After six months in abeyance, a return for my occasional series exploring famous signature dishes, and the cookbooks where you can find them.
Salad Days
Robuchon's Salade Marachiere
aux Truffes. Fiver if you can
spot the novelty salad leaf...
|
Not just, of course, any old salad. Certainly not the limpid concoctions of lettuce and tomato you’d find at your local sandwich bar. Nor (alas) the glorious fin de siècle “composed salads” of the Escoffier era (primary ingredients: lobster, crayfish, as little shrubbery as possible). And not even the 1980s salade gourmandes of Guerard or Robuchon (primary ingredients: truffles, truffles and a little shaved truffle).
No this
isn’t just any ordinary salad. In fact it’s more like a bonsai horticulture
show. Imagine thirty, forty, fifty different varieties of shoots, roots and
leaves: Each of them individually trimmed, blanched, and carefully arranged on
the plate. To go with them no thuggish vinaigrette, rather a puree of this, a
slick of infused that and a sprinkle of freeze-dried crunch.
The effect
is overwhelming, and deliberately so. But rather than coming from expensive
ingredients like truffles or lobster, it is the sheer variety on the plate that
delivers shock and awe: The freshness of perfect shoots and tendrils plucked in
their prime (preferably that morning, ideally about five minutes before the
start of service). The painstaking work which has gone into preparing and
cooking each little leaf. The glorious array of them laid out together…
It’s salad
Jim, but not as we know it…
Salad modernista
David Kinch: Into the Vegetable Garden |
This modern
style of salad has become a recurring feature in some of the world’s greatest
restaurants:
- In California David Kinch has made Into the Vegetable Garden the high point of his nose-to-the-ground Californian cuisine.
- In New York, Paul Liebrandt serves up at $48 entrée simply called “Garden”, a mix of 30-50 greens, tubers and roots dished up in a Le Creuset pot.
- A world away in icy Noma, Rene Redzepi’s Vegetable Field applies the same idea to root vegetables, with their earthy connection emphasised with his famous trompe l’oeil malt soil.
- Meanwhile in sunny Lancashire (that last adjective was ironic, by the way), Simon Rogan serves up signature “salad explosions” at L’Enclume and The French, adding his own touch to the dish with a sprinkle of lovage-salt.
- And in sunny Spain (that last adjective was not ironic, BTW), chef Adoni Anduriz dishes up his Vegetables: Roasted and Raw, Sprouts and Leaves, Wild and Cultivated in two-starred restaurant Mugaritz.
Rene Redzepi: Vegetable Field |
The genius
of this dish is that it allows chefs to do is present a dish which showcases
local produce cooked with the utmost simplicity,
but also create an incredibly complex
dish with variations of flavour and texture to challenge the most discerning
palate. Remember, it is very easy to serve prime ingredients with little
adornment (the Chez Panisse style). And it’s very easy, given enough gadgetry
and work-slave stagieres (the El
Bulli/Fat Duck/Noma model), to create incredibly complicated dishes with dozens of different elements. But it is very difficult
to do both.
Of course
this dish isn't just called a “salad” or even a “modern salad”. It has a very
specific name and lineage.
Le
Gargouillou.
The Dish
Michel Bras: Mountain Main
If there is
ever a dish which is completely intertwined with its inventor, it's Michel
Bras and his Gargouillou de Jeune Legumes. After all, the Gargouillou is all about showcasing
the local terroir on a plate, and
Michel Bras is the three star chef most closely identified with a certain sense of
place.
That place
is the windswept Aubrac plateau of central France, where Bras’ and his family
run their eponymous three star restaurant. Locally-born and self-taught he has
created a unique cuisine that is tightly bound with the rugged Auvergne
landscape. Out on the hills he forages wild leaves and shoots for his
Gargouillou. In the kitchen he prepares the hardy Aubrac beef which roams the
neighbouring hills. In his dining room dishes he lays out traditional Laguiole
steak names, made in the next village across. Indeed the whole restaurant
complex – hewn from the peak of a lonely mountain with sweeping views across
the hills, means the landscape is utterly inescapable for diner and chef like.
Dead Aubrac cow, in extreme close-up... |
In short the
food Michel Bras cooks is resolutely tied to his tradition and region. But at
the same time, it is equally forward looking and willing to innovate. Nowhere is
this contrast shown more clearly than the Gargouillou.
Le Vrai Gargouillou
The idea, he
says, came to him during a long run in the countryside in 1978. It was June and
the fields were in full flower. He wanted to capture the richness and the
beauty, to translate it into a dish….
His starting
point was the Gargouillou, a
traditional and rather obscure peasant dish. The 1988 Larousse mentions it in passing as “a country ragout of vegetables”
but adds no detail. It was actually so obscure that none of my traditional
French recipe books (include Edisud’s Cuisine
d’Auverge et du Bourbonnais!) even mention it. It was only a desperate
Google.fr query for “le vrai gargouillou” which turned up the elusive Pommes de terre en gargouillou.
