured.) Add the milk with the black treacle melted in it and allowed to cool, using just enough liquid to make a fairly stiff batter, about the same consistency as a Christmas cake.
Divide the marzipan into two not quite equal pieces and roll out the smaller one into a round the exact size of the inside of the cake tin. For these quantities, an 8 inch (20 cm) cake tin, well buttered and lined with buttered greaseproof paper, should be used. Turn half the cake mixture into the tin, level it out and cover it with this circle of marzipan. Then cover with the rest of the cake mixture. Bake in the centre of a slow oven, Mark 2, 300°F, 150°C, for about 3½ hours, or until a knife blade inserted into the cake comes out clean. Take care not to stick the knife down as far as the marzipan or you might be misled.
When the cake is quite cold, brush the top with a little warmed jam, sieved if necessary, and place the second circle of marzipan on top, pressing it down well. Mark the top into squares, ¾ inch to an inch (2-2.5 cm) wide, with a sharp knife. Gather together the trimmings from the marzipan, make the 11 small balls which are the traditional decoration – they represent the twelve apostles, less Judas – and arrange them round the edge of the cake. Brush lightly with the beaten egg and put the cake into a hot oven or under the grill for a few minutes to give it that attractive, toasted appearance. (Run a small pool of coloured icing into the centre if you prefer.) Now you have a traditional Easter Simnel and you can, if you like, decorate it with a few tiny marzipan bird’s eggs and/or Easter chicks as well.
EASTER BISCUITS
8 oz (225 g) plain flour; ½ teaspoon (2.5 ml) salt;
½ teaspoon (2.5 ml) each cinnamon and mixed spice; 4 oz (115 g) butter;
4 oz (115 g) caster sugar; 3 oz (85 g) currants; 1 oz (25 g) chopped candied peel;
1 egg, beaten; milk; granulated sugar, to decorate.
Sift the flour, salt and spices together, and rub the butter in quickly and lightly. Stir in the sugar, currants and candied peel; add the beaten egg and just enough milk (about two tablespoons/30 ml) to make a stiff dough.
Chill the dough for an hour or two if you can. Roll it out thinly and cut into rounds with a large fluted cutter. Place them on a greased baking tray and bake in a fairly hot oven, Mark 6, 400°F, 200°C, for 15 to 20 minutes until they are just beginning to colour. They should be no deeper than a pale fawn. Brush them with a very little milk and sprinkle them with granulated sugar as they lie on a wire tray to cool.
SPICY HOT CROSS BUNS
1 lb (450 g) plain flour; 1 oz (25 g) fresh yeast; pinch of sugar;
½ pint (300 ml) milk-and-water;
1 teaspoon (5 ml) each cinnamon and nutmeg; 1 teaspoon (5 ml) salt;
2 oz (55 g) caster sugar; 3 oz (85 g) currants;
1-2 oz (25-55 g) chopped candied peel; 2 oz (55 g) melted butter;
1 egg, beaten.
Sift half the flour into a bowl. Blend the yeast with a pinch of sugar and a little of the lukewarm milk-and-water; when it is frothy add the rest of the liquid. Pour it into a well in the sifted flour and mix well. Cover with a folded cloth and leave in a warm place for about 40 minutes. Meanwhile, sift the rest of the flour with the spices and salt, and stir in the caster sugar, fruit and peel. When the first mixture has proved (nearly doubled in bulk), add this to it, then pour in the butter and the egg. Mix really well with your hand, knead until smooth and leave to prove again, this time for about an hour.
Now turn the dough on to a floured board, roll or pat it out and divide it into about 16 pieces. Shape them into rounds and place, not too close together, on a greased and floured baking tray. Mark each round firmly with a cross, using a sharp knife, or criss-cross the buns with narrow strips of pastry or marzipan. (Bakers’ crosses are made with rice paper; one couple in South London makes them, by hand, all the year round and supplies almost the entire industry.) Leave in a warm place for 15 minutes or so until the buns are well risen, and bake in the centre of a hot oven, Mark 7, 425°F, 220°C, for about 15 minutes.
As soon as you take them out of the oven, brush them with a sugar and water glaze – 2 tablespoons (30 ml) sugar dissolved in 2 tablespoons (30 ml) water. Bake these on Good Friday to have them at their best. You can do all the mixing and proving the day before – cover the baking tray with polythene and leave it overnight in the refrigerator.
