This Page

has been moved to new address

look what I had for breakfast

Sorry for inconvenience...

Redirection provided by Blogger to WordPress Migration Service
/* Primary layout */ body { margin: 0; padding: 0; border: 0; text-align: left; color: #554; background: #692 url(http://www.blogblog.com/moto_son/outerwrap.gif) top center repeat-y; font: Trebuchet;serif } img { border: 0; display: block; } /* Wrapper */ #wrapper { margin: 0 auto; padding: 0; border: 0; width: 692px; text-align: seft; background: #fff url(http://www.blogblog.com/moto_son/innerwrap.gif) top right repeat-y; font-size:80%; } /* Header */ #blog-header { color: #ffe; background: #8b2 url(http://www.blogblog.com/moto_son/headbotborder.gif) bottom left repeat-x; margin: 0 auto; padding: 0 0 15px 0; border: 0; } #blog-header h1 { font-size: 24px; text-align: left; padding: 15px 20px 0 20px; margin: 0; background-image: url(http://www.blogblog.com/moto_son/topper.gif); background-repeat: repeat-x; background-position: top left; } #blog-header p { font-size: 110%; text-align: left; padding: 3px 20px 10px 20px; margin: 0; line-height:140%; } /* Inner layout */ #content { padding: 0 20px; } #main { width: 400px; float: left; } #sidebar { width: 226px; float: right; } /* Bottom layout */ Blogroll Me! #footer { clear: left; margin: 0; padding: 0 20px; border: 0; text-align: left; border-top: 1px solid #f9f9f9; background-color: #fdfdfd; } #footer p { text-align: left; margin: 0; padding: 10px 0; font-size: x-small; background-color: transparent; color: #999; } /* Default links */ a:link, a:visited { font-weight : bold; text-decoration : none; color: #692; background: transparent; } a:hover { font-weight : bold; text-decoration : underline; color: #8b2; background: transparent; } a:active { font-weight : bold; text-decoration : none; color: #692; background: transparent; } /* Typography */ #main p, #sidebar p { line-height: 140%; margin-top: 5px; margin-bottom: 1em; } .post-body { line-height: 140%; } h2, h3, h4, h5 { margin: 25px 0 0 0; padding: 0; } h2 { font-size: large; } h3.post-title { margin-top: 5px; font-size: medium; } ul { margin: 0 0 25px 0; } li { line-height: 160%; } #sidebar ul { padding-left: 10px; padding-top: 3px; } #sidebar ul li { list-style: disc url(http://www.blogblog.com/moto_son/diamond.gif) inside; vertical-align: top; padding: 0; margin: 0; } dl.profile-datablock { margin: 3px 0 5px 0; } dl.profile-datablock dd { line-height: 140%; } .profile-img {display:inline;} .profile-img img { float:left; margin:0 10px 5px 0; border:4px solid #8b2; } #comments { border: 0; border-top: 1px dashed #eed; margin: 10px 0 0 0; padding: 0; } #comments h3 { margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: -10px; font-weight: normal; font-style: italic; text-transform: uppercase; letter-spacing: 1px; } #comments dl dt { font-weight: bold; font-style: italic; margin-top: 35px; padding: 1px 0 0 18px; background: transparent url(http://www.blogblog.com/moto_son/commentbug.gif) top left no-repeat; color: #998; } #comments dl dd { padding: 0; margin: 0; } .deleted-comment { font-style:italic; color:gray; } .comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

greenbanner

27 August 2005

look what I had for breakfast


broiled figs, originally uploaded by shaunaforce.

The more I cook, the more I want to cook. It’s a self-regenerating process, deeply creative, and also fairly addictive. Thank goodness I’m addicted to figs, slow-roasted tomatoes, and fresh goat cheese instead of some other substance. And as I keep noticing, and remarking on in here, I’m paradoxically less addicted to food than ever before. As with most American women, I went through a chunk of years eating for emotional reasons, never truly tasting my food, stuffing myself for some other reason than pleasure. But now, I want every taste to be exquisite. I don’t want a single taste to be wasted. And when I insist on mindfulness in the kitchen, everything else glows, gloriously.

Case in point? Take a look at what I had for breakfast this morning.

In those years before my celiac diagnosis, food would often languish in the refrigerator. I’d plan elaborately for a big meal, and then be too physically exhausted by the process to cook any more for days. Vegetables would shrink into themselves in the crisper drawer. The corners of hunks of cheese would start to crack from dryness. And leftovers would wither into some strange concoction that would make me turn my head and wince when I went to throw it out. I wasted food, and I always felt guilty.

Not anymore.

First of all, I’ve really adopted the European village method of shopping. Daily jaunts to my favorite little stores—A & J Meats for meats and eggs; Wild Salmon Seafood Market for all my fish; McCormick's for choice wine purchases; the Market for fruit and veg on days when there are no farmers’ markets going on—instead of one big shop on a Sunday. I waste less food this way. But more importantly, I’m also more creative this way. Figs are fresh today? Okay, I’ll come up with something for those.

