Friday, February 5, 2010

Light Sea Casserole



A sea casserole is one of the easiest and most impressive dishes you can serve. Flounder fillets, shrimps and minced vegetables steam together above a ginger seaweed broth perfumed with clamshells and oysters. No half-shell treatment required as the heating will naturally insure the opening of the shells. The same broth is used in a reduction finished with a dash of heavy cream and a generous sprinkle of pepper. The secret is all in the timing of the different cooking stages from immersion of the shells to the steaming of vegetables and then the fish. The taste is naturally briny. The earth vegetable needs a generous sprinkle of salt to match the one naturally contained in the sea products. I like to soak my bread in the sauce. If you feel more Japanese than French, sushi rice will fulfill the same function.
The dish feeds 4.

Sea casserole
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 15 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
4 small flounder fillets
1 inch (2.5 cm) ginger root piece
8 oysters
8 clams
8 raw shrimps shell reserved
1 cup Japanese seaweeds (Hiziki, Arame)
1 Kombu sheet
2 leeks
Several leaves of Chinese cabbage,
8 carrots
¼ cup (60 ml) heavy cream
Salt and Pepper
Material:
1 fish steamer
1 food processor mincing attachment on
Salad bowl
Strainer
Saucepan
       Place the seaweeds in a salad bowl and cover with cold water.
       Carefully clean the oysters shells and clamshells in cold water.
       Cut off the greens from the leeks. Slice off the bottom and immerge in cold water. Remove the outer leaves from the cabbage and wash 6 of the internal leaves. Peel the carrots and slice off the bottom part. Grate all the vegetables in the food processor.
Fill the steamer ¼ of the way with water, the sliced ginger root and a Kombu sheet (the basis of dashi soup in Japan). When the water boils, remove the kombu sheet and add the reconstituted seaweeds. At the boiling point, add the oysters, clamshell and the shells of the shrimps. When they open, remove oysters and clamshells. Reserve until ready to serve.
Strain a cup worth of broth and place in a saucepan to reduce with the cream.
Return the bottom part of the steamer with its remaining content to the gas stove. Insert the upper part of the steamer with the minced vegetables and a spoonful of salt in the steamer. Cover and steam for 10 minutes. Add the fish and shrimps. Turn the gas off after three minutes.
Place a layer of vegetables on each plate. Top with the fish fillet, clams and oysters meat and shrimps. Pour generously the creamy broth on top and serve.  

Friday, January 29, 2010

Not So Traditional Fast Skate



As you well know, I am always intrigued by variations on old classics. When they give birth to new dishes, which can be made in less than ten minutes, my enthusiasm is unbound. Add to this a lesser fat content than the original and the timely use of seasonal vegetables and I am totally sold. Taste matters. Whereas, skate bistro style is traditionally cooked in butter and dressed in a sharp lemon and caper sauce, I have been toying with a meatier but lighter version. To add richness, I like to sauté onions, or in this case, shallots in butter or olive oil. Balsamic vinegar and red wine are added to obtain a wine reduction. At this point, the sauce could equally be at home on a rib eye steak. When my daughters were young and could not be made to eat “smelly” fish, I layered that sauce on top of white breaded fish fillets. The plate was emptied without a groan. For a more adult palate, I like the fish to be just grilled. The crispness of the shallots goes well with the skate flesh texture. Butternut chips, besides being in season, complement the sweetness of the balsamic reduction.
Skate “wine merchant”, a literal translation from the French, which emphasize the use of wine in the recipe, and its garniture serve 4 and is elegant enough for guests and equally enjoyable in a less formal dinner.

