citrus gama

My first inclination upon opening the box of citrus was to sit down and have myself a citrus feast, but that would have been purely indulgent and more than a little irresponsible. After all, it's not everyday that I have access to such rare and exotic jewels with at least one, the malaysian lime, of ambiguous origin. Gene Lester tells me that he planted it many years ago from seeds brought back from Malaysia and speculates that it may be an Egyptian lime.

I felt it was important to document their characteristics, if only for my own reference, as that has already been done to a greater extent over at Citrus Pages. Many of the photos and much of the information on the website is based on the fruit that Mr. Lester grows. After photographing, collecting data, and preliminary tastings, I was ready to get cooking. 

New products, especially those of exceptional quality, always incite my creative monkeys. But with so many avenues and so little fruit, I had to reign them in and focus on a preparation that would capture the essence of the individual cultivars— not just the flavor of the juice, but also the rich aroma of the rinds.

Ever since stumbling on yuzu gama, I've been fascinated with the concept. I'll admit that using citrus as a kettle is a romantic notion.  But it's also a practical one: the porous rind insulates, breathes, and permeates the contents with aroma. 

The first thing I learned was that not all citrus make suitable cooking vessels. Those with bitter albedos— lemons, limes, grapefruit— impart unpleasant bitterness. 

And yet those with thin, tender rinds— kumquats, clementines, mandarins— are surprisingly palatable and can be eaten along with the contents. Many of the fruits that I was given were petite— just the right size to snugly hold a scallop.

The Thomasville citrangequat (below left) is a cross between an orange and a kumquat. Like the kumquat, it has a sweet rind and tart pulp, though the fruit is larger (about 2" diameter), and the pulp is sweeter. After cutting off the top and bottom and removing the pulp, I steamed the rind for a few minutes to soften it. A scallop was stuffed into the citrus band and seared on both sides. The cintrangequat juice was reduced with saffron and blended with egg yolk and olive oil to form a mayonnaise that accompanies the scallop and steamed baby artichoke. The bright, fresh rind cut through the richness of the scallop and brought to mind the evanescence of spring.

The Silverhill mandarin (below right) is an Unshu satsuma with a rich, sweet flavor and aroma. It was hollowed out (an easy task as the pulp separates easily from the rind), stuffed with a scallop, seasoned with salt, szechuan pepper, a dab of butter and a sprinkle of its juice, then sous vide at 50ºC for 40 minutes. The scent escaping from the opened bag was incredible. It was glazed with a sauce made from the juices in the bag, reduced with the rest of the mandarin juice and mounted with sweet butter. Served with crumbled, dehydrated Cerignola olives and pureed black garlic, it made a sweet and resonant autumnal starter; rind and all.  

Scallopcitrusgama 

Over the winter, my quasi-obsession with citrus has been interlaced with an increasing interest in old-school terrines, though up until now nothing has materialized.  
For this terrine, I chose the Temple tangor, a cross between a tangerine and orange, because it was the largest specimen with a sweet rind. The hollowed out tangor was filled with a cylinder of foie, surrounded by black truffles folded into prepared sweetbreads (soaked, blanched, cleaned, pressed, seasoned), and bound with transglutaminase. The terrine was cooked sous vide at 65ºC for 90 minutes, pressed overnight, and sliced. Again, the mingled scents of foie, truffles and orange was not to be believed. 
Other components are: pickled beet with tangor sections, brioche crouton, and a leaf of liquid salad made from watercress fluid gel, finished with olive oil and lemon juice. 

Note: Although the rind of the tangor was sweet, it was a bit leathery. I had hoped that it would have softened more than it did in the sous vide process. If I were to repeat this dish— which I intend to (perhaps with a pate de campagne), I would precook the rind. Alternately, the rind could be used as a scented mold.

Citrusgamaterrine

*Admittedly, foie, truffles and sweetbreads were rather decadent ingredients to experiment with, but these were left over from a job.

