


Sandi W prepared one of the more
ambitious dishes of the evening. Grilled Eggplant with Tomato Jam and
Spiced Hazelnuts. This dish
required ingredients that take 6 weeks to make, such as the preserved
limes and tomato jam. It too had yogurt, used as
a bed for the eggplant slice.
The tomato jam was more like dried tomato jam and had very concentrated
tomato flavors that added a blast of flavor to the mild eggplant. The other side to this dish that is not
picked up in the title of it, was the preserved lime compote. It was very spicy (i.e. not wine
friendly) and did little to highlight the eggplant. The Spiced Hazelnuts were scattered about the dish as
accent notes to the paprika flavor.
We all (including Sandi) felt that the lime compote could be deleted
from the dish in the future. The
grilled eggplant, tomato jam, yogurt and spiced nuts were very enjoyable. Bill wisely selected a very
hearty 1990 Topolo Zinfandel from their
Rosso Ranch in Sonoma to go with this dish. The zinfandel actually held up against the heat in the dish
and because of its earthiness,
went well with the eggplant and tomato.
Michelle took us to Japan with her Tuna with Black Beer Ponzu and Radish. She even purchased the tuna from a
Japanese market! She chose a
non-hoppy stout to make the ponzu sauce and used daikon ( pronounced “die cone”
BTW) instead of the watermelon radish called for (none were to be found
anywhere!). The tuna was seared
perfectly and the whole dish was very Japanese-y, especially with the daikon
substitution. Bill served a
Rochioli 2010 Chardonnay from the River Block vineyard in the Russian River
Valley in Sonoma. It was
delicious, definitely. What’s not
to like about a Rochioli Chard?
But the tuna dish stomped all over it, and I was wishing we had some
sake for this entré.
For our main course, our host,
Jeffrey, made Beef Gulyas with MarrowToast, that he said was basically a Hungarian goulash: meat, potatoes,
onions, paprika, green bell peppers, lots of garlic, marjoram, Serrano chiles
and some bacon. The Gulya was
pretty unremarkable but the marrow toasts were divine! Totally not good for us but oh so
rich, flavorful and decadent!
Jeffrey has a private purveyor who raises cattle from whom we was able
to get very large marrow bones. He
toasted some slices of ciabatta bread from Acme Bakery and we all slathered all
the marrow we could dig out of the bones on our slice. Bill chose a Rhone wine to go
with this hearty stew and marrow toast.
Chateau Cabrieres 1998 Chateauneuf-Du-Pape. As Rhones tend to be earthy, this was the perfect
choice to complement the goulash stew.


We all commented that the Bar Tartine book was not a “go to” cookbook that we
will neither buy nor use much, if already bought.
The amount of work put into each dish was not evidenced in the outcome. BUT, as Willie stated, we are all such good gourmet cooks that we had a wonderful meal in spite of the book. . .a yeoman's effort on everyone's part.

Bill chose a 2001 Chateau Lafleurie-Peraguey
Sauternes
for the desserts this evening. I’m not sure it went well with either dessert but it
sure was delicious on its own!
I opted to make a Strawberry Tart with Flakey Pastry. The flakey pastry takes 3 hours to
make: rolling, folding, refrigerating repeatedly and then baking with a weight
over the dough so that it doesn’t rise in the center. This is a recipe out of the Tartine Bakery cookbook so
I confess, I cheated! I just
felt we needed a lighter dessert to end the evening on and really liked this
recipe. The great thing about this
recipe is that once the dough was put together, I only needed half of it so I
have the other half sitting in my freezer, waiting to be baked. The whipping cream had Grand
Marnier in it but it wasn’t very evident.
I think I’ll increase the amount next time. The strawberries were from Kika’s Farms in Watsonville who sells their strawberries at the Saratoga Farmer's Market on
Saturdays and the Mountain View Farmer's Market on Sundays. They are picked very ripe and are
sweeter than other varieties. Eat
them quickly because they are so ripe they spoil within a day. The BEST strawberry jam strawberries,
bar none!
And, so we end another evening
enjoying the company and the great view from the top of the Saratoga
hills. The evening was so pleasant
that we dined outside, no wind, no bugs and no night chill. Perfect!
Our Annual Holiday Buffet will be on Saturday Dec. 12. You
may bring any dish from any of our cookbooks to date. We tend to do appetizers and desserts but if you want
to make a main course, just remember that we have small plates so make them
bite-sized! Bring
suggestions for our next cookbooks.
Benu has already been suggested by Jeffrey and a retro to Greens
by Sharon. Bring ideas
too (like a coffee tasting event by Reid)! AND,
of course, your kitchen-oriented White Elephant or $15 or less kitchen gift. Don’t forget our crowing coq mascot!
Time of buffet TBA so stay tuned!
Cook on!
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