EASTER WREATH
Not a traditional English Easter Cake, but a Scandinavian one, and very good. You can leave out the second proving if you like.
1 lb (450 g) plain flour; pinch of salt; 4 oz (115 g) caster sugar;
1 oz (25 g) fresh yeast; ¼ pint (150 ml) lukewarm milk; 2 eggs;
4 oz (115 g) melted butter.
For the filling: 1 oz (25 g) softened butter; 4 oz (115 g) caster sugar;
2 oz (55 g) seedless raisins; 1 teaspoon (5 ml) cinnamon;
½ teaspoon (2.5 ml) nutmeg.
Glacé icing; nuts and glacé cherries to decorate.
Sift the flour and salt into a bowl. Stir in the sugar. Blend the yeast with a little of the warm milk, and when it is frothy add the rest of the milk, beaten up with the eggs and the melted butter. Make a well in the centre of the flour and pour in the yeasty liquid. Mix all together thoroughly with your hand. Turn out on to a floured board and knead well.
Put the dough into a buttered bowl, cover with a folded cloth and leave in a warm place to rise until it has nearly doubled in bulk – about 40 minutes. Knock down, pull the sides to the middle, cover and allow to rise again for 30 minutes. Turn out on to a floured board, knead lightly and roll out into a rectangle about 18 inches by 9 inches (46 x 23 cm). Spread this with the softened butter for the filling and sprinkle on the sugar, raisins and spices. Roll up tightly along the length and seal by pressing the edges down firmly.
Put on to a greased baking sheet and form into a ring. Join the ends together. Cut deeply into the ring at 1 inch (2.5 cm) intervals and give each piece a half-twist so that it is lying on its side. Cover and prove for 35 minutes. Bake in a fairly hot oven, Mark 6, 400°F, 200°C, for about 25 to 30 minutes. When cold, coat with glacé icing and sprinkle with nuts and cherries.
OMELETTES
The age of French colonialism is over, but French food, the gentle omelette above all, still conquers the world. There is no civilized country where one cannot find an omelette, the simplest and best of all French dishes.
More than any other uncomplicated and economical dish, the omelette has a prestige all its own. Remember Hélène, Gertrude Stein’s cook, who disliked Matisse? When Miss Stein told her that he was staying for dinner she would reply: ‘In that case I will not make an omelette but fry the eggs. It takes the same number of eggs and the same amount of butter, but it shows less respect and he will understand.’
There are may legends about the origins of the omelette and many myths about how it should be made. Strange secrets are ascribed to La Mère Poulard of Mont St Michel. But all she said herself was :‘Je casse de bons oeufs dans une terrine, je les bats bien, je m ets un bon m orceau de beurre dans la poële, j’y jette les oeufs et je rem ue constam m ent.’
In fact, there is nothing very difficult about making an omelette, yet it takes much longer to explain how to do it than to make the omelette itself. And it requires great concentration to learn how to make an omelette successfully from reading a book. I have seen a very lucid account of how to do it taking up ten pages of text.
Certainly, the best way to learn how to make a per fect omelette is to watch an expert doing it – and then make one yourself every day for at least a fortnight. However, I shall try to describe it all the same.
I remember, many years ago, Monsieur Laplanche, then chef des cuisines at the Savoy Hotel, making me an omelette in the deserted kitchens at half past three in the afternoon. I learned much from this. Firstly, he didn’t beat up the eggs, not even with a fork; and he most certainly didn’t add any milk or even water. He broke the eggs into a bowl and shook the bowl vigorously with his strong chef’s wrist until the yolks and whites were blended. I cannot emulate this, but at least it taught me to use a fork to beat the eggs and not a whisk or an electric mixer.
The omelette was then cooked in an old, long-handled, black iron pan, well culotté with age and use. Not a pan used only for omelettes, not a pan that was never washed – though it was never scoured; simply a pan that was very hot, very thick, very flat, very smooth, very clean and absolutely dry. And it did have rounded sides so that the omelette could slip and slide about in it easily. It was also the right size for the number of eggs used, which is the most important thing of all. Too few eggs in too large a pan produce a thin, leathery pancake; too many eggs in too small a pan, a thick stodgy pudding with a tough crust. For a 2 or 3 egg omelette a 6 inch (15 cm) or 7 inch (18 cm) pan is ideal; for a 5 or 6 egg omelette, a 10 inch (25 cm) pan.
