from Out There to your kitchen
One of the most satisfying things in the world, to me, is to eat something truly inspiring out there in the world, think on it for a day or two ( or between lunch and dinner), and then recreate it in the cozy warmth of my kitchen, these November days. The fact is, if the sun is going to set at 4 p.m., I think the only recourse we have is to pretend that it’s dinnertime, and cook something elaborate to keep us going.
It always helps in these moods to have a friend to inspire me, and on Friday, it was my pal Charlie. We met two years ago on a five-day intensive (as in no phone, no newspapers, no cars, no escape) food writing course in deepest, darkest Devon. We became instant friends, engaging in what Charlie calls “banter,” in which we seem to do nothing but laugh at each other’s wit. Don’t you find that witty people make you wittier? I have to try that much harder, when I’m with Charlie, to think on my feet and find things to laugh about. It’s an addiction.
We always meet up and do foodie things together, so we can experience that most delicious of triumvirate pleasures: laughing, and eating, while talking about food. So Friday was “Masterchef Live” at the annual food fair in Olympia, the giant exhibition space near us. We met up in the spitting rain, folded our umbrellas and plunged into the melee. First up: the live Masterchef cook-off between Celebrity Masterchef winner Lisa Faulkner, she of the famed deep-fryer “Spooks” episode — I’m sure there were plenty of deep-frying jokes when she first began the competition! — and last year’s winner, Dhruv Baker, a truly inspirational Indian-English fusion cook. Crispy-skinned sea bream versus puff pastry fish pie… such fun to see them cook LIVE! A couple of terrible jokes led Charlie to quip, “Bring in the Luftwaffe, there’s been a bomb!”
And later in the morning we saw Dhruv cooking chicken ballotine, which sent me straight home to replicate it, as you see above. After Avery’s and my afternoon yesterday shopping for the first of the year’s Christmas ornaments, it was very pleasant to come home and mess up a clean, tidy kitchen with a complicated-ish recipe. The word “ballotine” is French for “bundle” and that’s your goal, to make a lovely chickeny bundle.
Chicken Ballotine With Marsala and Goat Cheese Sauce
(serves 4)
4 chicken breasts, tenderloin removed and set aside
12 mushrooms, chopped
3 stems fresh thyme, leaves only
1/2 shallot, minced
2 tbsps olive oil
1 tbsp butter
sauce:
1 tbsp butter
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 shallot, minced
1/4 cup Marsala wine
1 cup chicken or beef stock
3 oz goat cheese
2 tbsps double cream
Lay each chicken breast on a cutting board and pound with a mallet until flattened. Put the chicken tenderloins in a food processor and whizz until grainy. Remove and set aside in a bowl with the fresh thyme leaves, then give the same food processor treatment to the mushrooms and shallots. Mix all together with the chicken.
Lay each chicken breast flat, and place 1/4 of the mushroom mixture on the breast. Roll up and then roll up in a long piece of plastic wrap, like a sausage, or log. Do this for all four breasts. Twist each end of each log and tie in a knot. Place in boiling water for 15 minutes.
While the chicken poaches, melt the butter for the sauce in a small frying pan and fry the garlic and shallots till a bit browned. Pour in the Marsala and cook until reduced to about 3 tbsps, just a little bit of liquid with the garlic and shallots sort of shivering in the simmering bit of liquid. Add the stock and boil till reduced just slightly, then whisk in the goat cheese and cream. Simmer low while the chicken finishes cooking.
When the poaching 15 minutes are over, heat the olive oil and butter for the chicken in a large frying pan. Cut open the plastic-wrapped chicken over the sink and drain well. Place the unwrapped ballotines in the frying pan and fry on each side, on medium heat, until brown all over, perhaps 3 minutes total cooking. Don’t overcook or the chicken will become dry.
When ready to serve, slice the ballotines into four slices per “bundle”, then drizzle the sauce over.
GORGEOUS.
This dish is warm, savory, complex in flavor, rewarding and quite professional-looking! If you’re not cutting down on carbs, by all means serve with a large bowl of buttery mashed potatoes, but if you’re cutting down, try my new favorite side dish…
The new It Vegetable. Have you ever roasted butternut squash? Or made it into a sleek, velvety creamy soup? Or simply steamed it, mashed it up with a tablespoon of butter, poured it into a dish and baked it? Heaven!
We have been eating it every way I can think of. John would happily eat it every night, although we both agreed that lasagne with mashed butternut squash was a little… odd. Good, and of course we ate it all, mind you, but… odd. I think it was the unexpected sweetness, mixed in with savory flavors. Part of my attempt to cut down on carbs, but not cut OUT. So I substituted squash, for one layer of noodles. Ah well, you won’t know until you try.
My week last week, crowned by fun with Charlie, was full of friends.
There was my lunch with Elisabeth, an extremely busy mother of two who nevertheless made time to sit with me, over roasted salmon and rocket at a local cafe, and talk… personalities. To what extent can we change ours? Jung, she explained to me, felt that we could shift along our spectrum of natural inclinations, and become, for example, more outgoing than we were naturally. How true I believe that is! How John, who is rather shy naturally, has expanded his interest in being social, to accommodate me, and my love of having people around. How Avery, who is naturally a bit scattered with her belongings, has adjusted to the demands of a very asky school, and become organized.
Elisabeth’s just brought me a book called “Nurture Shock,” an American parenting book that asks a lot of questions about raising teenagers — to let them lie or not? to praise them for their achievements, or only for their efforts? to make them SLEEP or let them suffer the consequences of fatigue? — I was left exhausted. What was I doing wrong? Then I looked at this face, and realized that the task of teaching me NOT to tell her how wonderful I think she is was beyond any book I had ever read. She is, and that’s that.
But tremendously thought-provoking! It seems that there is an acknowledged parental wish to praise, to comfort, to make up for the pressures we know WE have put our child through. Sort of an antidote to the situations we sign them up for. But also, there is a serious theory that we don’t do our children any favors by unquestioned praise. Can there be unquestioned support, but with a bit of criticism? I’m sure there can be. I have to learn that.
How wise of Elisabeth to know I wanted to think about these things, how lucky I am in my friends. I only hope I make as much of a success with being a parent as I made with a chicken ballotine… something tells me it’s a bit more of a daunting task.
delightful. Actually I love butternut squash in my lasagna but I just scatter a few chunks here and there. Your day with Charlie sounded fun. cheers! ann
I love the description of the school as “asky” — great! I may try that ballotine for a dinner party I am giving in 2 weeks — but I suppose I had better try it out once first! How do you keep the chicken breasts from unrolling?
I hear you, Ann, just chunks rather an all-over layer would work: carrots too!
Work, do give it a try… I found that once the “ballotines” were poached (rolled tightly in the cling film) they clung together perfectly for the sauteeing. Let me know!
Ooops Im a bit late to this party, but the dish looks and sounds so lovely I must try it soon. It would make a lovely addition to my dinner a deux repertoire for Bryan and I ;) . Would dry sherry be an ok substitute for Marsala btw or I have some Pineau ??
It is gorgeous, Caz, but I’d say off the bat that it’s partly the sweetness of Marsala (or Madeira for that matter) that is delightful. Dry sherry might not add that little touch. I don’t even know what Pineau is, ignorant me!