Posts Tagged ‘garlic’

Cowdery Farms Schiacciata Margherita

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Cowdery Farms sits on a  fertile sloping bench above the Ohio River. Once you stop by and take in all it has to offer, it brings one word to mind: Impressive. Today I marvel at the many kinds of vegetables and the sincere kindness of owners Larry and Kim Cowdery, proud fifth generation stewards of the land. The passion with which they describe the food they grow shows they truly love what they do.

So, what’s here that a pizza fanatic like me hasn’t seen already? Plenty.

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An assortment of squashes.  Golden cherry tomatoes. The movable greenhouse and river vista beyond.

Larry and Kim  have been selling produce at the Athens Farmers Market for 12 years. I’ve seen practically every restaurant owner in the area buy from this productive and hard-working couple. Their huge assortment of bok choy, napa cabbage, Thai eggplant and bitter melon makes them a destination for local Chinese restaurant owners. Chefs gravitate to their red tent as if pulled by some magnet, drawn in addition to beautiful kholrabi, beets, yellow squash, zucchini, melon and Mediterranian striped squash.

I am particularly keen on the purple potatoes, acorn, delicata, butternut and pumpkin squash in the fall; and the pimento, padron, habenero, jalepeno, cayenne, hot banana and sweet Italian peppers in late summer.  I call Larry the “Godfather of Heat” because I use his full compliment of capsicum to produce such hellish culinary firestorms as my cumin-laced Guatalajaran Pepper Bread with roasted cayenne, padron, hot yellow and jalepeno peppers. I add them to  fresh corn, black beans, roasted garlic, oven-dried tomato, carmelized onion and cilantro. I also use his peppers in my Beelzebub pizza, with  roasted tomato and habenro sauce, fresh oregano, mozzarella and garlic. This year I am buying all my Roma tomatoes, purple potatoes and green peppers from the Cowdry’s for my in-store menu mix, as well as some of the most awesome pattypan squash I’ve ever seen.

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Tender pattypan squash in bloom looks like a Dr. Seuss creation.

Back in the field, I squint at a big hedgerow, pointing to a 12-foot wall of green. “Why is that in the middle of your garden?” I ask with a pompous air of a business consultant.

“John, those are are tomato plants,” Larry answers politely.  I tried to catch a glimmer of an “eye-roll” behind his sungasses, knowing full well I deserve the Stupid Comment of the Week prize.

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Larry and his crop of “Tomato-zilla” plants.

Now that I’m looking at the hedgerow more closely, I see little orbs of yellows, purples and reds speckling the green leaves. The tomatoes don’t stop as I follow the vines above my head. I try to distract Larry while I grab a few. They taste candy sweet.  Now I know which pizza to make: my  Schiacciata Margherita.

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Note: Never get a 4-wheel ride from Kim up a mountain. She belongs in Nascar. Awesome teardrop tomatoes.

Kim tells me to hop on the trailer hitched onto the back of her 4-wheeler. As we drive up the slope from their farm shed to the eggplant and pepper field, I  find myself floating in space. Kim hollers, “Are you holding on?”  I crash down. “Now I am!” I wish for just a few less bumps just as we pass the tall corn and okra fields. At the top, the view of the mighty Ohio is stunning. Across the river, the mountains of West Virginia seem just a stone’s throw away. As Larry points to his bottom vegetable fields, you can see why the first settlers called this flat and productive land Long Bottom.

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Chinese long beans, white and Thai eggplant. Athens Farmers Market sign.    Early tomatoes for pickling.

The upper fields are just as productive and meticulously kept, containing all sorts of the previously mentioned peppers along with Japanese eggplant, acorn squash and pumpkins, which are blooming and beautiful. The rolling hills stretch out into the north, leading me to my pizza oven. I must go, but not before buying a copious amount of all sorts of small tomatoes for my Schicciata.

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Larry and Kim take a break to laugh at the pizza freak.   The most beautiful tomatillos are grown here.