Skate wine merchant
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 10 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
2 lb (1 kg, 2 pieces) skinned skate*, bone in
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 shallot peeled and finely sliced
¼ cup (60 ml) balsamic vinegar
1 cup (230 ml) red wine
 Material:
1 frying pan
1 saucepan
       Sauté the shallot slices in a little oil until soft. Add to the saucepan the vinegar and the wine. Reduce until about ½ (120ml) a cup is left.
       Sauté the skate in a large frying pan for about 3 minutes on each side. Cut each piece in two and place on a warm plate.
       Pour the sauce on top and serve with butternut chips

Butternut chips
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 10 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
2 medium butternut squashes
Vegetal oil
Coarse salt
Material:
Potato peeler
Grapefruit spoon
Slicing meat machine
Deep Fryer
       Peel the squashes and halve them. Slice them as thinly as possible in the slicing machine. Put ½ in the frying basket.
       Set the deep fryer at 375F (190C). When it has reached the right temperature, immerge the basket for 5 minutes. When the chips are crisp, place them in a salad bowl lined with paper towels. Repeat the operation a second time with the remaining chips.
* If the skinned version is not available at the seafood shop, cook the skate wings in boiling water to which 3 tablespoons of white vinegar have been added for 2 minutes, until the skin starts to come off. Strain the wings and  peel off and discard the skin.


   

Friday, January 22, 2010

Worldly tapas


Light meals are in. The Spanish have a tradition we can borrow from. They eat “tapas”. At first it was a way not to drink on an empty stomach and consisted of little more than a garnished piece of bread. But soon the vast array of Spanish cuisine came to the rescue and contemporary tapas include any food preparation in smaller quantities. A bar fare generally includes 4 to 6 different preparations. It is not necessary to confine oneself to Europe and Asia has much to offer to enrich the repertoire. Here is my selection of 6 worldly dishes. They bring to mind countless hot afternoons spent leisurely sharing good conversation, wine and food under the shade of a tree. The memory sustains us in the long cold winter, while the food miraculously lifts our spirit.
To prevent last minute panic, start by the marinade for the lamb chops, continue with the Japanese vegetables, which you can ready and then reserve in the oven until dinner is served. Prepare the ham and cheese rolls, which can also be kept warmed in the oven. Make and refrigerate the chocolate sauce. When the guests arrive, prepare the truffle quail eggs crostini and grill the Asian chops. It will take about 5 minutes.

Spanish Meatballs
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 20 minutes, A little pricey)
Ingredients:
½ lb lamb meat from the shoulder
2 slices of bread
2 tablespoons of milk
1 egg
Dusting of flour
½ lb Spanish cheese (Manchego)
1 slice foie gras
Material:
1 food processor
1 frying pan
1 ovenproof dish

Remove the crust from the bread and soak in the milk.
Grind the meat and the bread in the food processor with the sharp blade on.
Add the egg and mix well. Dust a plate with flour and roll out bite-sized meatballs.
Fry them on all faces and place them in the ovenproof dish. You can refrigerate them until ready to serve.
Turn on the oven at 360F with the grill option on. Place the partition in the oven on the upper tier.
Add a shaving of cheese on the top of the meatballs. Cut the foie gras in small pieces and add to the meat. Cook until cheese and foie gras have melted.
Serve immediately

Asian chops
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 10 minutes, Marinade: 2 hours plus, Reasonable)
Ingredients:
6 tiny lamb chops
1 slice ginger
1 garlic clove
2 stems cilantro
¼ cup soy sauce
1 tablespoon Worcester sauce
Material:
1 salad bowl
1 blender
1 frying pan

Place all the ingredients except for the lamb chops in the blender and run the machine.
Marinate the lamb chops in the blended sauce for at least two hours.
Stir-fry the lambs for three minutes on each side and serve immediately.

Truffle quail eggs crostini
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 10 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
6 quail eggs
6 slices of baguette
Truffle oil
6 asparagus stems
Salt and pepper to taste
Material:
Toaster
Frying pan
Sprinkle truffle oil on top of the bread and toast until crisp and gold.
Add the olive oil to the frying pan and sauté the asparagus until lightly charred. Set the asparagus on top of the bread.
Crack the eggs in the lightly oiled pan and cook them sunny side up. Place each egg on top of the bread. Add salt and pepper and serve immediately.

