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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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DECEMBER 12, 2010 8:17PM

An auspicious and delicious seasonal drink

Rate: 11 Flag


I’ve come to believe that home food is best, but it’s not often an opinion that you will hear expressed by a world-class chef, in this case David Tanis, chef of Chez Panisse.

Tanis is living a foodie dream – working six months of the year at Chez Panisse in Berkeley, California, and living and cooking and writing in Paris the remainder of the year. Tanis' first cookbook, “A Platter of Figs” was a selection of the Gourmet Cookbook Club and focused on entertaining at home. In his newest cookbook, “Heart of the Artichoke and Other Culinary Journeys,” Tanis writes about cooking for small gatherings at home. The menus are for small groups of  2 or 3 people, medium-size groups of 3 to 6, and seasonal feasts for large crowds.



One of the most charming aspects of “Heart of the Artichoke” is the first section, “Kitchen Rituals,” short essays about food in his everyday life – chopped jalapenos in pancakes, a foodie travel kit with chilies and a tube of harissa, easy apricot jam, a quintessentially French sandwich – baguette, butter, ham. His essay on eating oatmeal will make every mother of a quirky eater smile. 

Chef Tanis talked about his new book and his culinary life over lunch this week at Atlanta’s Holeman & Finch Public House. Chef Linton Hopkins prepared the meal with recipes from the book – a crab-stuffed deviled egg to start, followed by a terrine of pork and duck liver, vegetables a la Grecque, a flat-roasted chicken with lemon and rosemary, cabbage with potatoes, Sea Island red peas cooked with bacon. And for dessert, molasses pecan squares. 

Photo of David Tanis by Joe Vaughn
 
David Tanis is a low-key guy with gray, wavy hair and cream-colored glasses who looks very much like the artist he says he intended to be. He didn't learn to cook at home. Growing up in Ohio, he was only allowed to set the table each night. He learned to cook in college and taught himself to bake. Eventually, he found his way to Berkeley and Chez Panisse. After working as a dishwasher and baker, he rose through the ranks to chef. At first, he and fellow Chez Panisse chef Jean-Pierre Moulle split the work week. When Tanis decided to take a Paris apartment, Alice Waters offered to let he and Moulle split the year, a genius moment in job-sharing. (Moulle spends his half-year in France, aussi).

Unlike many in the restaurant trade, Tanis cooks at home every night after work, eating pasta at midnight. “Eating at home cements the culture,” he said. He laments that children who know only restaurants are missing out, both in the preparation of food and conversation at the family dinner table.
 
The recipes in “Heart of the Artichoke” cover the culinary globe, but the American and European influences are prevalent. “I’m a cultural chameleon,” Tanis said, “Everywhere I travel to becomes something else in my culinary bag of tricks.” When traveling, Tanis doesn't visit many restaurants, instead, he books accommodations with a small kitchen and seeks out local markets. 

Tanis claims no direct Southern connection to his cooking. “Any Southern influence comes from Southerners I’ve known or Southerners I’ve imagined,” he said. With ingredients like pecans and pork and field peas in his book, I think he's a Southerner at heart.

I especially like his use of grapefruit in the winter menu. Go into any local market this time of year and you will find the fruit, mellow yellow on the outside, ruby red on the inside. The taste is tart and refreshing, a counterpoint to heavy and creamy winter meals. Tanis employs grapefruit juice in his winter feast titled “Auspicious and Delicious” - a menu that includes black-eyed peas and ham, those crab-stuffed deviled eggs, bread and butter pickles, a relish plate and corn sticks. 



Hair of the Dog, Salty Dog, and

Other Grapefruit Drinks

There you are in the middle of winter, in a cold, harsh season, and a little sunshine is only too welcome. Citrus is the true gift of winter and there’s something wonderful about freshly squeezed grapefruit juice, mixed with Champagne for a Grapefruit Mimosa, or mixed with vodka for a Salty Dog.

Count on 1 grapefruit per serving; 1 large grapefruit will yield about a cup of juice. There is a world of difference between fresh juice and flash-pasteurized store-bought juice. This is a drink that’s all about the freshness, and no, you can’t squeeze the fruit the day before. And if your New Year’s resolution is a month without alcohol, enjoy a delicious glass of fresh grapefruit juice. You’ll feel virtuous and satisfied.

The proportions for a Grapefruit Mimosa are 1/3 grapefruit juice to 2/3 Champagne. Pour the juice into a Champagne glass, then slowly add the Champagne.

