
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
..
Bistro
Sharon O'Connor
Sharon
OConnors Bistro is an ambitious and engaging cookbook that covers all
the bases with enthusiasm, charm and an acknowledged passion for French bistro cooking.
OConnor tells
of being hopelessly smitten with her subject matter, and proceeds to unfurl it
with sixty-eight recipes by the chefs of seventeen Paris bistros and three more in Quebec,
New York and the Napa Valley. The two American bistros - the smash-hit Balthazar in
Manhattans SoHo, and the more recent arrival, Bouchon, in Yountville - are so
authentic they seem like transplants from France.
In an unusual
innovation, OConnor provides mood music for the home cook who might need it in the
form of a CD that accompanies the book. OConnor is a musician (founder of the San
Francisco String Quartet) as well as a cookbook author, and has turned out eleven previous
works in her menu-and-music series.
The Bistro CD
features vintage jazz numbers by Francophiles like Django Reinhardt and George Gershwin.
Not surprisingly, the nostalgic musical tour of Paris by the lively Metronome Quintet
includes Edith Piafs "La Vie en Rose" and Vernon Dukes "April
in Paris." The instrumental arrangements, complete with sentimental accordion solos,
are uniformly appealing.
In addition, the
book offers brightly written background material about French bistros. OConnor
traces the bistro from its origin two centuries ago as a cafe-charbon (a place to
buy coal or wood and stop for a snack and glass of wine) to its status today as a
convivial neighborhood eatery with simple, satisfying home-style cooking, or cuisine
grand-mere, as its most often called. OConnor even explains the blurry
difference between a bistro, brasserie and cafe.
Finally, the book
becomes a delightful travel guide, with short but informative essays headed
Neighborhood Walk, about the area surrounding each of the Paris bistros.
Theres a lot of rich history and local color in these essays, thanks to
OConnor's assiduous and thorough research.
The recipes
represent house specialties of the different bistros. These include such venerable
establishments as Chez Allard (Duck with New Turnips), Polidor (Lamb with White Beans) and
Au Pied de Fouet (Chicken with Chive Cream Sauce). This being bistro cuisine, the dishes
are largely uncomplicated and very traditional, such as steak pommes frites, cassoulet,
tarte tatin, mousse au chocolat and creme caramel. Most can be made
ahead, and some, like braised coq au vin and veal stew, taste better the day after
theyre made.
Familiar as these
classics are to most cooks, theyre given interesting little twists, as in the
tantalizing Poached Salmon with Leek Sauce of the renowned Left Bank bistro, Chez
Germaine.
It must be
said that bistro food such as this isnt particularly light or healthy. Because of
the high fat content, OConnor suggests that the amount of butter can be cut by half
in many of the recipes without noticeably altering the flavor or texture. Im not so
sure, though it would certainly help lower your cholesterol.
Here is a tempting
example of a recipe from OConnors book:
Soft-Boiled Eggs with Morels
This appetizer from Bistro Chez Diane is served with strips of toast for dipping into the eggs. A Cabernet such as Bourgueil or a Beaujolais such as Brouilly is good alongside.
1 ounce (30
grams) dried morel mushrooms
1/2 teaspoon butter
1 small shallot,
minced
3 tablespoons dry
white wine
1 teaspoon tomato
paste
Salt and freshly
ground black pepper to taste
8 eggs
8 slices sandwich
bread, toasted and cut into thin strips
Soak
the dried mushrooms in warm water for 1 hour. Gently squeeze dry and chop finely.
In a small saucepan,
melt the butter over medium heat and saute the shallot for 2 minutes, or until
translucent. Pour in the wine and bring to a boil.
Stir in the morels,
tomato paste, salt and pepper. Reduce heat to low and simmer for about 30 minutes,
stirring occasionally. Set aside and keep warm.
Bring a medium
saucepan of water to a boil, add the eggs and immediately lower the heat so the water is
barely simmering. Cook the eggs for 3 minutes. Using a slotted spoon, remove the eggs and
run under cold water.
Using a sharp knife,
neatly slice off the tops of the eggs and reserve the tops intact. Place each egg in an
egg cup, top with a spoonful of the morel mixture, and cover with an egg top set on a
slant. Place 2 egg cups on each of 4 plates and serve wit the strips of toast.
Makes 4 servings.
- Stanley Eichelbaum