Ham and cheese rolls
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 40 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
6 thin slices cooked ham
6 slices Gruyère
1 tablespoon cream
2 tablespoon scream cheese
1 potato peeled and cubed
¼ cup milk
1 tablespoon butter
2 eggs
Breadcrumbs
Olive oil for frying
Material:
Saucepan
Whip
Frying pan
Toothpicks
Place the potato cubes and milk in the saucepan and bring to a boil. Add the butter, cream and cream cheese. Whip into a purée. Bring to room temperature.
Lay down a slice of ham. Cover with the Gruyère slice. Top with a little purée. Roll up and secure with two toothpicks. Refrigerate until ready to eat dinner.
Dip the roll in the beaten egg and coat with breadcrumbs.
Fry in abundant oil. Serve immediately.
Japanese vegetables
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 30 minutes, Resting time: 60 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
¾ cup (180 ml) soda water
2/3 cup (105 g) all-purpose flour
3 tablespoons cornstarch
1½ teaspoons salt
1 sweet potato
1 broccoli stem
Red pepper flakes
Vegetable oil for deep frying
For the sauce (facultative):
1 tablespoon Daikon radish grated
2 tablespoons Mirin sauce
1 tablespoon seasoned rice vinegar
2 teaspoons fish sauce
2 teaspoons soy sauce
Frying oil
Material
Tongue
Fry maker or a deep saucepan
Ovenproof dish
Paper towel
Salad bowl
Bowl
Sifter
Pour the soda water in the bowl. Sift in the flour, cornstarch and salt. Whisk until blended. Cover and refrigerate for 45-60 minutes.
Put all the sauces together in a little bowl. Add the grated daikon and red pepper flakes.
Peel and form fries out of the sweet potato. Cut the broccoli florets, keeping the broccoli stems for a soup. Wash and dry them.
Heat the oil to 375F (190C). Dip the vegetables in the batter. With the tongue, remove each piece and fry four at a time for about two minutes. Transfer to an ovenproof dish lined with paper towel in a low (200F/95C) oven while you finish up frying. Prepare in the oven and keep until ready to serve.
Serve with or without the sauce.
Strawberries dipped in chocolate
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 10 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
18 strawberries washed, stem on
3 oz dark chocolate
¼ cup heavy cream
1 pinch Espelette powder
Material
1 bowl
Melt the chocolate with the cream. Whip in the powder. This can be prepared ahead and can be micro waved before serving.
Serve surrounded with the strawberries to dip.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Dressing a soup


I love soups. They bring warmth to the body in winter and require about as much cooking talent and equipment as a smoothie. A good blender, any fresh seasonal vegetables and you are 3 minutes away from a healthy meal. To give body to high water content vegetables such as spinach, zucchini, asparagus and leeks, you can add a potato, boil in some cream or blend in the yolk of an egg before serving. My secret ingredient: sauté some onions in butter or olive oil and put them in the mixer along with the cooked vegetables. What you might not imagine is that soups can also be elegant. You can dress them up with croutons (that’s French for baked stale bread) bits of bacon, boiled eggs, dried fruit such as apple and pear or even sautéed mushrooms. The only limit is your imagination. The only requirement: cut as finely as possible the chosen ingredients. I generally love to pair sweet (pumpkin) and salty (bacon), or build on commonly associated tastes (eggs and asparagus or leeks). Another good combination is crunchy (toasted bread) and creamy (spinach). You can serve a bicolor soup for a starter. Pick two color-contrasting soups such as the pumpkin and spinach featured in this issue, pour each in a carafe or a measuring beaker and pour both at the same time in a soup bowl. You have leftovers? Not to worry, they freeze beautifully, or better they make tasty light appetizers in shot glasses. All recipes serve 4
The essential butternut squash soup (Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 30 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
1 butternut squash
1 onion
1 tablespoon butter or olive oil
Salt and pepper
Material:
Blender
Grapefruit spoon
Paper towel
Beaker
Place the onion in the freezer.
Cut the butternut squash in two. Remove the seeds. If you want to save them, clean and dry them before baking them on a cookie sheet.
Line the microwave with a paper towel and place the butternut squash halves on top. Microwave for 20 minutes or until soft. When the squash is cool enough to handle peel and place the flesh in the blender.
In the mean time, remove the onion from the freezer, peel, slice and cube the onions prior to sautéing in a little olive oil or butter depending on your taste. Add to the content of the blender
Cover the content of the blender with hot water. Add a teaspoon of salt and some pepper. Blend, taste and pour in a beaker. If the consistence is too thick, add water.