It is seldom wise for the home cook to attempt a larger omelette than this anyway – and even if she has a large enough pan for a 10 or 12 egg omelette, she will probably not have a large enough source of heat to cook the omelette evenly, or she will find the pan too heavy for her to handle easily and deftly. Anyway, it’s nice to have a whole little omelette to one’s self – and more satisfying.
But back to my own lesson. When the eggs were well seasoned and a little unsalted butter had been melted in the pan – just enough to film the bottom and sides well over – the eggs were poured in. The pan, I noticed, had been slowly heated until it was so hot that the butter melted and frothed instantly – but not hot enough for it to burn at once; and the eggs were added as it was just beginning to colour. They set on the bottom almost immediately. Monsieur Laplanche gave an experienced shake or two, tilting the pan so that the uncooked part ran underneath the part that was already set, and in a moment, while the top was still a little runny – baveuse – the omelette was on my plate, neatly folded in three, apparently of its own accord, and deliciously dappled with golden brown.
The touch of panache about the whole thing was that he cooked it on the back ring of a gas cooker with the naked flame in front beneath his wrist. This was how he had been taught to do it as a young com m is many years before – you soon learned that way that an omelette must be cooked quickly. Few chefs today grew up in this school.
Of course, this was simply ‘an omelette made with eggs’, and although the omelette offers almost too many attractive opportunities to the creative cook with its many possible fillings, its success depends on their being used with discretion and economy. The pleasant and substantial jumble of good things to be found in a Spanish tortilla has no place in a true French omelette.
An omelette, when the spring ‘flush’ of eggs begins, can help us to capture the illusion of warm weather. A true omelette fines herbes should be freckled with the green of chopped parsley and chives – which by then you will have in the garden or can buy – a touch of garlic perhaps, tarragon, and that best of all herbs for egg dishes, chervil.
When summer comes you can ring the changes with basil, lemon thyme and sweet marjoram – not all at once, of course. But an omelette made with simply a couple of spoonfuls of finely chopped parsley and slim spring onion tops will be just as welcome. So will frozen or canned asparagus tips tossed in butter, until the new season’s asparagus comes in; they must be very hot when they are added to the omelette just before it is folded over.
Best of all in spring is an omelette filled with sorrel. I have heard it called l’om elette de m on curé presumably because it makes such a very cheap meal. It takes only a minute to pick a handful of the young leaves – enough to make this most delicious and springlike omelette of all. Later on you will need to strip them from their stalks and the central rib, but now you need only wash them, chop them finely, ‘melt’ them in butter for about five minutes and bind them with a little thick cream. For the real addict, sorrel can be cut into tiny strips and added raw to the eggs. This is how they cook it in Perigord – in goose fat or raw pork fat, not in butter – and they serve it with a walnut sauce. Like this, it keeps all its sharp, acid flavour, si fraîche et saine. Failing sorrel, you can make a spinach or even a lettuce omelette, sharpening it with lemon, or you can add peppery chopped watercress to the unbeaten eggs.
These simple omelette fillings are the best. Not for me the lobster omelette, the om elette au caviar or au foie gras – although, of course, one would be happy to settle, in Perigord, for an om elette aux truffles, or an om elette aux m orilles. But my favourite omelette of all is one with just a few tiny croÛtons of bread fried crisp in butter – or perhaps a few dice of cooked, unsmoked bacon; the contrast of textures is delightful.
All these omelettes are most fresh-tasting and vernal. Serve them very plainly with a salad, and just glisten their tops with a little butter – m aître d hôtel butter, perhaps, so as to bring them to the table with a delicate and appetizing gloss. If you like, and if you are confident that the omelette is juicy enough inside to take it, you can sprinkle it with a very little finely grated Parmesan cheese and just slip it for a minute under the grill.
MUSHROOM OMELETTE
6 eggs; salt and pepper;
4 oz (115 g) mushrooms or mushroom stalks; 2 oz (55 g) butter; nutmeg;
½ teaspoon (2.5 ml) flour; 2-3 tablespoons (30-45 ml) cream;
chopped parsley, to garnish.
Beat the eggs lightly and season them well. Don’t peel the mushrooms, simply chop them very finely and cook them till soft in half the butter. Season with salt, pepper and nutmeg. Stir in the flour, cook for a minute or two and add the cream; keep it all very hot. Make the omelette and add the mushrooms in their creamy sauce to the eggs in the pan as soon as they have begun to set underneath. Finish cooking, fold over and sprinkle with a little chopped parsley before serving.
