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Jamie's Food Revolution

Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution

Sunday afternoon, my better half and I took our guests to the Piggy Market in Westboro to visit Dave Neil and Pascale Berthiaume. Apparently, we arrived two hours before closing. Pascale had just returned from the Landesdowne Farmers' Market. Both she and Dave was visibly worn, but happy to answer all of our friends' many questions. Suffice it to say, Abby and Mlle Ling were curious about just about everything in the self professed "fine food delicatessen with a focus on artisanal pork products, and locally produced foods."

Bread and Smoked Duck Breasts
In the end, we picked up a loaf of oat and cranberry Art Is In bread and a pair of smoked duck breasts. Originally, I promised Mlle Ling duck confit, but Dave was all out. He offered me some frozen ones, but I substituted smoke duck breasts instead.
Abby Carefully Slicing the Art Is In Bread
Abby Carefully Slicing the Art Is In Bread

Pair of Smoked Duck Breast
Pair of Smoked Duck Breast

Sliced, served chilled
Sliced, served chilled

Mlle Ling's boyfriend Thomas picked up a tub of Pascale's Hazelnut and Chocolate ice cream for dessert.

Dave also graciously invited me back to see a batch of in-house hot smoked pork belly bacon. Were I not just in the market for appetizers for that evening's dinner, I think I would have walked away with an entire side. It looked and smelled incredible.

Total cost of duck breast and bread: $32.25 (and worth every penny!)

When I tweeted what I planned to serve as an appetizer (thinly sliced smoked duck breast on artisanal bread), Epicuria's Chef Tracey Black mentioned that smoked duck breast goes very well with fruit chutney. Yes, Chef! I then walked up to my fridge and demanded ingredients. My fridge coughed up a pair of mangoes, so I made mango chutney.

Mango Chutney
With limited ingredients and time, I settled on FoodTV's Anna Olson's recipe with slight omissions. The modified recipe follows:

Recipe
Ingredients
Ingredients

Diced Onions
Diced Onions

Baking Chutney
Baking Chutney

Done
Done

Things you'll need:
  • 2 cups diced mango - I know, mass would be better. Still, 2 regular large mangoes produce 2 cups of diced flesh
  • 1/2 cup diced onion
  • 1/2 cup light brown sugar
  • 3 tbsp rice wine vinegar
  • 1 tbsp finely grated fresh ginger
  • 1 tsp ground cumin
  • 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • zest of 1 orange
  • white granulated sugar to sprinkle

Prep:
  1. Disassemble the mango, onion, and ginger
  2. Pre-heat an oven to 375°F

Method:
  1. Combine all ingredients in a non-stick pan and simmer on medium to medium-low heat until the onions are tender and the liquid reduces to a syrup
  2. Spoon the mixture into heat proof ceramic containers. I used oval gratin dishes
  3. Sprinkle with sugar
  4. Bake for 20 minutes

The latter oven baking is meant to create a sugar syrup on top of the chutney. Had I a butane torch, I would have brullé'd the top.

Since there was no time to cool the chutney or allow it to mature its flavours, I chose to add some caramel sweetness and serve it warm. My intention was to pair savory and smokey with spicy and bright. The pairing worked.
Served
Served

Playful Plating
Playful Plating

Think duck breast. dry cured with spices. hot smoked. sliced thin, served chilled. Accompanying it, on slices of expertly worked bread, was something sweet, bright, and spicy.

Stew
Here is the additional entree I was asked to make: slow cooked beef stew (4 hours), using beef rib meat.
Beef Stew
Beef Stew

Regarding the sauce, it came from blening the onions I stewed the beef with, forced them through a strainer, and using the resultant puree to thicken leftover braising liquid. Major flavourings: light soy sauce, fish sauce, and black pepper.

Bacon Waffles
For breakfast the next Monday, I snuck out of the condo early in the morning to barbecue a typical supermarket-sized package of bacon.
Barbecued Bacon
Barbecued Bacon

Bacon Mountain
Bacon Mountain

When I came back, I whipped up a batch of cookingnook.com's waffle batter: 1 1/2 cups milk, 2 egg yolks, 1/4 cup sugar, 2 cups plain flour, and 1/2 tsp baking powder via the muffin method; thinned with 2 oz melted butter and 2 tbsp cold water; and lightened with firm peaked egg whites. While the mixture was hydrating, I ran the crisped and cooled bacon through a food processor and added the fine crumbs to the batter.
Batter
Batter


Then, my better half ran the batter through our waffle maker. Result: bacon waffles, which tasted really good with pancake syrup.
Waffle maker
Waffle maker

Waffles
Waffles

Texture
Texture

Think light waffles, crisp, and loaded with savory bacon bits.

Lunch in the Byward Market follows after the jump...

More after the jump...
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foodiePrints was born December 3, 2009