Creamy spinach (Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 15 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
2 bunch spinach
3 garlic cloves
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 large potato or the yolk of an egg
1/3cup (60 ml) crème fraîche or heavy cream
Material:
Colander
Saucepan
Set of tongues
Blender

Wash, cut off the end and dry the spinach in a colander. Place the blade of a knife flat on each garlic clove and strike the blade with the fist of the other hand. Discard the skin of the cloves.
Place the oil in a saucepan and add the spinach and crushed garlic. Sauté until the spinach is wilted. Place in the blender. Peel the potato and slice finely. Place in the saucepan, cover with water. Add a teaspoon of salt and bring to a boil. When the potato is tender to the knife, add to the content of the blender. Cover with hot water and blend until smooth. Return to the saucepan, add water if needed, cream and pepper and bring to a boil. Alternately, remove from the stove and add the beaten yolk of an egg instead of the cream to the spinach purée. Place in a beaker.

Garniture (Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 10 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
Stale bread cubed
1 tablespoon olive oil
Thyme leaves
5 Pancetta slices cubed
Material:
Frying pan
Paper towels
Salad bowl
Place the bread cubes in a salad bowl. Toss with the olive oil and the thyme leaves.
Set the frying pan on the high setting of the stove. Turn the cubes when they are golden. Reserve on a paper towel
Use the same frying pan to sauté the pancetta. Reserve on another paper towel.

To assemble, pour at the same time the two beakers. Sprinkle the bacon bits on the pumpkin soup and the croutons on the creamy spinach soup.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Fast after a feast


My weekly culinary comments have been running for over a year now. It provides a snapshot of what my family and I have been eating. As any record, journal or photograph, it provides its author with a snapshot of the past. For example, in 2009 I did not feel the need for a change of diet before February 16th. This year, I am speaking of a break one month earlier. The holidays take their toll. The emotions run high. The days are long and culminate in good meals charged with calories and lack of sleep. After all the excitement, it is necessary to restore good sleep patterns and food habits. A twenty minute nap after lunch will not interfere with the night rest and will help the organism restore itself.
I propose, in addition to the previous year recommendation, which is still valid, a three-day or a week fast. The principle is simple: eat mostly barely cooked vegetables and salad or soup, add a little fish or tofu in the evening, drink only water with a little cider or lemon juice and some green tea. The three-day schedule starts with a fresh apple, carrot and parsley juice and a cup of green tea. For lunch alternate between the following three salad recipes. The dinner should consist of steamed vegetables and either tofu or a grilled 3-oz fillet of fish. The weekly menu includes my favorite kefir recipe for breakfast along with some green tea or a rosemary mint infusion. For lunch a bowl of cabbage soup and one of the three salad recipes. Dinner is another bowl of cabbage soup, steamed vegetables and a seasonal fruit such as pear, apple or clementine. To your health!
Broccoli and fennel salad
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 20 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
2 broccoli stems
1 fennel bulb
1 tablespoon walnuts
Sauce:
1 shallot
The juice of a lemon
3 tablespoons olive oil
Material:
Steamer
Blender
Meat slicing machine

Cut the florets from the broccoli and drop them in clean cold water. Keep the stems for a soup. Clean the fennel. Using the slicing machine, slice the bulb finely. Place the vegetables in the steamer basket and steam for about 10 minutes.
Drop the peeled shallot in the blender with 1 tablespoon of lemon and the olive oil. Blend well.
Place the vegetables on a plate. Add the walnuts and sprinkle with the sauce.

Beet salad
(Easy, Preparation: 10 minutes, Cooking time: 40 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
3 beets
3 oranges
1 black radish
Sauce:
1 tablespoon orange juice
3 tablespoon walnut oil
Material:
Silver foil
Grapefruit spoon
Salad bowl
Small bowl
Preheat the oven at 360F (180C)
Cut off the foliage of the beets and reserve for a soup. Wrap each beet in a silver foil and bake for 45 to 60 minutes.
Cut the oranges in two and remove the flesh with a grapefruit spoon. Place in the salad bowl.
Extract the remaining orange juice in a recipient. Beat the olive oil with the orange juice.
Peel the black radish and grate it in the food processor. Add to the salad bowl
Remove the beet from the oven, unwrap the foil and cut in sticks. Mix with the orange.
Pour the sauce in. Sprinkle with the radish and serve.

