Sunday, July 18, 2010

Warm German Potato Salad




I had plans to entertain a very dear friend today. He helped create the menu by inserting his desire to grill brats and the ideas rolled from there. Simple menu of grilled brats with sauerkraut, BBQ beans, sweet and sour red cabbage and homemade warm german potato salad. Dessert was a chocolate cake with peanut butter cream filling served on a drizzle of hot fudge sauce and vanilla ice cream.

Consulting the Food Time Line and History...

ABOUT SALAD

Food historians tell us salads (generally defined as mixed greens with dressing) were enjoyed by ancient Romans and Greeks. As time progressed, salads became more complicated. Recipes varied according to place and time. Dinner salads, as we know them today, were popular with Renaissance folks. Composed salads assembled with layers of ingredients were enjoyed in the 18th century. They were called Salmagundi. Today they are called chef's salad.

Why do we call it salad?
The basis for the word salad is 'sal', meaning salt. This was chosen because in ancient times, salt was often an ingredient in the dressing.

Potatoes (a new world food) were introduced to Europe by Spanish explorers in the 16th century. By the end of the century many countries had adopted this new vegetable and integrated it into their cuisines. Preparation methods and recipes were developed according to local culinary traditions.

Arnold Shircliffe, executive chef of Chicago's legendary Edgewater Beach Hotel, traced the origin of the potato salad to the 16th century. These are his notes:
"Early potato salad: John Gerrard in 1597 writes about potatoes and their virtues and said that "they are sometimes boiled and sopped in wine, by others boiled with prunes, and likewise others dress them (after roasting them in the ashes) in oil, vinegar and salt, every man according to his own taste. However they be dressed, they comfort, nourish and strengthen the body." This is one of the first potato salads mentioned in any book."
---Edgewater Beach Hotel Salad Book, Arnold Shircliffe [Hotel Monthly Press:Evanston IL] 1928 (p. 231)

Potato salad-type recipes were introduced to America by European settlers, who again adapted traditional foods to local ingredients. This accounts for regional potato salad variations in the United States. Potato salad, as we know it today, became popular in the second half of the 19th century. Cold potato salads evolved from British and French recipes. Warm potato salads followed the German preference for hot vinegar and bacon dressings served over vegetables.

Print evidence confirms recipes for potato salads were often included in 19th century American cooking texts. These recipes had many different names. The Cassells Dictionary of Cookery [London:1875?] contains three recipes for potato salad, one without notes [presumably British or American], a French recipe and a German recipe.The French recipe is very similar to the first and is also served cold. The German recipe required bacon. Early cold potato salad recipes often called for "French dressing". Some recipes specifically indicate this is an economy dish, "a good way to dispose of leftover potatoes." During the 1940s mayonnaise began to supplant French dressing as the congealer of choice. It is interesting to note that during both World Wars recipes for German-style potato salad did not bear that country's moniker. They were simply listed as "hot potato salad."

This is what the food writers have to say:

"Potato salad. A cold or hot side dish made with potatoes, mayonnaise, and seasonings. It became very popular in the second half of the nineteenth century and is a staple of both home and food-store kitchens. Hot potato salad, usually made with bacon, onion, and vinegar dressing, was associated with German immigrants and therefore often called "German potato salad."
---Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, John F. Mariani [Lebhar-Friedman:New York] 1999 (p. 253)

"There seems to be no dogma concerning the origins of potato salad, but Germany is a good place to begin. As a country with lots of potatoes and lots of recipes for potatoes, Germany almost certainly was among the first to look at cooked small new potatoes or cut chunks of larger spuds and imagine them blanketed with dressing. The dressing they came up with was a classic. Kin to the heated dressing used to wilt spinach salad, this one thrilled German taste buds, raised as they were on sauerkraut and sauerbraten with vinegar bite. Some versions featured a little coarse mustard, others cut the sour with a little sugar, and most added bacon and even its flavorful drippings. By the time the notion of potato salad reached France, vinegar wasn't quite good enough. The French demanded full-scale vinaigrette, and it was no sweat to satisfy their demands. Whenever you see something called "French potato salad," it's a safe bet you're in for potatoes (and probably other vegetables, too) in a light vinaigrette, with Dijon mustard and sweet tarragon.

When potato salad caught on in the United States, in the second half of the 19th century, it was probably by way of German immigrants. To this day, most people who know how to cook, or at least know how to eat, understand that "German potato salad" will be served warm, will feature no mayonnaise, and will be pleasantly tart with vinegar.The American idea of making potato salad with mayonnaise has no recorded history - but then again, neither does the idea of mayonnaise itself. Clearly a sauce created in France using egg yolks, oil and either lemon juice or vinegar, little is clear after that. Virtually every French bible of cuisine explains the name differently, ranging from a link to "Magon," the Carthaginian general who helped his brother Hannibal battle the Romans," to a possible misspelling of "Bayonnaise," hailing from the town of Bayonne in France - and later, less romantically, New Jersey.