The original
Gargouillou, it turns out, is completely different
from the Bras version. It’s a simple stew made by frying some country ham with
bay leaves and then simmering it with potatoes, onions and a little broth (the
name “gargouillou” comes from the
bubbling of the simmering broth – shares a root with the English “gargle”), before finishing with a dash of parsley, cream and
lemon juice. The sort of humble dish you’d expect an
Auvergnat farmer to have bubbling away on a cold winters night – filling, cheap
but unremarkable.
Good enough to eat... |
Of course
Michel Bras’ version is nothing like that – more “deconstructed gargouillou” than peasant potage. He begins by
replacing the potato with vegetables and flowers. In a hat-tip to the original
recipe some of the vegetables are simmered first, although individually rather
than all together. The ham remains, but is gently fried and added at the last
minute. As Michel Bras said, the countryside on a plate.
Niac, niac niac…
Of course so
far what we have described is nothing more than an extremely posh mixed salad.
Shrubbery? Tick. Plate? Tick. All we need is a dribble of vinaigrette and they
we’re done.
Of course
that’s where you’re wrong.
What sets it apart is the deployment of Niacs to create contrast and flavour in the dish. Niac is Michel Bras own term for little condiments, techniques or touches which add excitement to a dish. It could be anything from a herb puree to a dash of local fire-water to a sprinkle of dried olive. As Bras writes:
… we enliven our plates with many different combinations that I call niac. Niacs are structures of visual, scented, and tactile elements that sharpen the senses and prepare for new discoveries. A niac livens up, energizes, stimulates and provokes inquiry. When placed alongside the dish being presented, I design them as “touches” or “traces.” Or the niacs could be an emulsion of sorrel leaves or sweet peppers, or mixtures made from dry black olives, combinations of unrefined sugar cane and fruits, vegetable structures-the possibilities expand every day… I can find niac in a coffee cup. When the sugar has dissolved, I drink it without stirring. A teaspoon of sugar mixed with coffee remains at the bottom of the cup-the combination of strong flavours is comforting.
In the
Gargouillou a number of niacs are
deployed. “Flavoured pearls” of cep braised with a little garlic, coriander and
parsley are used as a garnish. Parsley oil is painted onto the plate. “Crystal
leaves” (oven dried herbs, shiny and brittle as glass) add a crunch, fried
slices of country ham a salty note. These are all little touches which seem
insignificant in isolation, but together create the little crunches and flashes
which elevate the dish.
The Recipe
First take one large French plateau…
The recipe
for Gargouillou of Young Vegetables was first published in of
Michel Bras’ Essential Cuisine (of
which more later) but is now readily available
from the Bras website. Actually it’s more an “instruction set” then a “recipe”
per se; Unless you have access to a large French, mountainous plateau, a wide
variety of its vegetation and a certain breed for French country ham, it is
nigh on impossible to exactly recreate the dish. (That’s sort of the point –
it’s a dish which is inescapably rooted in a certain place.)
The original Gargouillou recipe (pages 1 & 2) |
Nonetheless
the broad formula is definitely replicable, requiring little more than a pan, some water and quite a lot of vegetable matter.
Variety and
freshness of ingredients are the key. The recipe recommends several distinct
categories of vegetables: perennials (asparagus, fiddlehead ferns, artichokes
etc), leafy vegetables (with flowers), bulbs, roots, vegetables with pods and
fruits (by this it means vegetables with seeds like cucumbers, tomatoes and
pumpkins, not sweet things). There will inevitably be some kinds
of plant life he mentions that you don't have access to (e.g. bryony, pascal celery, geslu, crapaudine, conopode, saint fiacre
green beans, chayote, burnet, yarrow), but
please don’t despair. I guess that’s why Michel Bras is a three-starred
Michelin chef and you’re not!
The recipe
gives instructions for preparing and cooking each vegetable – a list that
stretches to nearly three pages. Mostly it’s just blanching in salted boiling
water, but there are variations. Artichokes, cardoons and garlic are cooked in
a broth flavoured with coriander and orange zest. Some greens (e.g. beet tops
or fennel bulbs) are sauteed in butter or oil; crosnes are also pan-fried. Onions are wrapped in foil and roasted.
A number of roots (e.g. parsley root or turnip root) are prepared as a puree,
which presumably adds a bit of textural variation to the finished dish.
The original Gargouillou recipe (pages 3 & 4) |
The remaining pages
covers the various niacs and
dressings. Ceps (rather poetically termed “flavoured pearls and touches”) are
blanched and then fried with garlic, coriander, parsley and thyme. There is
also a parsley oil (the stems and leaves are simply macerated with the oil,
rather than blitzed together as is more common). He also recommends sprouts
which are gathered by soaking the seeds and sticking them in a dark place for a
few days until they sprout.
To finish
the dish an emulsion is prepared by frying slices of country ham and deglazing
with vegetable broth and butter (note there is no viniger or acidic component,
which you would normally expect). Everything is then tossed together –
vegetables, sprouts, garnishes – and heated slightly before being plated “to
give an impression of motion”. The recipe ends with the whimsical instruction to
“Play with flavoured pearls and touches”.