Vegetarian pot-au-feu salad
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 30 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
2 leeks
2 carrots
2 potatoes skin on
2 turnips
1 green onion minced
Sauce:
Foolproof Dijon vinaigrette
Material:
Steamer
Salad bowl
Peeler
Place the potatoes in the bottom of the steamer, cover with water and bring to a boil.
Remove the tops of the leeks and crisscross the top before dropping in cold water. Once the sand is off, place in the top basket of the steamer. Remove the tops of the turnips. Peel and place in the steamer basket. Peel the carrot and place in the steamer.
When the water boils, place the steamer basket on top and cover.
After 20 minutes, remove from the gas. Cool all the vegetables under running cold water. Cut all the vegetables in small pieces and place in the salad bowl. Add the Dijon vinaigrette and mix well. Sprinkle with the green onions

Cabbage soup
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 30 minutes, Cheap
Ingredients:
Cabbage cut in quarters and blanched
4 garlic cloves
3 onions
5 carrots
1 celery root
The broccoli stems and beet tops leftover
Chicken broth
Salt and pepper
Material
4-quart stockpot
Peeler
Blender

Peel the garlic cloves and the onions. Slice. Peel the carrots and celery root and slice. Put all the vegetables including the broccoli stems and beet tops in the stockpot. Cover with the chicken broth. Add 1 teaspoon coarse salt and bring to a boil. Simmer for 20 minutes. Put in the blender and mix coarsely.

Breakfast kefir
(Easy, Preparation time: 5 minutes, Cheap)
Ingredients:
1 apple
The juice of a lemon
1 cup kefir
1 tablespoon nuts
1 tablespoon raisins
Material:
Food processor
Peeler
Peel the apple, grate them and place them in a bowl. Add the raisins and mix in with the lemon juice. Add the kefir and sprinkle with the nuts.

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Eric Ripert's New Year appetizers


Le Bernardin in New York is a three-star restaurant where the specialty is fish. Maguy Le Coze and Eric Ripert are solidly at the helm and, under their direction, their team faultlessly deliver their passengers to Cythère. I first went to it when it was in the Paris street, which gave the restaurant its name. Itself derived from the convent, which stood there before the Revolution. The ruins have since been beautifully restored. Maggie’s brother was the chef before his untimely death. Then as now, the cuisine was memorable and the service impeccable. The New York successor is much bigger but the quality is unchanged. The menu offers four courses including a dessert. There are also two more extensive tasting menus. The categories you choose from are “almost raw”, “barely touched” and “lightly cooked”. There can be no clearer indication of the philosophy at work: the ingredient is foremost and the cuisine is at its service. Le Bernardin does not serve Chilean sea bass or any other endangered specie.
On a recent visit, I asked for one and received two recipes of my choice. The first one is the almost raw tuna, which uses foie gras au torchon (see December 11th ) on a baguette with raw tuna layered on top. The second is the barely touched scallop, another subtly enhanced savor. In both cases the magic comes from the just combination of a few notes. The recipes serve 4. I cannot think of a better start for the year 2010.

Le Bernardin Tuna (Layers of thinly pounded yellowfish tuna, foie gras and toasted baguette, shaved chives and extra virgin olive oil)
(Easy, Assemblage time: 5 minutes, Expensive)
Ingredients
¼ recipe torchon foie gras
8 oz (250g) yellowfish tuna
½ baguette
Fine sea salt and freshly ground white pepper to taste
Extra virgin olive oil
Shallots minced
Chives snipped
Lemon halves
Material:
Meat slicer on #3 setting
Rolling pin
Plastic film
Brush
Cut the tuna in 8 pieces of 1 oz each respecting the grain of the fish. Place each piece between two larger layers of plastic film. Pound with the rolling pin until the tuna is as thin as smoked salmon. Reserve in the fridge until ready to assemble.
Slice thinly the foie gras.
Halve the baguette half for another usage and slice each quarter lengthwise. You should get 8 thin pieces of bread.
To assemble, place the foie gras slices on the bread. Place the bread in the center of the plate. Remove the top plastic layer from the tuna and place the tuna over the foie gras. Season with salt and pepper. Brush the tuna with olive oil. Sprinkle a few shallots and chives over it. Squeeze lemon juice at the last minute.