Cowdery Farms Schiacciata Margherita

Schiacciata dough

1 – 2 ounces fresh basil leaves (probably 20 to 30 leaves depending on size and your tastes)

30 – 40 cherry or grape tomatoes, in different colors for a prettier presentation

8 – 10 ounces fresh mozzarella, sliced thinly (you will tear these up according to your own taste)

1 teaspoon sea salt

1-2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

Using the Schiacciata dough recipe, cut a 19 ounce dough ball and set in an oiled bowl for about 30 minutes. Form a football shape, 10 – 12 inches long by 6 – 8 inches wide. Transfer to an upside down cookie sheet that has been dusted with cornmeal. (This will be your pizza peel or large spatula to put on the pizza stone or upturned and pre-heated cookie pan in the oven) Be sure not to push down too hard or you will knock out the gas bubbles that create a bread-like rise.

Scatter the fresh basil leaves over the dough. Do not push them into the dough. Place the cherry tomatoes on top and press down gently.

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Tear the mozzarella into pieces to get a good “spread” and scatter around the schiacciata. Try to place the mozzarella on top of the largest leaves of basil. This will ensure that the leaves won’t burn, and gives the mozzarella a better flavor. Sprinkle sea salt on top and drizzle all over with olive oil.

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Transfer to a warm place for the dough to proof for 15 -20 minutes. Proofing is the final rise where the dough literally “cooks” in the warm air giving a chance for the yeast to eat more sugars and thus create more gas or “rise.” It is especially important with this recipe, as the dough will literally gobble up the tomatoes so they don’t roll off the schiacciata.

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I cook alot of Schiacciata Margheritas, all in one shot. Beautiful, Tasty and an awesome summer sight!

Gently push the tomatoes down again with the flat of your hand before putting in the oven. Slide the schiacciata into the oven onto the pizza stone or tray and cook for 10 to 15 minutes depending upon oven cooking. When golden brown, check the tomatoes and push down if it looks as though they want to “jump ship”. Look at the bottom of the schiacciata for doneness which will be a dark brown. Pull from oven and enjoy the results of this fresh mozzarella pizza recipe.

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Dances with Chanterelles

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“No kidding John, you haven’t been chanterelle hunting yet?” my astonished foodie-friend asked while buying a hunk of  pizza from me.
“Aaaaaaa no,” I said, my response sounding more ignorant than usual.
“Well, you gotta get your head out of that pizza oven and get out there dude, there poppin’ everywhere!”  He walked away.
Within the next 30 minutes, three more people said it was a bumper year for the chanterelles, and I goaded them on to tell me where to look.
“Under big beech trees,” came one response.
“On the north side of ridges with big oaks,” came another.
Now, nothing tweeks the goon’s brain like the challenge of a forest forage. The lure of free booty taken easily from mother nature, and all you have to do is hunt. The hunt was on.
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The name chanterelle comes from the Greek  cantharos, meaning cup. In France, it’s known as the girolle; in Italy as canterello, galletto, gallinacci, finferlo, margherita and garitula. The mushroom’s firm, eggshell yellow flesh has the fruity taste of apricot with a peppery finish, which is why the Germans call it pfifferling.

Often the simplest preparation is the best:  sauteed in butter with chervil or flat leaf parsley and shallots. Some northern Italian cooks add cream. Since 1893, it has been the favored mushroom to throw into  thick-ass bechamel for Maxime Gaillard’s famous Croutes Aux Champignons (baked mushrooms on toast) at Chez Maxim’s in Paris. Damn the heart attack, full speed ahead.

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My own chanterelle memory brings me back to Le Ciel Bleu restaurant in Chicago in 1988, where I was a dining room captain and served  hundreds of appetizers called “Champignon en Papillote,” or mushrooms baked in parchment paper.