To make a Salty Dog, pour 5 ounces grapefruit juice and 1 and 1/2 ounces vodka, both well chilled, into a glass with a salted rim. Without the salt, the drink is called a Greyhound. To make a Pamplemousse, add the same amount of Pernod to the juice instead of vodka and don't salt the rim.

 
(Excerpted from HEART OF THE ARTICHOKE by DAVID TANIS (Artisan Books)
Copyright 2010.)

I will add that while you’re serving grapefruit mimosas to your grown-up friends, pour grapefruit juice with lemon-lime soda for the children, they will love it.



To accompany: In what I consider a forehead-slapping, bloody brilliant idea, Chef Tanis suggests baking corn stick batter in a Madeleine pan. I love an excuse to break out the Madeleine tins and made these beautiful little cakes. And I have to call them cakes, because they have sugar in them – true Southerners do not put sugar in their cornbread. They will sugar everything else, including the greens beans (a practice I find unpalatable), but never cornbread.





Text and images © 2010, Lucy Mercer,
With the exception of the recipe, excerpted with permission from Artisan Books. The author photo by Joe Vaughn and jacket cover were also provided by Artisan Books.
 
 
Just a note on the china pictured here: this is my wedding china, Orleans Blue by Lenox, and crystal, Classic Laurel, also by Lenox. My 20th wedding anniversary is this month, so I’ve had this china for two decades. It’s true what I was told – I really don’t use it very often. But it makes my heart happy to pull out the bone china and the gold-rimmed crystal for company and special occasions, such as an Auspicious and Delicious holiday feast for family.

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This made me smile and thirsty ;0
I love your crystal and the idea for using the Madeleine pan is wonderful..Happy Holidays!
Lucy, you really have the knack of bringing out the flavors when you write. I almost goofed on the Salty Dog; reading 11/2 ounces (of vodka) as 11 over 2 or 5.5. That would have made for a (briefly) memorable drink.
Hmm....grapefruit might indeed be a good ingredient in this cold winter. Also, your china is lovely and Happy Anniversary! And Happy Holidays, too!
Both your drink and the presentation look very refreshing. I love pink garpefruit as a fruit or freshly squeezed. Beautiful china to go with all. Happy upcoming anniversary and many more, Lucy ! ~R
Thanks, everyone, for your kind words. And Abra, thanks for the catch, I fixed it. (formatting will be the death of me).
Looks so appealing in your china and crystal, but I think you should use it more than on special occasions. -R-
I love what Tanis says here: “Eating at home cements the culture,” he said. He laments that children who know only restaurants are missing out, both in the preparation of food and conversation at the family dinner table.

Grapefruit, especially the red kind, has always been one of my favorite fruits and your Champagne mimosa sounds lovely. Happy Anniversary!
I have never been to Chez Panisse and am about 8 minutes by car..
This was such a great article
Rated with hugs
Lovely photos, Lucy! I am so glad for you that you got to have lunch with the chef! Ruby red grapefruit is so pretty and refreshing. And cornmeal madeleines sound like the perfect accompaniment. Happy Anniversary!!!
Great post, Lucy. I've always been fond of Alice Waters, since the very first time I saw her (I believe she was a guest on one of Martha Stewart's shows many many years ago). So, a chef of hers sounds like a winner to me. And, the greyhound is one of my favorite drinks. The champagne mimosa sounds so good, too!
I've grown addicted to grapefruit as of late--my local grocery now has them for 3/$1, which is a wonderful thing. I love how sunny and bracing they are, especially in wintry weather. I also love your idea of mixing the juice with Pernod; sounds like a perfect picker-upper!
One of my favorite wintertime memories is my first bite of, luscious oranges and grapefruit brought into my kitchen just before an ice storm by a man from Indian River, Florida, the greatest citrus growing area in the world. My sous and I both experience extreme knee buckle with eyes rolled high into the skull.
I love any drink with citrus, and especially grapefruit. The introduction to this author/chef is a bonus!
Thanks, everyone, for reading and commenting. If you have cookbooks on your Christmas list, add "Heart of the Artichoke" or even "A Platter of Figs." The books are filled with beautiful photographs and well-written essays. It's the food that I want to cook and I want to eat. If you follow my blog A Cook and Her Books, look for more recipes from "Heart of the Artichoke" - the link is in the column on the left.
Excellent post. I will definitely look for the book.