The other Gargouillou:
There is
also a second variation later in the book, the Gargouillou of Leaves, Roots, Mushrooms and Fruits in Autumn
(p128). As the name suggests it’s a variation on the theme which focuses more
on Autumn produce like roots, squashes and mushrooms. The flavours are slightly
sweeter (on niac is a red wine,
juniper and fig reduction, another step purees pumpkin with a slug of sugar).
Also, rather than being dressed with ham butter he uses a more traditional
hazelnut vinaigrette (the garnish is also raw prosciutto rather than fried
country ham). The overall effect however is much the same.
The Book
Once
upon a time in Connecticut…
Both recipes
were originally appeared in Michel Bras Essential
Cuisine. First published in French in 2002 we owe its existence in English
to a remarkable outfit called Ici
La Press. This is a boutique publisher was founded by husband-and-wife
restauranteurs Bernard Jarrier and Carole Peck who ran the Good News Café in Danbury,
Connecticut. In 2000 they teamed up with local typesetter Dennis Pistone to
start a brand new publisher with a simply mission: to translate and published
great European cookbooks for an American audience.
They had
spotted a gap in the market for the treasury of world-class French chefbooks
which never made it into English because their authors were thought of as too
obscure or esoteric for an American audience. They basically took a bet that
great food writing would sell whatever the audience.
Their modus
operandi was to take the pick of French-language cookbooks, keep the existing design and layout but translate and update the text and recipes for an
American audience. Notable coups included the first Spoon cookbook, Marvellous Recipes from the French Heartland
by future three-star chef Regis Marcon, and Vegetables
by Guy Martin of Le Grand Vefour. But their greatest triumph was, of course, Michel
Bras’ definitive work, Essential Cuisine.
Time and Place in French Cuisine... |
Even twelve
years on the book feels remarkably modern. One reason is the design. Rather
than the soft-focus “restaurant dishes on a plate” prevalent at the time,
dishes are arranged in a flowing, vertical style and shot against a pure white
background. This technique was unusual at the time, but is now widely used
(e.g. in the Mugaritz and Coi cookbooks) to create an absolute focus on the
food.
Another pioneering feature comes at the end of the book. At the time almost every cookbook finished with the Dessert section and acknowledgements. But in Essential Cuisine once you are through with the recipes it launches into a fifty-five-page travel-essay-cum-photo-montage which is
basically a love-letter from Bras to his countryside. Today
this sort of “mood and inspiration” essay is a common feature of any
self-respecting chefbook (in Noma: Time and Place in Nordic Cuisine it pretty much takes up entire
book). But in 2002 this felt entirely new.
Melting middles and monochrome monkfish
And the
recipes aren’t bad either. Along with the two variations of Gargouillou, the
standout dish is the recipe for Chocolate
Biscuit Coulant (p166) - the original “melting middle” chocolate cake. Bras' version is unusual because achieves the molten effect by first freezing a ball
of chocolate ganache which is then embedded in the cake batter and baked. This
contrasts with most other recipes which simply part-bake the batter so the
middle is half-cooked and runny. The advantage of the Bras recipe is a) you don't need to time it
perfectly to get the middle right and b) the interior isn't laced with raw
flour.
Also check out the monkfish poached in black olive-oil (p74), a strikingly black/white presentation intended to evoke the light and shade of Aubrac:
Michel Bras' striking olive oil/monkfish combo. Shades of Heston's Salmon & Liquorice... |
In short
this book is well worth seeking out; even without the Gargouillou it would qualify as a minor classic on the
basis of the Chocolate Coulant alone.
Although the Ici La Press edition is becoming increasingly hard to track down
(listing for well
into three figures on Amazon), there is a 2008 reprint from the original French publishers which is easier to find (the restaurant website also has
it for €59).
Unfortunately, the
intervening years haven’t been as kind to Ici La Press. Despite their early
success I’ve seen nothing new from them for ten years. My suspicion is that the
globalisation of the online foodie world meant previously undiscovered French
chefs suddenly attained a much higher international profile. This attracted bigger
publishing houses like Flammarion, Phaidon and Ten Speed Press, leaving little
room for a niche publisher like Ici La Press. Today the idea that a Rene
Redzepi or Pierre Gagnaire would go with a small typesetting outfit from the
backwoods of Connecticut sounds vaguely quaint. Commercial reality but, for
lovers of fairy-tales, the food world’s loss.
Postscript: A few more spreads from the book (because it really is that good)
No self-respecting modern(ist) chef would be caught without a childhood-nostaligia based hors d'oeuvre... |
Foie gras sandwiches. Because if you're a French chef no matter how many hydrocolloids you have, some ingredients never go out of fashion... |
Michel Bras is a man who would never mix his whites and his coloureds in the washing... :-p |
Worth pointing out that M. Point was the originator of the truffle salad- from memory the truffles were marinated in lemon juice for a bit. I imagine Robuchon owes Point a great deal, though- kind of like a Point-successor in a faux-Japanese sensei outfit.
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