Gourmet Food


Feature Writer: Jacqueline Church
Hello, Mark Hoover, Cordova Alaska

Follow trends of the food-obsessed: organic hand-harvested herbs, artisanal gelato, heritage livestock breeds, seasonal produce. Holiday recipes. What are five-star restaurants up to? Hot new chefs who deserves a Michelin star of her own? Look for gourmet recipes, cookbook reviews, how-to tips.

Dig in!

Full Gourmet Food blog

ahhh, istockphoto.com
feature articles
Jacqueline Church

Herbs in a Tube, Gourmet Garden in your Fridge

In: Gourmet Food (general)

One must always weigh competing choices when it comes to food. If fresh herbs could always be handy, your meals would be improved. What are the options to fresh? more...

Miso-Marinated Sablefish Recipe

In: Gourmet Food (general)

Umami-rich dashi adds a delicious punch to this easy miso-marinated fish. Known as "Black Cod" it is neither. White-fleshed, moist, mild, Sablefish loves miso-marinade. more...

Chadon Beni, Culantro, Jerk - Recipes

In: Gourmet Ingredients

A reader asks: what is Chadon Beni? Another wants to know about jerk sauce. What roles do achiote and culantro play in Caribbean recipes we are beginning to love? more...

Loving Lemongrass-Beef Wraps, Mussels or Chicken

In: Gourmet Ingredients

Lemongrass is a staple in Thai cuisine. Its citrusy fragrance flavors easy lettuce wraps for cool summer dinner. Lemongrass simple syrup elevates summer drinks, too. more...

Cold is the New Hot; McGee on Science of Cold

In: Gourmet Food (general)

Ironically, just steps from the Mass. Institute of Technology, Chef Gabriel Bremer at Salts, elevates so-called molecular gastronomy, by taking it back to its roots. more...

All feature articles in Gourmet Food

Suite101: Gourmet Food articles How to subscribe to article feeds

feature blog
Jacqueline Church

Aug 23, 2008

Side of Xanthan Gum with That?

Gourmet Garden promises garden-fresh herbs always convenient. In a tube.


Okay, so convenience is there. No one has to touch garlic or wash sand out of parsley if they don't care to, but isn't that what cooking is about? I made swordfish using Rick Moonen's Fish Without a Doubt recipe (p. 166) and it calls for garlic, red pepper flakes, thyme.

I could not have brought myself to squeeze garlic from a tube rather than mash it in the mortar and pestle. I took fresh garlic, mashed it anchovies, and thyme forming a nice paste. To this, red pepper flakes and oil were added, and the swordfish was marinated in the paste. Strong, fresh flavors.

No preservatives, no sugars, no starches, no emulsifiers. I was making the emulsion with the mortar and pestle. The anchovy provided umami, salt. The herbs added great flavor, and the swordfish was delicious.

Here's a technique for drying fresh herbs from Michael Vyskocil.

Here's another method for keeping herbs: make a compound butter, roll it in waxed paper and place in the freezer.

Newer ovens on the higher end (such as Bosch) have extremely low settings such for dehydrating herbs and proofing bread. Last year's end-of -summer garden herbs, dehydrated that way were spectacular!

Read about Gourmet Garden herbs here in my product review. Does convenience rule over all else?

Full Gourmet Food blog

Suite101: Gourmet Food blogs How to subscribe to blog feeds