That’s what I thought I was getting when he dropped a DVD into my hands with a grin on his face. I was nonplussed that he had handed me a romantic film by Wong Kar-wai, a Chinese director known for visually stylized films. Looking over the cast, a name jumped out at me and it all made sense…if there’s one thing that he likes more than cars and guns, it’s Nora Jones.
The movie, My Blueberry Nights, was almost forgettable despite the stunning melancholic atmosphere created by Wong through roving shallow lenses and lush chiaroscuro. The minor key mood was a good fit for Nora, but Jude Law never convinced me as a marathon runner wannabe who settles for running a diner where he makes blueberry pies that no one ever eats. It was the pie, and the way that Wong committed it to celluloid that I will remember: tight macro shots of ice cream salaciously melting into mounds of lurid blueberries. It was so deliciously lascivious that I wanted to avert my eyes.
In the end, it was blueberry pie that brought the characters together and endeared Wong to me as a film maker and food pornographer. And it inspired this dish.
Blueberry Pie
blueberry cheese
Use the juice reserved from draining the blueberry cheese. Ultratex 8 is a modified food starch derived from tapioca that thickens liquids without applying heat.
150 g. reserved blueberry juice
8 g. agave nectar
2.5 g. ulratex 8
Place all ingredients in a bowl and blend with whisk or immersion blender until starch swells and juice has thickened.
Cooking blueberries at a low temperature leaves them firm and intact, yet taste cooked.
1 pint raw blueberries
60 g. reserved blueberry juice
30 g. unsalted butter
10 g. agave nectar
Place blueberries in a vacuum bag and seal. Cook in a water bath at 63C (150F) for 1 hour. Make a glaze by heating the blueberry juice and agave nectar over low heat. Whisk in butter until melted. Remove bag from water bath and toss berries in glaze. Serve warm or at room temperature.
Roasting flour is a technique introduced by Pierre Gagnaire and Herve This in their collaboration, Art et Science. Cooking flour in this way brings out the toasty aroma and flavor of wheat but it alters its starch and gluten molecules, causing it to lose much of it’s elasticity. While roasted flour may not be suitable for baking bread, it’s perfect for baked goods with sandy textures such as sables.
40 g. all purpose flour
8 g. confectioners sugar
.5 g. salt
13 g. tapioca maltodextrin
30 g. unsalted butter, melted
Preheat oven to 325F (160C). Spread flour in an even layer on a baking sheet and roast in oven for about 45 minutes, stirring often until fragrant and golden. Cool completely. Toasted flour can be made ahead and kept in a sealed container.
Preheat oven to 350F (180C) Place the flour, sugar, salt and TM in a bowl and toss to combine. Slowly drizzle in melted butter while tossing with a fork. Remove rounded nuggets as they form and place on a baking sheet. Bake for 10-12 minutes and allow to cool completely before handling.
Greek yogurt makes a sublime frozen product that rivals the best frozen yogurt boutiques. If it’s not available in your area, plain yogurt can be drained overnight in a cheesecloth-lined sieve with similar results. I’ve found that the best way to infuse ice cream (or any sweetened cream base) with herbs is not in the cream, but by processing them with the sugar. The hygroscopic property of sugar draws out the essential oils in the herbs, making them more available.
30 g. fresh lemon balm leaves
100 g. sugar
50 g. heavy cream
300 g. greek yogurt, well chilled
Place lemon balm and sugar in a food processor and process with 10 pulses or until lemon balm is finely chopped. Working quickly, as lemon balm begins to oxidize and turn brown, empty contents of food processor into a saucepan and add heavy cream. Set over medium heat and cook gently, just until sugar melts. Remove from heat and pass mixture through a fine-mesh sieve. Chill until cold, then fold in yogurt. Freeze in an ice cream machine according to manufacturers instructions.
How fascinating! I’ve just discovered your blog and I am loving your creativity. That is very interesting about the blueberries clotting. I’m interested to try it myself. I wonder if any other fruits will behave in this way?
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That looks amazing. I love looking at your site and seeing the incredible things you do with food!
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Wow nice, it looks tasty! Anyway, we loved Blueberry Nights and that unforgettable blueberry kiss too! Feel free to swing by for some quick movie reviews! 🙂
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Love this take on pie a lot! Very creative, looks beautiful too!
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Absolutely gorgeous plate; one of the most stunning I have seen in a while.
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Came across your blog recently, your deconstruction of familiar dishes is amazing!
Along with the chicken beef steak, this is a very pretty dish.
Keep up the great work!
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When I’ve tried lemon balm in sorbets, there’s always a slight bitterness, although I always steep it in simple syrup. Do you notice that in sugar processing (something I haven’t tried yet)? It’s for that reason that I switched to lemon verbena for the same kinds of purposes.
Incidentally, two days ago I did chicken leg quarters deboned and stuffed with a small dice of mirepoix, garlic, and potato at 62C/6hrs with some lemon oil and red wine vineger. The vegetables were surprisingly crisp, yet without that starchy uncooked quality.
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Thanks everyone.
Nathan- I’ve found that heat and prolonged steeping draws out bitterness, even from sweet herbs. Sugar processing minimizes this effect because it is done quickly and with only enough heat to melt the sugar. The most effective way to infuse flavors cleanly is with a commercial vacuum–which, sadly, I don’t have access to.
Good to hear that you’re having fun with the SousVideMagic.
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