OMELETTE SAVOYARDE
3-4 eggs; ½ oz (15 g) butter; 2 teaspoons (10 ml) olive oil;
1 smallish potato;
a thickish 2 oz (55 g) piece of cooked lean bacon, ham or salt pork;
2 oz (55 g) Gruyère cheese;
1½ teaspoons (7.5 ml) finely chopped spring onions or chives;
salt and pepper; 2 tablespoons (30 ml) thick cream, warmed.
Heat the butter with the olive oil, and when piping hot drop in the raw potato cut into small dice. Cook, shaking often, till golden brown and crisp all over. Add the bacon and cheese cut into tiny dice of equal size and the chives, onion or even a little finely chopped leek. Pour in the seasoned eggs and cook till they are nearly set and the cheese is just starting to melt. Pour the hot cream over and quickly slide the omelette flat on to a hot serving dish.
OMELETTE ARNOLD BENNETT
4 eggs; 4 tablespoons (60 ml) flaked, cooked, smoked haddock;
about 1½ oz (40 g) butter; pepper and salt;
2 tablespoons (30 ml) grated Parmesan cheese; 4 tablespoons (60 ml) cream.
Warm the flaked haddock through in about half the butter. Beat the eggs lightly with pepper and a very little salt – if the haddock is not too salty already. Stir in the haddock and a tablespoon (15 ml) each of the cheese and the cream. Melt the rest of the butter in a large, heavy pan and cook in the usual way till the omelette is set underneath but still runny on top.
Quickly pour over the rest of the cream, sprinkle with the rest of the cheese and put the pan under a hot grill for 1 minute before serving. Do not fold.
SPANISH ONION OMELETTE
4 eggs; 2 Spanish onions; 2 tablespoons (30 ml) olive oil;
salt and pepper.
Peel the onions and cut them into thin slices. Fry them slowly in the hot oil until golden, then season well. Beat up the eggs with a little more seasoning and pour them over the onions, shaking the pan so that the egg mixture covers the onions completely and spreads out evenly. As it is a Spanish omelette, it isn’t folded either but cooked on both sides and served cut into wedges while it is still soft and juicy in the middle. (If you are afraid of breaking the omelette when you turn it over the easiest thing to do is to turn the pan upside down over another hot, slightly oily frying pan that is just a little larger than the first.)
Omelettes, or rather tortillas like these are very good cold, especially slipped inside a large buttered bap or between two slices cut from the middle of a cottage loaf. They make splendid picnic food. The ltalians serve a slice of a big cold frittata like this, as thick as a cake, as an hors d’oeuvre. It’s particularly delicious ‘stuffed’ with chopped artichoke hearts and, to me, just about the best use for canned or frozen ones.
CHEESE SOUFFLÉ OMELETTE
3 eggs, separated; salt and pepper;
1 good tablespoon (15 ml) finely grated cheese – Gruyère or
Parmesan or a mixture of both, for choice;
2 teaspoons (10 ml), finely chopped chives or spring onion tops;
1 oz (25 g) butter; a little more grated cheese.
Beat the egg yolks till light, season with salt and pepper, and beat in the grated cheese. Stir in the chives. Beat the egg whites up with a pinch of salt till they stand in stiff, shiny peaks. Stir a little of the whites into the yolks, then very lightly, carefully and thoroughly fold in the rest with a metal spoon. Melt the butter in an 8 inch (20 cm) frying pan – shaking it gently so that the sides are covered with butter too – and, as it foams, turn in the egg mixture and level it off with a palette knife.
Cook very gently, far more so than for an ordinary omelette, until, after about 3 or 4 minutes, the bottom is golden when you lift the omelette with the palette knife to have a look, and it has started to rise. Then put the pan under a gentle grill and cook very gently for 3 or 4 minutes longer until the omelette is well risen and just set. Remove at once, loosen the edges with the palette knife, and if you want to fold it over, score it lightly across the middle to make it easier to do so.
Turn out gently on to a hot plate, rub the sur face lightly with buttered paper and sprinkle it with a little more cheese.
OMELETTE SOUFFLÉ NORMANDE
4 oz (115 g) peeled and cored apple; 1 oz (25 g) butter;
2 heaped tablespoons (60 ml) brown sugar;
½ teaspoon (2.5 ml) grated lemon rind; 3 eggs, separated;
1½ tablespoons (22.5 ml) caster sugar; the grated rind of ½ orange;
a few drops of vanilla essence; 1 small teaspoon (5 ml) flour;
¾ oz (20 g) butter; icing sugar, to decorate.