Le Bernardin scallop (ultra rare scorched scallop, garlic chive goat milk butter emulsion)
(Easy, Preparation time:20 minutes, Reasonable)
Ingredients:
1-Emulsion
¼ lb (113g) garlic chives bud
Kosher salt
6 oz (177g) goat’s milk butter cubed
Fine sea salt and freshly ground white pepper
2- Relish and garnish
¼ lb (113g) garlic chives buds
4 teaspoons olive oil
zest of 1 lemon
fine sea salt and freshly ground white pepper
16 pieces (113g) hen of the woods mushrooms
1 tablespoon canola oil
Freshly ground black pepper
1 lemon cut in half
3-Scallops
¾ lb (340g) sea scallops (8 large)
2 teaspoons olive oil
Fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.
Material:
Medium stockpot
Strainer
Salad bowl with ice cubes
Blender
Small saucepan
Eggbeater
Iron pan or griddle

Gently pull off the muscles off the scallops and discard. Season the scallops with olive oil, salt and pepper. (This operation can be done as soon as you purchase the scallops.)

1- Bring salted water to a boil in the stockpot. Cut the garlic chive buds into 1-inch pieces and blanch for about two minutes. Strain and place the strainer in the salad bowl filled with ice cubes. Blend the chives with a couple of ice cubes and purée. Strain through a fine sieve into a bowl and reserve.
Bring two tablespoons of water to a simmer in a small saucepan and whisk in the goat’s milk butter, 1 tablespoon at a time until fully incorporated with an eggbeater. Beat in about 4 tablespoons of the garlic chive bud purée and season to taste with salt and pepper
2- Trim the tough stems off the remaining garlic chive buds. Place them in a salad bowl and season them with olive oil, salt and pepper. Set the iron pan or griddle on the gas at the high setting. When it is very hot, add the chives and cook until they are tender and lightly charred. Transfer to the cutting board and set aside 8 garlic chive buds. Chop the rest. Transfer back to the salad bowl. Add 2 tablespoons of olive oil, lemon zest, salt and pepper. Reserve.
Heat a sauté pan in which a little bit of canola oil has been added over medium high. Sauté the hen of the woods mushrooms until golden brown and tender. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
3- Heat the cast iron griddle until very hot. Remove the scallops from the marinade and sear quickly on both sides about 1 minute. The scallops must remain rare.

To assemble, spoon a line of relish down the center of the plate, slice the scallops in half and place the rare side face up. Garnish each scallop with a charred chive bud, add 4 pieces of mushrooms over and around the sliced scallops. Squeeze a drop of lemon juice over the scallops and spoon the emulsion over and around. Serve immediately

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Festive beef filet two ways


Meat has become for me a special occasion meal. Among the variety offered, beef filet retains its cachet. I propose two cooking methods, boiled or baked. Both will treat the special cut appropriately, leaving the meat rare. I suggested to the Japanese guests who tasted the first version that it was a French rendering of Shabu Shabu. The buttery béarnaise, which accompanies the minimally processed vegetables and meat, turns it into a richer although still light fare. Foie gras plays the same role for the second recipe. Both are appropriate for a sophisticated Christmas or New Year’s dinner depending on the number of your guests. I like to cook the string filet for 6 people. When accommodating a larger number, 8 as the recipe is written, beef Wellington is the way to go. Everything can be prepared in advance. Finishing the dish takes 20 unattended minutes, once all the guests have arrived. The side dish of boiled string beans can be prepared at the same time. As a bonus, I am suggesting my baked fries. They can also be prepared in advance and warmed up during the last 20 minutes. With foie gras or smoked salmon toasts as a starter and a Christmas log at the end, the festive meal can be enjoyed by all, including the hostess.