However it got the name, mayonnaise became the favored dressing for American potato salad for more "There seems to be no dogma concerning the origins of potato salad, but Germany is a good place to begin. As a country with lots of potatoes and lots of recipes for potatoes, Germany almost certainly was among the first to look at cooked small new potatoes or cut chunks of larger spuds and imagine them blanketed with dressing. The dressing they came up with was a classic. Kin to the heated dressing used to wilt spinach salad, this one thrilled German taste buds, raised as they were on sauerkraut and sauerbraten with vinegar bite. Some versions featured a little coarse mustard, others cut the sour with a little sugar, and most added bacon and even its flavorful drippings. By the time the notion of potato salad reached France, vinegar wasn't quite good enough. The French demanded full-scale vinaigrette, and it was no sweat to satisfy their demands. Whenever you see something called "French potato salad," it's a safe bet you're in for potatoes (and probably other vegetables, too) in a light vinaigrette, with Dijon mustard and sweet tarragon.

When potato salad caught on in the United States, in the second half of the 19th century, it was probably by way of German immigrants. To this day, most people who know how to cook, or at least know how to eat, understand that "German potato salad" will be served warm, will feature no mayonnaise, and will be pleasantly tart with vinegar.The American idea of making potato salad with mayonnaise has no recorded history - but then again, neither does the idea of mayonnaise itself. Clearly a sauce created in France using egg yolks, oil and either lemon juice or vinegar, little is clear after that. Virtually every French bible of cuisine explains the name differently, ranging from a link to "Magon," the Carthaginian general who helped his brother Hannibal battle the Romans," to a possible misspelling of "Bayonnaise," hailing from the town of Bayonne in France - and later, less romantically, New Jersey. However it got the name, mayonnaise became the favored dressing for American potato salad for more than a century. Its sweet, creamy mouthfeel served up just the right delight when wrapped around solid, dependable American potatoes."



WARM GERMAN POTATO SALAD


Ingredients

* 6-8 large potatoes, peeled, sliced in slices, then in half again
* 12 oz package bacon
* 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
* 4 tablespoons white sugar
* 2/3 cup water
* 3/4 cup white wine vinegar
* 1/2 cup chopped onions, 1/2 of a whole onion
* 3 tablespoons Chopped fresh parsley
* salt and pepper to taste

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add potatoes and 1/2 of a whole onion for flavoring; cook until tender but still firm, about 15 minutes. Drain,discard onion, cool.
Place bacon in a large, deep skillet. Cook over medium high heat until evenly brown. Drain, crumble and set aside. Reserve 1/4 cup of the bacon fat in skillet and saute until soft the 1/2 cup onion.
Add the flour, sugar, water and vinegar to skillet and cook in reserved bacon fat over medium heat until dressing is thick.
Add bacon, potatoes to skillet and stir until coated. Cook until heated and season with salt and pepper and chopped parsley. Serve warm.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Zucchini fries and Eggplant Medallions


I love zucchini, in any form. Eggplant prepared in a crispy crust is just a delight.

This recipe is so easy...it's silly simple.

But...good. When you are denying yourself potatoes and you hunger for a crispy french fry next to your burger or you just plain want a break from potatoes this is the recipe to reach for.

The eggplant addition came about for taste variance with grilled meats. This is equally good to add a bit of mozzarella cheese to the top to melt after the eggplant has been baked to its crusty goodness and serve with marinara sauce.

Zucchini fries and Eggplant Medallions

Preheat oven to 400 degree

2 small zucchini
1 small japanese eggplant
2 eggs
1 tbsp water
1 cup grated parmesan cheese
salt and pepper to taste

Cut zucchini in halve length wise. Then cut the halves again, length wise. Precede to cut those into 'french fry' strips. I prefer not too thick, so they crisp.

Cut eggplant ends off. Then cut into round medallions.

Beat two eggs with water in a medium mixing bowl. In a separate bowl that will fit the zucchini strips with room, add the parmesan cheese. Toss to coat zucchini in egg wash, a few at a time, then drop in parmesan cheese and shake about to coat. Lay on a Pam sprayed cookie sheet. Make sure there is room around each for crispy 'fries'. Follow the same procedure for the remaining zucchini and eggplant.

Bake in hot oven for approximately 30 minutes, or until browned to your liking and crispness.

Broccoli-Cauliflower Salad


You will find many versions of this salad in cookbooks and on the internet. All I'm sure are delicious. Switching gears a few weeks ago to eating healthier and watching my carb intake, I opted for this version.

I found you do not miss any of the goodness, except perhaps the raisins. I miss them, but it is pretty easy to be satisfied with not having them after taking a bite of this scrumptious rendition.

Broccoli-Cauliflower Salad

1 bunch of broccoli, cut into small florets
1 head of cauliflower, cut into small florets
1 12 oz package of bacon, fried and torn into pieces
1/2 small red onion, sliced and cut into small slivers
3/4 cup pecan halves, toasted
1 cup mayonnaise
1/4-1/3 cup cider vinegar (depending on the tartness you wish)
4 packets of splenda (adjust to your taste)
salt and pepper to taste


Combine in a small mixing bowl mayonnaise, splenda, vinegar, salt and pepper. You may wish to add splenda and vinegar in increments to determine to your taste how sweet-tart you wish the mixture to be.

In a large serving bowl add broccoli, cauliflower, onion slivers. Add mayonnaise mixture to this and mix to coat all. Add pecans. Mix again to distribute. Saving a few bits of bacon for top garnish, add bacon and mix to distribute throughout. Add bacon garnish on top.

Refrigerate until ready to use.

Note: Almonds can be used in place of pecans.