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Lucy Mercer

Lucy Mercer
Location
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I cook, I write, I carpool. You may also find my words at A Cook and Her Books. Email acookandherbooks@gmail.com. Thanks for visiting!

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SEPTEMBER 12, 2010 11:23PM

When autumn leaves start to fall: Menu for late summer

Rate: 11 Flag

 

The telltale signs of summer ending in Georgia: the trees are dropping leaves on the  driveway, the afternoon highs are in the low 90s, and the harvest is in at the markets. Tomatoes; some late peaches, still eye-poppingly sweet; zucchini; bell peppers; corn; cantaloupes, astoundingly stinky ripe and full of flavor; and even watermelons, still crisp though low on the sugar scale. And okra - between the technicolor glory of August and the sturdy greens and squashes of October, is okra. People either love or hate the prickly pods with pearly seed-filled interiors - most citing the slime factor, but I love them all ways, always.

 The vegetable was brought to the United States on the slave ships from Africa, and can be used as a stew-thickener in familiar dishes such as gumbo. Many a Southern cook I know swears by a meatless, streamlined version of this known as "okra and tomatoes" and it's usually just those few ingredients, united in holy matrimony by Father bacon and served over rice. Okra is delicious when chopped into short lengths, dipped in a cornmeal batter and fried - some folks will call that Cajun popcorn, although I'm not sure it's particularly authentic to Louisiana. Okra can be pickled, in fact, an okra pickle is a splendid garnish for a Bloody Mary.

I recently picked up a new okra recipe, thanks to two-time James Beard award winning author Nathalie Dupree. Nathalie is near and dear to Atlantan's hearts - she was a cooking instructor here and on PBS stations for years. I have many of her books and use them for inspiration frequently. And now I can say with a barely concealed squeal of delight - she’s my Facebook friend! Nathalie lives in Charleston, S.C. now, where she writes for the Charleston Post and Courier. Being her Facebook friend is like reading her books and asking questions and getting an answer back within minutes. In a recent post, she detailed a Southern vegetable feast with her favorite method for cooking okra - thinly sliced, tossed with olive and oil and salt and roasted in a hot oven. 

I experimented with the idea and created beautiful, crispy okra chips that were devoured by my family. My husband and I dusted the chips with chipotle powder. I think with some tweaking, I could go all Famous Amos and market Lucy Mae's Smokin' Hot Okra Chips.

Dear reader, I can't leave you with just one recipe for okra, and not even a real recipe at that, so I featured the okra chips in my End of Summer Menu:

 Roast Chicken with Honey, Grapes, Rosemary and Thyme

Mashed Potatoes

Crisp-Roasted Okra

Plum Crumble with Cinnamon Yogurt Cream

 

 

Late summer grapes are coming into markets and they are sweet and juicy. We mostly eat them as snacks, but they are fun to cook with, adding a tasty element to a marinated chicken.

Roast Chicken with Honey, Grapes, Rosemary and Thyme

 Marinate the chicken for up to a day before roasting. This is a small quantity of marinade for the chicken - the key is to use a large plastic bag and squeeze the air out, allowing the bird to make contact with the marinade. 

1/4 cup olive oil

1/4 cup red wine vinegar

1/4 cup honey

1 cup white wine

2 tablespoons kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

3 cloves garlic, peeled and smashed

3 sprigs fresh rosemary

3 sprigs fresh thyme

5 pound roaster chicken

2 cups red seedless grapes, divided

Additional thyme and rosemary sprigs for garnish

1. Assemble the marinade: combine all ingredients except for chicken and grapes in large zippered bag. Make sure the salt dissolves. Add chicken to bag, carefully squeezing out all of the air, so that the marinade thoroughly covers the bird. Place in a plastic container, then the fridge overnight or for up to a day.

2. When you're ready to roast, turn the oven to 450°. I use a cast iron skillet, but a roasting pan will do just fine. Place 1 cup grapes in bottom of skillet or pan, then the marinated bird, one breast side up. Roast at 450° for 15 minutes. After 15 minutes, turn bird to other breast side and roast for 15 minutes. Turn bird breast side down for 15 additional minutes. Finally, roast the bird breast side up for 30 minutes or until a meat thermometer placed into the thickest part of the breast reads 165°. 