This morning, I found the leftover figs from the dinner party on Thursday. I should have used them yesterday, but I was too busy grinning at the Rufus Wainwright concert (ah, that boy’s voice) to make dinner last night. In fact, I just brought the lefttovers from the party as a picnic with my friends, Daniel and Jeff. They were suitably impressed, and then perhaps a little overwhelmed, as I pulled one dish after another from my big black bag. It was a good night.

But when I woke up this morning, and the coffee was brewing, I saw the figs. And thought of Christa.

I first met Christa at the door of a penthouse apartment on 66th and 5th in Manhattan. I had just been sent by the tutoring agency—where I was working at the time, tutoring child actors on movie sets—to be the emergency substitute weekend nanny for the year-old child of a famous movie actor. I was a writer, tutor, and book editor, broke after a summer, because no kid has to study during the summer. So of course I took the job. I had no idea that babysitting would lead to a book-editing gig. This is how I met the Crazy Famous People (CFP for short), to whom I allude sometimes. Through these strange circumstances, I became the editor of a destined-to-never-be-published gardening book, working with them for three months in New York, and then living with them in London for five months in Sting’s house. (I was only the babysitter for three days.) But all that was in the future. All I knew when I stood at the door of the penthouse apartment is that I was somewhat curious and mostly, already disgusted by the thought of working with these celebrities. I grew up in LA. I’ve seen too much. And I hate the way we venerate famous people in this culture. But it was money. And sure enough, it was going to be a story. When the door opened, my eyes took a quick sweep of the rooms before me. And of course, I saw an enormous living room, with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Madison Avenue. And what was on the table but six champagne flutes and an open, bubbling bottle of champagne. I almost chuckled. And then I took in Christa.

Christa is now one of my favorite people in the world. Blunt, funny, and deeply kind (as long as you don’t let her know that you know it), she had been cooking professionally for nearly forty years when I first met her. Originally Polish, but moved to Germany when she was two, she barely escaped WWII, although her mother did not. She thought her father had died, all her life, but he suddenly reappeared when she was forty. This is an incredible story I should tell another time, or in another place. After all, it’s hers. I didn’t know all this when I first met her. I just knew that she came with the fancy apartment the CFP were renting. She had been cooking for the same man and his family for decades. He moved out of his penthouse apartment to an even better one, which left this one open. What to do? Of course, rent it to the CFP! Unfortunately for her, Christa came as part of the deal.

I say unfortunately because the CFP drove Christa to distraction. She abhors pretension of any kind, and they were oozing it. Madame would call from the living room, in her deliberately syrupy sweet voice, “Christa, coffee?” Oh, but not just any coffee. It had to be a fresh latte, done just right. If, when Christa brought it in, grimacing, it didn’t have a perfect head of foam, Madame would ask for it to be done again. I’d always shrug my shoulders behind her, trying to establish unity with Christa instead. There were three hundred little trilling demands to Christa per day. The poor woman, over sixty years old, walked in a perpetual sweat, her greying hair in damp curls around her face.

She and I became friends through this, bonded by the searing experience, both of us a little too fascinated by the story and human drama to completely pull away. And in the end, we were both just too damn tenderhearted, trying to redeem these people, to no end. But long after we both cut our ties to the CFP, we have remained friends. When I still lived in New York, she would invite my best friend Sharon (who eventually worked for the CFP for awhile too; it was hard to resist at first) and I over for dinner in her little apartment on the Upper East Side. She’d plie us with prosciutto and melon, little spinach tarts, smoked salmon, tuna sushi, and gorgeous desserts. And plenty of really great wine.

Damn, that woman can cook.

Christa is the best chef I have ever met, bar none. She has impeccable taste, an extraordinary eye, and the ability to make beauty mundane, in the best way. I miss her. I haven’t been to New York in awhile, which means I haven’t had the chance to sit at her small dining table with Sharon, drinking great wine and listening to her gruff talk, while she drinks her beer and asks, about every three minutes, “You like? It tastes good?” And Sharon and I always nod, vigorously, our mouths full of bliss. Of course, she had cooked all day for us, and we would beg her to just eat at a restaurant, to spare her the work. But we were always secretly happy that she wanted to cook for us. We felt loved.

I’ve been thinking about her a lot lately, now that I’m choosing my food mindfully, insisting on the best, now that I must eat gluten-free. And when I saw the leftover figs in their little green basket on my dining table, I knew what I had to do.

Christa made these broiled figs often in the penthouse apartment. Madamde CFP loved them. And so did I. Ridiculously easy to make, they tasted decadent, like gourmet candy and expensive restaurants at the same time. So I put little dabs of leftover goat cheese on the figs I had sliced in half, then put the tray under the broiler. Five minutes later, and I was sighing with pleasure as I ate. Softly sweet, with a crunch of seeds, everything melting into one, the smooth taste of goat cheese spreading into the sweetness, and all of it over in thirty seconds. But the taste lingers and fingers its way down to my stomach. I’m happy and absolutely awake.