For this dish, our belligerent yet talented Chef  Dominique folded a round piece of parchment paper around a pile of chanterelles he had tossed in a bowl of white Bordeaux, paper thin slices of garlic, chopped thyme and parsley, and sea salt. He baked the package at  375 degrees until the steam from the wine-soaked mushrooms bloated the air-tight bag into beautiful Hindenburg-like ball. As he yelled epithets like “Hurrrry, you Amer-eee-Keeen Dog,” I scurried out of the kitchen and brought the bag and a sharp knife to the table.  In front of guests, I cut the bag open with great finesse, releasing the herbal steam into their receptive faces. A drizzle of mushroom jus and brioche toast points made it a superb dish.

Back on planet earth and 22 hours after deciding to hunt, I struggled up a ridge in my usual mushroom hunting grounds. I had checked all the low-lying swampy forest but found no chanterelles so I gave up, caving in to my boys, who ranted about going to a large rocky ridge they call “Indian Rock.”
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Just as we approached the top, Sam shouted, “Shamdrell…er… kantrell!” My eyes followed his point and sure enough, on an almost vertical, moss covered wall above the trail, he had found chanterelles. They were small, beat-up and dirty, but chanterelles nonetheess, perfect on pizza with an organic duck breast.

A word about chanterelle hunting: Beware of false chanterelles and Jack O’Lanterns. These mushrooms mimic the real one. False chanterelles have sharp gills, thinner stems and more orange brown than the funnel-shaped real ones. Jack O’Lanterns grow on wood in large clumps, and in the dark. The best rule is: If you wonder whether it’s a chanterelle, don’t pick it.

Chanterelle Pizza with Grilled Duck Breast and Apricots

3-4 ounces fresh chantrelles

2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

1 tablespoon minced garlic

2 tablespoons chicken stock

1 tablespoon dry white wine

1 tablespoon chopped Italian flat leaf parsley

1 duck breast

Salt and freshly-ground pepper

1/4 cup shredded Parmesan cheese

1/4 cup shredded Gouda cheese

2 tablespoons shaved dried apricots

1/4 cup arugla

Use the Easy Dough recipe for round pizza (found in the right sidebar). Make it 4 hours before the bake.

Preheat oven. Place a pizza stone or the upturned bottom of a heavy sheet pan in the middle rack.

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Chanterelles are notoriously dirty and hard to clean. Luckily, mushroom fanatics revel in the fact that they don’t have to wade through forests of prickly bushes and mosquitoes to do this. Do not soak chanterelles. They act like sponges and soak up an amazing amount of water. To clean, use a dry brush or blow on them. For really dirty ones,  turn on the shower and use one or two streams to blast some dirt away fast, then dry like mad.

I always eat as much of the chanterelle as possible. You may have read the stems are tough. Bullocks! The meatier the better, with this beauty. I cut the stems down the center or quarter the big mushrooms.
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1. Saute garlic in a skillet on medium-low heat with 1 tablespoon of the olive oil for 5 minutes or until translucent. Add another tablespoon of olive oil and the mushrooms as you turn heat to medium. 2. Cook for 3 minutes, tossing frequently. Remove mushrooms from the pan, keeping all liquid. Turn heat up to high and add the chicken stock and wine. 3. Reduce for 2 minutes, stirring gently, then add mushrooms again. Add parsley and stir for another minute. Remove from heat.
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1. Cut a cross hatch pattern on the duck skin to alleviate curling of the breast while cooking. 2. Salt and pepper the duck breast and place on the grill at high (500 degrees) temperature, skin side down. Do not walk away as the duck fat may cause a firestorm. Cook for 2-3 minutes until the skin is crispy and starting to turn dark brown. Turn the breast over and cook for another 2-3 minutes. Remove and rest on a plate for 10 minutes. 3. Place skin side up and slice thinly on the bias across the breast (not lengthwise)

Make a pizza round according to the Easy Pizza Dough recipe and place it on a cornmeal-dusted pizza peel or the bottom of a sheet pan. Add the shredded Parmesan and gouda, then the mushrooms. Transfer it to the pizza stone or upturned pan and cook for 7- 10 minutes or until golden brown. (See video)
                                                  

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Top the cooked pizza with slices of duck breast, shaved dried apricots and a chiffonade (strips) of peppery arugula. Serve Immediately.

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