String filet*
(Easy, Preparation and cooking time: 45 minutes, A little pricey)
Ingredients:
1 lbs ½ beef filet
4 cups of chicken broth
4 medium carrots
4 leeks
1 Chinese cabbage
1 lbs (500g) turnip
1 bouquet garni
4 tablespoons coarse salt
Sauce:
2 yolks
¼ cup (70 ml) wine vinegar
¼ cup (70 ml) white wine
Pepper
1 shallot
1 stick (130g) butter
Material:
Plastic bag
Peeler
4-quart pot
Small saucepan
Strainer
Paper towel
Eggbeater

2 hours prior to cooking place the filet in a plastic bag with the salt. Refrigerate for two hours.
Peel the carrots and turnips. Keep the whites of the leeks and clean them. Remove the outer leaves of the cabbage and cut it into four. Clean it.
Bring the chicken stock to a boil. Plunge all the vegetables in the broth and simmer for 20 minutes. Add the meat and cook for another 10 minutes.
Prepare the sauce during the cooking of the meat and vegetables. Start by cooking the butter. When it has melted, place the towel over the strainer and dispose it over a measuring pitcher. Strain the butter to obtain clarified butter.
Use the same saucepan to sauté the shallots. Add the minced shallots, the pepper, white wine and wine vinegar and reduce by half. Bring to room temperature. Reserve in a bowl.
Beat the two yolks in the same saucepan. Place the strainer over and filter the cold reduction.
On a very slow gas, beat the content of the saucepan constantly until it foams and doubles. Remove from the gas and beat in the butter. Add salt and minced chives.
*The string in the name comes from the kitchen tie around the roast which can be attached to the handle of the saucepan to help remove the meat after its 10 minutes soak. I prefer using a set of tongues.
Beef Wellington
(A little delicate, Preparation and cooking time:1 hour and 1/2, Expensive)
Ingredients:
2 thick slices foie gras
½ lbs (250g) Paris mushrooms
4 lbs (2 kg) beef filet
Salt and pepper
1 pastry sheet (unfrozen)
1 egg beaten
Material:
Rolling pin
Frying pan
Ovenproof dish
Brush
Parchment paper on a baking sheet

Preheat the oven to 400F (200C).
Place the beef filet on the ovenproof dish. Salt and pepper the meat.
Wash the mushrooms and clip the extremities. Slice them finely. Season them with salt and pepper. Set the frying pan on the lowest setting of the gas, melt one tablespoon of butter and sauté the mushrooms for 5 minutes. Strain the mushrooms and reserve.
Bake the filet for 25 minutes. When the 25 minutes are past, remove the filet and bring it to room temperature. Lower the oven to 360F (180C)
Roll out the pastry sheet so that it is wide enough to wrap around the meat. Place it on the baking sheet covered with parchment. Sprinkle the mushrooms and pieces of foie gras on the pastry. Place the cooled meat in the center and fold the pastry sheet over the meat. Seal the pastry well and brush the exterior with the beaten egg.
Bake for twenty minutes.
Serve with buttered string beans.

Baked fries
(Easy, Preparation and baking time: 30 minutes plus waiting time, Cheap)
Ingredients:
2 lbs (1kg) Idaho potatoes
4 tablespoons duck fat
1garlic clove unpeeled
1 tablespoon butter at room temperature
2 yolks
1 teaspoon coarse salt
1 teaspoon minced parsley
Material:
Peeler
Towel
4-quart stock saucepan and cover
Set of tongues
Strainer
Ovenproof dish

Peel the potatoes and cut each in eight long and fat pieces. Immerge in water. Strain and pat dry with the towel.
Place the duck fat in the saucepan. When it starts smoking, add the garlic clove and the potatoes. Lower the gas. Turn over each potato until all faces are golden. Cook for another 15 minutes covered. Strain the potatoes. Put them back in the pan and sprinkle the butter on top. Make sure that the butter coats each fry.
Beat the yolks and mix the yolks and the fries with your hands. Place in the ovenproof dish. Add the salt and parsley.
Place the ovenproof dish in the oven preheated at 360F (180C) until ready to serve.