i remember when i was but a tot, when a perfect day involved
my friend anna from down the road, our teddies, a picnic in my back garden, and orangina.
look out for that owl, he will shoot you the side-eye and steal your popsicle when you’re not looking. |
a few years later, the perfect day involved a sleeping bag, a video of the
breakfast club, and some impulse body spray just to make you feel really classy.
later still, a dodged curfew, a beach, a boy you might have
a crush on (or you might not. you’re not
quite sure yet, and that’s okay), and a bottle of boone’s strawberry hill.
let’s face it, perfection comes in many forms; wears many
faces. each year, each decade, the
perfect day sheds its skin, and undergoes a metamorphosis into something
perhaps completely unlike before. lou
reed meets franz kafka.
mushrooms. to me, perfection. |
fast-forward a few decades, a few kids, and what, now, does
the perfect day (or, evening) entail?
why, pajama pants, an uncorked bottle (or two) of red, and a fun cooking
project with your partner in crime-fighting and cookery.
the supermensch shares most of my food
crushes, which makes cooking with her such a pleasure. we both have a fascination with fennel, admire
the elegance of the eggplant, and the beatific beauty of the beet. (she crushes slightly less hard on alliteration,
though, so let’s move on.)
autumn has hit hard here in the pacific northwest. pretty much overnight, actually. to the right of the frame is summer, to the
left is autumn, muscling poor summer out of the way like a schoolyard
bully.
boom |
though summer’s end always brings
a pendulous and somewhat dramatic single
tear to my eye, autumn also holds a warm place in my heart. for, despite its dark mornings, blustery
days, and soggy nights, it brings with it presents of culinary wonder: freshly
sprung mushrooms with wet earth still clinging to their slender stalks, tiny
brussels sprouts that make you feel like gulliver eating a cabbage, and my old
favourite, the humble beetroot.
when the supermensch shined her spatula signal into the sky,
we knew that in some shape or form, we had a hot date in store with a bunch of
beets. SM found a recipe (in the
still-adored “a change of appetite” by the terribly clever and entertaining diana
henry) for beet and carrot fritters with dill yogurt sauce which awoke our
appetites with rumbly roars. time to
turn up the volume on the lou reed. to
the chefmobile, supermensch! we have a
root vegetable to save!
beet and carrot fritters with dill and yogurt sauce (adapted from diana henry’s excellent “a change of appetite”)
fritters:
canola oil (diana suggests peanut oil, but the canola we had
on hand did just fine)
1 small onion, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1 large russet potato
2 large carrots
2 large beets (diana apparently thinks that size DOES, in
fact, matter)
2 eggs
salt & freshly ground pepper
sauce:
1 cup greek yogurt
1 cup greek yogurt
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 tbsp chopped dill fronds, plus extra for garnish
heat ½ tbsp. canola oil in a skillet and gently sauté the
onion until soft but not browned. add
garlic and cook a further 2 minutes.
remove from heat and transfer to a bowl.
shred the remaining vegetables (preferably with the aid of a
food processor to save your poor joints).
use a clean dish towel (preferably red so the beet doesn’t stain it) to
squeeze out excess moisture. once fairly
dry, add the shredded vegetables to the bowl with the onion. add the eggs, season with salt and pepper,
and mix well.
action shot! |
mix together ingredients for the sauce. the flavor will develop with a little time,
so be sure to make it before you fry the fritters.
heat 1 tbsp of oil in the skillet, and spoon in the mixture
in roughly 1/4 cup portions. don’t
overcrowd the pan, you want them to have enough room to form a nice crust. cook over medium heat until the bottoms are
brown and crispy, then flip and repeat.
once both sides have a good crust formed, turn down the heat to low and
cook a further 4 or 5 minutes on each side to make sure they are cooked
through. repeat in batches, keeping the
cooked fritters warm in a low oven, until all are done.
serve with the yogurt sauce, the remaining dill, perhaps
some mushroom ragout (as you can never have too much of a good thing), a fat
bottle of red, and a fabulous friend.
perfect.
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