by Jenise » Thu Jan 05, 2017 2:06 pm
Made a southern style dinner last night for six in which the protein was sous vide pork loin roast in a gingersnap gravy. For sides I made an almost-dirty rice (all the herbs and spices, but no organ meats) and collard greens. Two big hits in the meal worth talking about, the collard greens and the peach sorbet I served for dessert.
The collard greens: turns out both guest couples had a southern connection. The husband in one case grew up in Louisville Kentucky, and the other couple, though Canadian, spent 20 years in Tennessee when Chuck taught at Vanderbilt. None had ever had collard greens anyway except cooked for hours with bacon and onions, which they all hated and so have avoided collard greens ever since. I wilt collard greens often and just serve with vinegar and salt, a bastardization of the way I ate spinach as a child. But that was too simple for dinner party food, and a quick scrounge for an alternative turned up a recipe on Epicurious, I think it was, for collards drizzled with an emulsified miso-based butter. I didn't want a drizzle nor did I want the sweet elements in their recipe so I skipped the recipe but borrowed the idea: I put about two heaping teaspoons of miso in a high-sided skillet, and whisked in enough white wine vinegar to create a loose paste, then flipped in two pats of butter. Whisked to emulsify, added the already wilted greens, stirred to coat. My god were those good! The miso didn't come across as Japanese, more like a very complex salt. They ate them all.
The sorbet: I'm not a dessert eater and don't enjoy making them. But this was awesome: since peaches be a Southern Thang, I bought two containers of Haggen Daz peach sorbet and let them soften enough to stir in chopped fresh tarragon and whole fresh blueberries. Took about two minutes to convert something store-bought into something unusual, pretty and refreshing. The blueberries were a particular attractive touch and burst of flavor. I am SO going to do that again.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov