Who is interested? If B and N are eating, we'll have an early dinner at my house, maybe 5:30. Otherwise the time is up for grabs.
I've been DVRing the coverage of the Tour in HDTV, and it's gorgeous.
Brunch update: I tried a different buckwheat crepe recipe. It was tastier and much easier to manage. Just about as I finished making a stack of crepes, B and E returned from a bike ride, and we ate all of the following permutations of crepes:
- Asparagus, onion, and a (unidentified) grated cheese
- Asparagus, onion, and a soft (also unidentified) French cheese
- Elodie Farms fig-and-honey chevre with a warm compote of peaches, apricots, and plumcots
- Shrimp, corn, hot peppers, and more of the grated cheese
The crepe recipe was inspired by Anne Willan's Look & Cook French Country Cooking. For 10 crepes, I used the following ingredients:
- 2 TBS butter
- 3/4 cup buckwheat flour
- 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 1/4 cup 2% milk from Maple View Farm
Dinner update: The fish stew was fabulous. The recipe called for one pound of a white fish (cod, haddock, hake, or whiting), one pound of a rich fillet (eel or mackerel), and 1 1/2 pound of mussels, as well as a pound of sorrel. What ended up in the soup pot was a pound of cod, a pound of bay scallops, half of a pound of Spanish mackerel, and 10 ounces of arugula ... Nonetheless, the stew was excellent: rich, flavorful, multi-faceted.
For those interested, the recipe is on pages 100-101 of The Country Cooking of France, by Anne Willan.
1 comment:
Let me just say, while leftovers may be created equal, they don't all end up nearly as tasty as today's brunch... -- B
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