prosciutto asparagus olive oil lemon rose
I once worked for a chef with an exacting standard for detail. His mirepoix were perfectly uniform 1/4" dice and his mise en place were works of art, craft, and geometry. Besides his knives, which he wielded with the precision of a surgeon, his favorite tool was a ruler.
I learned a lot about OCD from him.
He must have seen some of those same tendencies in me because I was given some of the fussier tasks that he normally did himself. When he wasn't there to walk me through it, he would leave detailed notes– complete with drawings– of components or new dishes that he wanted me to work on. Eventually, as I became more familiar with his aesthetic, and he with mine, I was just given a list of dishes and left to interpret them.
On one of those lists was a dish that I fixated on: Fresh pea risotto with prosciutto rose. I immediately saw the dish in my head; a pale green mound of risotto topped with a loosely coiled ribbon of prosciutto. I couldn't figure out how prosciutto rose even fit into his style so I proceeded with my vision.
When I showed him the dish, he glowered at it. He insisted he had specified prosciutto lardons. I showed him the list and he conceeded that it had been his mistake but he never did explain how someone confuses lardons with roses.
In the end, he liked the dish as I had made it. My reward for pleasing him was to make 150 more just like it.
robiola bosina
prosciutto rose
deep-fried rose petals
asparagus salt
A recent job took place on a privately-owned modern villa here in Northwestern Connecticut. Hidden behind 8'-high stone walls was the most extraordinary vegetable garden that brought to mind the gardens of Monticello, Versailles, and Villa Borghese.
Highly ornamental, yet fully functional, it featured symmetrical parterres edged with clipped boxwood in elaborately knotted patterns; the pockets planted with herbs and vegetables. Red and green lettuces were planted in alternating blocks to form edible checkerboards. Iron trellage towers supported beans and tomatoes. Antique terra cotta cloches protected tender seedlings. Gurgling fountains, imposing sculptures– there was so much to admire and draw inspiration from that I quickly went into sensory overload.
In that formal setting, herbs and vegetables were treated and displayed with a deference that is usually reserved for ornamental plants and flowers. One stunning border featured roses interplanted with asparagus. The slim stalks of asparagus rising out of the ground echoed the thorny stems of the roses tipped with tight green buds. The gardener revealed that there was a beneficial logic to the pairing, but I was too distracted to take note.
I can however tell you about the logic of pairing the flavor of roses with asparagus. They are united by several aroma compounds, most notably alcohols and aldehydes and also some ketones and esters. Among them are:
Valeraldehyde (warm, winey, slightly fruity, and nutty)
Phenylacetaldehyde (earthy-sweet, fruity, floral)
Octanol (fresh orange-rose, slightly herbaceous)
Vinylphenol (vanilla extract)
Nonyl Alcohol (floral-citrus, slightly fatty, bitter)
No matter how much research I do on these compounds, the scientific names always shock me. They serve as a reminder that everything we perceive as wholesome, natural, and organic is, in fact, a complex composition of chemicals.
Linda, your posts are always wonderful, but this one is particularly beautiful. The photography is beautiful and the dishes look and sound delicious.
You are quite correct that ultimately, everything boils down to chemicals, then elements and so on. Of course there are chemicals and there are chemicals, but one must not get bent out of shape simply because of a chemical name as many do when they hear that some of the more modern “chemicals” have been used in a dish. In addition, just because something is “natural” doesn’t mean that it can’t be a poison.
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Ah sweet!! what a great idea!!!
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Some pictures are simply incredible! I think i will try to make Prosciutto Asparagus
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