The French Kitchen Cookbook

FrenchKitchenTwo weeks residing in an eighteenth-century Provencal farmhouse owned by a world-renown cookbook author and former restaurant critic who enthusiastically teaches you to how to cook, enjoy fine wine, and find satisfaction in the kitchen (and in life). While it may sound like the plot summary of a delicious novel, it’s not. For nearly twenty years, Patricia Wells, America’s preeminent French culinary expert, has shared her home and kitchen with scores of “total novices” who, thanks to her efforts, have been “transformed into confident cooks.”

Wells isn’t just any cook. She is the former global restaurant critic of the International Herald Tribune, the only foreigner and female to serve as a restaurant critic for the French publication, “L’Express,” the author of twelve cookbooks, and the four-time winner of the James Beard award, the culinary equivalent of an Oscar.

The French Kitchen Cookbook: Recipes and Lessons from Paris and Provence, her latest cookbook, is a reflection upon her years as a cooking instructor, her relationships with students (many of whom have become her dearest friends), and her appreciation of shared meals. Her goal is to show the home cook the “joys of combining good food, good wine, and friends altogether around the table — an experience we can enjoy day in and day out, any time.”

Like any great teacher, Wells starts off with a short list of rules that should be followed in the kitchen, such as fully reading and understanding a recipe before jumping in (you know you’ve done this before to catastrophic results), creating a mise en place, or having all equipment and ingredients laid out before beginning (so you don’t realize halfway through a recipe that you’re out of say, heavy cream), tasting as you cook, menu planning, aesthetics (Wells prefers white pottery and solid linens that don’t compete with the food), and  the “big role” wine plays “in our lives and in the cooking school.” How can you not like a person who makes enjoying wine a rule?

The recipes, which are inspired by both Paris and Provence, cover the basics from soups, salads, and vegetables to seafood, meat, and grains, plus dessert. They include both US measurements and European metrics and are clearly written and easy to follow. While several are accompanied by color photographs, many aren’t, which is disappointing. I found myself craving a luscious photo of Wells’s dramatic Pavlova and her soul-warming Potato, Cheese, and Bacon Gratin: Tartiflette.

patricawellsFor those who feel French cooking is too difficult and expensive, Wells proves that many elegant dishes can be both workable and affordable such as her Pear, Fennel, Belgian Endive, and Curried Walnut Salad; Eggplant with Chickpeas, Couscous, and Tomatoes; Golden Almond-Crusted Sole Fillets; and Penne with Tomatoes, Rosemary, Olives, Artichokes, and Capers.

Depending on your budget you may opt against using imported European “00” flour or organic, free-range chicken. But you can’t fault Wells for using the best ingredients available to her. You won’t find any processed foods or short-cuts here — stocks and dough are made from scratch. While I share her sensibility, I’d likely draw the line at making my own homemade curry powder (there’s a recipe for that). Although I will try her recipe for hoisin sauce that she created after discovering that store-bought versions were loaded with additives.

As in most cookbooks, there are some recipes that are labors of love like the Beef Daube with Fresh Pasta Squares (which requires homemade chicken stock, several pots and saucepans, and a few hours of cooking time) and the Miniature Onion and Goat Cheese Tatins (you make your own Blitz puff pastry). Don’t be intimidated — even the lengthier, more involved recipes are doable.

Since many of the recipes call for cooking equipment that some home cooks might not have, such as an ice cream maker, canning jars, and cheesecloth, Wells specifies the equipment needed at the top of each recipe. In several recipes she offers variations for ingredients (dried black currants for candied citrus or cherries for figs) or kitchen utensils: Don’t have a cheese girolle? Use a mandoline or very sharp knife instead.

Most graciously, Wells includes secrets, tips, and wine suggestions with many recipes: Got used vanilla beans? Dry them and combine with a jar of organic raw sugar for aromatic vanilla sugar. Want the secret to amazing Cranberry Walnut Bread? Top-quality honey. It enhances the flavor and helps keep the bread moist. Not sure which wine to pair with your braised cabbage with smoked sausage and mustard? Wells adores Domaine Ostertag’s dry Alsatian Riesling.

I must admit that the chapter on desserts gave me pause. Of the 19 recipes, 10 are for sorbet. I would have preferred replacing several of the sorbet recipes with other French classics that are not included such as clafloutis, crepes, or pots de crème.

If you’re the type of a person who rushes past the recipe headnotes and chapter introductions, consider slowing down and savoring them instead. Here you’ll find they contain valuable culinary insights as well as delightful anecdotes about Wells’s life (her husband Walter is a master of fast and easy meals) and friends (Wells writes an homage to her mentor and friend, Julia Child.) Indeed, one of Wells’s most cherished kitchen objects is Julia’s former Art Deco style stove. Despite its having only one temperature — “really hot” — the stove is a source of constant inspiration for Wells.

The French Kitchen Cookbook will make you feel like you’re in the kitchen with a friend who instructs, encourages, and salutes your cooking efforts whether big or small. That, and a glass of good wine, is something many home cooks could use more of.

Penne with Tomatoes, Rosemary, Olives, Artichokes, and Capers

Penne-recipe6 servings

“There are evenings when I crave pizza but don’t have the time to prepare it. That’s when I turn to this pasta dish, one that has all my favorite pizza toppings turned into a sauce. Penne is the preferred pasta here, because it’s sturdy enough to stand up to the rustic trimmings.” – Patricia Wells

Equipment: A 10-quart (10 l) pasta pot fitted with a colander; 6 warmed, shallow soup bowls.

3 tablespoons course sea salt

1 pound (500 g) Italian penne pasta

2 cups (500 ml) tomato sauce or one 28-ounce (794 g) can diced Italian tomatoes in juice

1 tablespoon finely minced fresh rosemary

1/2 cup (60 g) best-quality brine-cured black olives, pitted and halved lengthwise

12 artichoke hearts marinated in olive oil, drained and cut into bite-size pieces

1/2 cup (60 g) capers in vinegar, drained

1 teaspoon fennel seeds

8 ounces (250 g) Italian whole-milk Mozzarella, cut into bite-size pieces

4 tablespoons fresh basil leaves, torn

Hot red pepper flakes, for serving

1. In the pasta pot, bring 8 quarts (8 l) of water to a rolling boil over high heat. Add the salt and the pasta, stirring to prevent the pasta from sticking. Cook until tender but firm to the bite.

2. Meanwhile, in a saucepan that is large enough to hold the cooked pasta, combine the tomato sauce or canned tomatoes, rosemary, olives, artichokes, capers, and fennel seeds. Simmer while the pasta is cooking.

3. When the pasta is cooked, remove the pot from the heat. Remove the colander and drain the pasta over the sink, shaking to remove the excess water. Immediately transfer the drained pasta to the sauce in the saucepan. Toss to evenly coat the pasta. Cover and let rest for 1 to 2 minutes to allow the pasta to thoroughly absorb the sauce. Taste for seasoning. Transfer to the warmed soup bowls, and garnish with the cheese and basil. Pass the red pepper flakes.

Wine suggestions: A favorite household red is the inky-purple Vacqueyras, the southern Rhone wine from Domaine des Amouriers. Their Les Genestes is a typical blend of Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvedre, with lots of spice that marries well with this pasta dish.

 

Susan Russo is a free lance food writer in San Diego, California. She publishes stories, recipes, and photos on her cooking blog, <Food Blogga and is a regular contributor to NPR’s <Kitchen Window. She is also the author of  Recipes Every Man Should KnowCookbook Review: Parents Need to Eat Too and The Encyclopedia of SandwichesCookbook Review: Parents Need to Eat Too