Start with the apple – use a cooking apple or a tart dessert apple for this. Cut it into thick slices that will keep their shape. Melt the butter in a wide-bottomed pan, put in the apple slices, and sprinkle them with the brown sugar and grated lemon rind. Cover the pan with a lid and cook very gently, basting the apples with the syrup as it forms. When they are quite tender, push the pan to the back of the stove and leave it there while you make the omelette.
Beat the egg yolks together with the caster sugar, orange rind and vanilla until so thick and creamy that the mixture forms a thick golden ribbon as it falls from the wooden spoon. Stir in the flour. Beat up the egg whites till shiny and stiff. (All this can be done before the meal.)
When you are ready to serve the omelette, finish preparing and cooking it in the remaining butter in exactly the same way as the cheese omelette. Spoon the hot, buttery apples over it, syrup and all, fold it over, sprinkle it with icing sugar and rush it to the table.
APRICOT OMELETTE
3 eggs; 1 tablespoon (15 ml) sugar; ½ oz (15 g) butter;
2-3 tablespoons (30-45 ml) warmed apricot jam or, better still,
apricot purée, or compôte;
a few flaked blanched almonds.
Separate the yolks and whites of the eggs; beat the yolks and sugar together until shiny and thick. Fold in the egg whites, beaten until stiff but not dry. Heat the butter in a large omelette pan. Pour in the mixture and cook over a fairly gentle heat till just set. (If you like, once the bottom has set, you can slip the omelette into a hot oven for a few minutes to finish cooking.)
Slide quickly on to a heated dish, spread with the warm jam or apricot compôte, and sprinkle with the almonds. Fold over and eat at once while still frothy and creamy.
If you find this omelette too sweet, try adding a little grated lemon rind to the jam. Strawberry jam, Morello cherry jam, or, of course, fresh berries sprinkled with a very little sugar and lightly crushed with a silver fork, also makes a delicious filling.
FISH SOUPS
One of the strangest paradoxes in our cookery is that, apart from a few traditional Scottish dishes, we have no fish soups – except that expensive favourite of canners and restaurant proprietors, lobster bisque. Yet canned and packeted fish soups from abroad are gradually finding their way on to the market, and fish soups are on the menu of more and more restaurants.
Home-made fish stock is really no trouble at all and it’s quickly made. Thirty or forty minutes of gentle simmering is quite long enough. What is more, the ingredients are virtually free. Fishmongers are an obliging lot and for very little charge, or even for nothing, they will give you fish shells, the bones and skins of the fish they have been filleting and a couple of fish heads. A ‘noble’ head is best – turbot or halibut or brill – but cod, haddock or, better still, conger or bream, will serve. A mixture of different kinds of fish will give you the best stock.
BASIC FISH STOCK The same basic fish stock will make an excellent foundation for many very different soups. Put all the fish trimmings you have been able to lay hands on into a large pan with a good-sized onion, a large leek, a small piece of celery and a carrot, all roughly chopped, and a half-clove of garlic. Add a bunch of parsley stalks tied up together with sprigs of lemon thyme, tarragon and fennel, if you have them, and a bay leaf; then a dozen or so peppercorns, a dozen or so fennel seeds, a tablespoon (15 ml) of sea salt and a dozen lightly crushed coriander seeds. Cover with cold water – add a good glassful of dry white wine or cider if you can – and bring to the boil. Simmer for about three-quarters of an hour and strain.
After simmering and straining, this should give you a large jar of delicately flavoured fish stock. You will also probably have half a pound (225 g) or more of flesh which is easily flaked from the head. Some of this puréed in the blender or sieved you may need for thickening the soup; the rest you can use as part of the filling for a nice, old-fashioned fish pie. I always try to keep some fish stock in the freezer as a fish soup makes an impressive and inspiring start to an impromptu meal.
SOUPE DE POISSONS has a fine Mediterranean look and flavour. First make the basic stock as directed. Flake off the flesh from your fish head or heads and put just a little of it in the blender to thicken the soup. (The rest you can use for fish pie, as suggested, or with a little canned salmon and mashed potato, make fish cakes for breakfast.) Add the half-clove of garlic, the carrot and some of