still life with cats
It’s warm, sunny summer in my London garden so I’ve picked up my computer and a nice glass of iced herbal tea, to soak up the lovely atmosphere this Saturday afternoon. Of course, this being Barnes, in the heartwarming path of landing aircraft to Heathrow, it’s never quiet. But after a few years of living here, the din starts to be a comforting hum, and I find myself imagining where all the people overhead are coming from, and feeling glad that I’m not one of them. Happy to be on the ground.
I’m joined by the cats, one by one, emboldened by my presence to come out, stalk a bird or two, sniff the new-mown grass (thank you, John) , even eat a bit of it. Hermione feels comfortable enough to take a nap in the dusty sunshine.
Tacy, not to be outdone, consents to perform her little dancing trick for me. First, she strikes a pose.
Then, she goes through her routine. “What’s that in your hand?”
“Tricked again. It’s just a hand.”
“Here’s a little move to prove it.”
On days like this, what better idea for supper than to bring out the pierrade and cook some divine duck breast and sirloin, served up with a trio of sauces — spicy satay, creamy bearnaise, fruity plum.
This is one of our favorite summer suppers, and the sizzling meaty bites (“hey, that one splattered me!”) seem to bring out the best in our conversations. We sit around the table long after the last mouthful has been enjoyed, the last bits of sauce mopped up, since these June days are very, very long. Sunset long after 9.
This morning brought a trip to the farmer’s market for me, after ringing practice, and oh my, the Isle of Wight tomatoes!
These little juicy beauties are John’s latest snacking craze, and they are well worth a trip to the market. The Isle of Wight produces the UK’s first crop of tomatoes each summer and they are divine.
I was then seduced by a pop-up Thai cafe, Boe’s Kitchen.
My goodness, the aromas that stole through the crowds: kaffir lime, coconut milk, ginger, garlic. I sampled everything, of course, and came away with tonight’s dinner: green chicken curry with galangal paste, tiny aubergines, and who knows what else. To be spooned onto a bed of the most magical fried rice ever: with exotic mushrooms and some kind of cabbage leaves.
You all know how I dearly love to cook our nightly dinners, but I’m terribly excited about this evening’s foray into flavors I cannot dream of producing at home. I stood hungrily watching the cooks stirring their pots, asking question after question, but not really understanding the answers. “Kaffir” featured high on the list of words I heard over and over, and my kitchen boasts a jar of its leaves, and there was an uneven green ball on a plate below the curry labeled “our secret weapon,” but how my leaves and that ball of magic are related, I really couldn’t say.
Sometimes, though, miracles of flavor can emerge from my kitchen, and I can say hand on heart that this week’s standout experiment was a sort of French-Jewish fusion.
Chicken Thigh Rillettes with Gribenes
(serves over 20 as canapes on toast or crackers)
6 bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs
2 tbsps duck or goose fat (or rendered schmalz, even olive oil in a pinch)
1 1/2 cups/375 ml chicken stock
glug Marsala or Madeira wine
1 stem rosemary, leaves only
4 cloves garlic, minced
sea salt and fresh black pepper to taste
This is French-Jewish fusion food. What could be better?
To make the gribenes, remove skin and fat from thighs. Place in a frying pan in a single layer, or overlapping as little as possible, and add 1/2 cup/125ml water. Place over very low heat and cook at a tiny simmer until the skin is crisp. This will take at least 90 minutes. Remove skin to paper towel and pour rendered fat, “schmalz” into a jar to use in this recipe, or to save for another recipe in the fridge.
In a deep saucepan or wok that can accommodate the chicken thighs in a single layer, melt the fat, stock and wine together. Add the rosemary and garlic and season to taste. Place the chicken thighs in the liquid and cook at a simmer, covered, for at least 2 hours. The meat will fall off the bones.
Remove the chicken thighs to a cutting board and allow to cool so you can handle them. Reserve the cooking liquid. Remove the bones, cartilege and any sinewy bits until you are left with pure chicken. With two forks, shred the meat to a consistency you like, then place in a large bowl. Strain the cooking liquid into a cup and pour in as much of it over the shredded meat as you need to make the chicken mixture nice and juicy.
At this point, it’s about presentation. If you’d like to give the rillettes as gifts, pack about a handful of the chicken mixture into little ramekins and top with a bit of the crisp skin, the gribenes. If you’re having a party, serve little bite-sized portions of the rillettes on toast or crackers, or tucked into tiny lettuce leaves, topped with chopped gribenes.
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So completely affordable, so simple (it all cooks itself). I made so much, without a party in sight, that I packed up several little gift ramekins and went off on my bicycle, delivering some unexpected little appetizers around my beloved neighborhood as the beautiful afternoon wound itself down into evening.
Summer pleasures.
Oh, I wish I lived in your neighborhood and got a gift of rillettes!!
That would be a pleasure, Work!
Kristen called and as “is it OK?” to deliver me the most sumptuous ramekin of rillettes to my door? I emphatically delivered my “YES please!” — Moments later she appeared on her gracious, sit-up Danish bike, still wearing her apron (!) and passed me the ultimate gift of gorgeous.
A finer neighbor? I couldn’t possibly conjure one up!
You are a heavenly neighbor as well, Carrie! I absolutely adore my visits to your beautiful studio, just up the road. Happy to provide rillettes whenever needed. :)
:) Thank you! We can cast sunshine in each other’s direction then. x
Precisely. x