3. When chicken is ready, place on platter and let rest for a few minutes. Pour liquid in bottom of pan into a degreasing cup. Stir remaining 1 cup grapes into the degreased liquid and spoon onto platter around the bird. Garnish with sprigs of rosemary and thyme.

 


And for dessert, a plum crumble, made with juicy tart-sweet plums, the last of summer's stone fruit from California.


 

 

Plum Crumble with Cinnamon Yogurt

This is an adaptation of a Martha Stewart recipe from back in the day, 1995's "Martha Stewart Cookbook." It would work with many kinds of stone fruit, but plums are inexpensive this time of year and lovely with the creamy custard and spicy crust. This is one of those "divided" recipes that require you to pay attention to the directions. Follow closely!   

1 1/4 cups sugar

1/4 teaspoon salt

1 stick unsalted butter, chilled and cut into small pieces

1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour

3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon nutmeg

1/4 teaspoon baking powder

2 eggs

1/2 cup whole milk

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

8 dark plums, pitted and cut into wedges

Vanilla yogurt

Cinnamon

1. Preheat oven to 350°. In a medium bowl, combine the sugar and salt and cut in butter until it resembles coarse meal. Stir in flour. Set aside half the mixture - this will become the streusel topping.

2. With one-half of the mixture, add cinnamon, nutmeg, baking powder and remaining egg. Mix until blended and press into the bottom of a baking dish - I use a round stoneware dish approximately 9 inches in diameter. Bake for 10 minutes.

3. In a small bowl, whisk together 1/4 cup sugar, the milk and vanilla.

4. Remove the baked pastry from the oven and cover with the sliced plums. Pour the milk mixture over and sprinkle with streusel. Bake at 350° for 30 minutes or until brown on top and bubbly around the edges. Serve warm with vanilla yogurt spiced with cinnamon.

 

      Text and images © 2010, Lucy Mercer.

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Comments

Type your comment below:
The roast chicken looks charred. I called it "mahogany chicken" for my family - it wasn't burned at all, just extra-toasty.
This looks delicious, Lucy. Okra with the honey chicken. Yum. It's an interesting collection of of flavors that begs for a nice bottle of wine and a late summer afternoon in the south.
Okra's a personal fave of mine just about any way you name--yes, even my grandmother's chilled boiled okra salad. Don't apologize for the chicken--it's lovely. I have a riesling chicken similar to yours and it's a treasure. Thanks for the Martha blast from the past and I'll have to check out Nathalie on FB.
:)
Rated.
Lucy, wow, what a feast! I imagine your okra chips would appeal to people who think okra is slimy (I will try this with the okra I told you Mamie has promised me). And the plum crumble looks scrumptious. Bonne chance to you, too!
I love okra any way it is cooked. I guess it's a childhood memory thing because I totally understand why someone unaccustomed would think the slimy boiled pods are disgusting. I love Natalie Dupree too!! I wish I had her elegant accent, and every time I don't peel a tomato (like never, I never peel a tomato) I remember her saying, " I don't serve anyone I love an unpeeled tomato."
I was wondering where your post was. I almost never get mine up before you do. This looks great! I love okra all ways, always, too, but I can't say I've ever made okra chips. I'll have to give them a whirl. I own that same Martha Stewart cookbook (I think). The macaroni and cheese recipe in it is divine. I'll try the crumble.

Oh, I used to love watching Nathalie Dupree on PBS. She was the most elegant woman. Bell's tomato comment made me smile - my mother never serves an unpeeled tomato, either, although the rest of my family (myself included) teases her for it. :)
I would love to try everything here. Ah, I wish I had your talent in the kitchen. ~r
Okra is such an interesting and underappreciated vegetable, especially out here in the West. Hey, if those Snapea Crisps can be on every store shelf, why not Okra Chips?

Love the plum crumble. I remember watching Nathalie Dupree years ago.
Great ideas, Lucy. I never met any of these ingredients I haven't liked - even a 'tart-sweet plum'. Looks like a feast, indeed. Bon chance. ~r
Magnificent. I'm definitely going to try the roasted okra: looks like fun!
What a lovely, sensuous meal! I envision it being served outdoors at sunset, at an end-of-summer pool party. I'm really starting to like okra and am always on the prowl for new and fun things to do with it--can't wait to try those chips!
Nathalie Dupree is your friend? I am not worthy!!!