Food is never just the taste. It’s the memories of the people I’ve eaten it with, the stories in my mind, the places I have stood and eaten these foods, all combined with the sensory pleasure. It all swarms in my mouth and my mind. And frankly, even though most of this crazy country swoons at the idea of being near a celebrity, I would much rather be in my spacious little kitchen in Seattle, eating figs with the memory of Christa in my mind, than anywhere near that penthouse apartment. Because this one is mine.

BROILED FIGS WITH BRIE

Christa always used brie with the figs, and I agree. I just had leftover goat cheese. It sure wasn’t bad.

--twenty fresh figs, split in half
--dabs of your favorite soft cheese (a really good brie or cambozola works best)

Put on the broiler. Assemble the figs. Broil them for five minutes or so, until everything is bubbly. Eat. Just try to save leftovers. It’s not going to happen.

12 Comments:

At 12:44 PM, Blogger chubbiegirl said...

yum. my obsession at the moment (which you reminded me of with your figs), are fresh dates, split down the middle and loaded with peanut or almond butter. i swear they are the best candy in the world.

 
At 5:06 PM, Blogger revidescent said...

Mercy!

You're making my mouth water and I'm racking my brain to see if I can remember if any store had figs yet.

I had some similar to what you made, but they came wrapped in prosciutto (my browser insists that is spelled wrong and suggests prostitute instead) with some goat cheese and I think walnut oil.

I say "I think," because the cook would not tell me what was in them, but I remember thinking they were very sweet. Perhaps it was the walnut oil. Mmm, they were delicious. I could do without the prosciutto. Your recipe sounds much yummier.

Anyway, thanks for the comment and link on my blog. It has been awhile, I know, but things have been so hectic for me lately. Mind if I link to you? :)

~revi (aka fluttergirl.net)

 
At 5:14 PM, Blogger revidescent said...

Maybe it was this recipe. Honey would explain the sweet flavor.

 
At 4:24 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Unsigned Artists, Independent Music, Urban Lifestyle, Entertainment News,
News, Music, Fashion, Poetry, Technology and Film :: Tha Bocks
Out Tha B.O.C.K.$ Entertainment is an urban music and lifestyle company that provides unlimited, free marketing and promotion for urban music artists, poets, fashion designers, and independent film makers. Upload your work today! singers

 
At 10:18 PM, Blogger Shauna said...

Chubbiegirl--

Oh goodness, that sounds good. I'm bound to try it soon and report back here. Almond butter sounds especially good. (Oh, and expect an email soon!)

Revidescent--

Thank you so much for that recipe. Actually, my friend Meri and I tried it this afternoon (after the potato chips! yikes!) and it was gorgeous. I got an email from the guy who runs Food Porn Watch, and he said he has made a fig, gorgonzola, prosciutto, and honey pizza. Talk about yikes!

Oh, and please feel free to link to me. I'd love for many people to find this site.

Nice job on yours, by the way. I'm coming back for more reading.

 
At 1:13 PM, Blogger Mags said...

Oh my gosh. Broiled figs. Who knew! It sounds so delicious and decadent.

Question: What type of fig do you use? I just recently started getting organic fruit shipments from Planet Organic, and figs are on my "yes" list...

 
At 7:32 PM, Blogger Mags said...

Okay. I am eating this RIGHT NOW. One fig with brie, one fig with chevre. I gotta say. Chevre wins. It's a perfect juxtaposition of tastes.

 
At 7:35 PM, Blogger Shauna said...

Mags--

I'm with you! I really do like the chevre on the figs, which only happened that morning because it was the only cheese I had in the refrigerator. I think I could eat it every morning.

I've been eating Mission Figs, by the way. They show up in my organic delivery box too. Oh, I love them.

Thanks for coming by. I love your website, so it's good to see you here.

 
At 8:11 PM, Blogger Shauna said...

Chef Aimee--

Oh yes, a day that starts off with broiled figs is bound to be great.

And of course, I'd love it if you linked to me. I'm glad to see that you've just joined the blogging world. Welcome. And thanks for stopping by!

 
At 12:27 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I know this entry is nearly a year old, but I just tried this. In fact, it looked so good and sounded so interesting, that tonight I tried fresh figs AND goat cheese for the first time.

It was good! The figs were small green ones (kafotas), and I quickly figured out how to tell the ripe ones from the few not quite ripe ones. I'm looking forward to trying more figs now. And I picked up a little thing of chevre with peppadew peppers in it. Just sounded good to me.

The sweetness of the figs mixed with the cheese and that little hit of pepper... I'll be making these again.

 
At 7:15 PM, Blogger Mags said...

Somehow, this post of yours ended up in my blogfeed (today is 8/31/06). And what a coincidence - I JUST had this as Part A of tonight's dinner.

You know what I've been doing too? Figs and chevre (not broiled), drizzled with a balsamic reduction.

So, so good. Seriously. If you can have balsamic vinegar (that doesn't have gluten in it, does it?), go for it.

Explosion of flavor. In your mouth.

BTW, I saw you again on the Food Porn channel, and I'm always excited. It's so great that they discovered you. Your blog is just fabulous!!!

 
At 6:47 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

I'd love to make these for a party tomorrow...do they have to be just broiled when served? Or can they be served cold? Confused...please advise..

 

Post a Comment

<< Home