 

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I don't recall the last time that I made a proper cassoulet, but I remember the first. It was after reading Paula Wolfert's "The Cooking of Southwest France" sometime in the mid 80's and feeling an overwhelming need to be connected to that place and its food. It was my introduction to duck confit, pork braised in milk, and the wantonly rich cassoulet. For years, I looked forward to the winter ritual that began with making lamb stock on a Friday night and culminated with a liberal topping of bread crumbs and duck fat on a Sunday afternoon. The crust was always the deal-breaker.
This cassoulet-inspired dish features Gigante beans cooked in duck stock, duck confit, and Cara Cara orange* segments, layered and baked together in the orange rind.  The crust is a variation on chicken skin croquant, substituting duck skin, and dusted with orange zest and parsley.       

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*Cara Cara is a navel orange, a mutation that naturally occurred on a Washington navel orange tree, with sweet pink pulp. It was not in the box of citrus that chef Kinch sent me but I needed a fruit large enough to hold an entree-sized serving. Unlike the other dishes, this rind is used for aroma and presentation, not to be eaten.

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asparagus black truffle

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Asparagus with Black Truffles and Butter

Just reading it made her mouth water. She hadn't known that she craved it until that moment. There was no need to read through the menu. 

The plate was set before her unceremoniously. Three fat stalks of naked asparagus. No truffles. No butter. She suddenly understood the agony of pigs who moved earth with bare snouts, driven by a primal fervor, only to have the object of their desire snatched away. 
She ached with unrequited truffle-lust.
"Yes ma'am, I assure you that there are truffles in the asparagus."

Had he spoken with less conviction, she would have handed the dish back and demanded satisfaction.
Had he not been so lucid, she could have come unhinged.
 
She poked the asparagus, moved them around the plate. 
Come out, come out, wherever you are.  
Nothing. 
He said they were in there.  
She lifted one to her nose, sniffed for evidence, found none. 
Was he lying?  
She caught his eye
I assure you…

Even before taking a bite, she knew that the asparagus were perfectly cooked. She had cooked enough of them herself to recognize the graceful arch; the way they bowed from their own weight when lifted. Familiarity did not diminish the pleasure she took in the first resilient bite and hexanol flavor that transported her to grassy green meadows, concertos of birdsong. 
Sparrow grass
Asparagus always elicited these sensations; they were welcome and expected. 
The surprise came a moment later.

It began as a peripheral warmth, skirting around the edges of her tongue. Wave after wave of volatile compounds, unleashed by the grinding of teeth, undulated and rose up through her olfactory bulb. Odor molecules mated with receptors in an orgy of scent. 
Caprylic. Pheromonal. Primordial. 

She began to feel a sound welling up in the back of her throat. She fought to suppress it as the server returned to inquire about the asparagus. Afraid to speak, she could only mumble and nod and let her eyes say the rest. He was well out of earshot when she dared to release it. 
Part snort, part grunt, it arose from a place of deep satisfaction; a gleeful pig giggle… the ecstasy of the sow. 
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white truffle

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She caught the scent the minute that she walked in the door. Even from within a glass case, it lured her with its siren song.

It never ceased to amaze her. How those small nuggets could emit such a powerful smell. 
Nestled in a small dish of rice, they were the least salient things in the case. Visually, they were no match for the pates, sliced to reveal their flamboyant mosaics. They had none of the panache of the glistening slabs of smoked fish. Even the oozing wheels of cheese had more verve. Yet, they galvanized her attention.  
Her eyes fixed on the marker that rose up from behind the dish. Her breath caught.
That can't be right…surely, someone made an error.
She thought back to the last time that she had purchased them for a client. He hadn't even flinched when presented with the bill. No, there was no mistake.
"May I help you?"
"When did they come in?" she asked with her index finger pressed to the glass. She resolved that if it were three days or more, she would walk away with no regret.
"Tuesday"
Shit. Two days ago.
"They're the last shipment of the season."
Great. It was now or never.
"Could you weigh one for me?"
"Which one?"
"The small one, please."
She watched the numbers come up on the digital display and tried to calculate the weight on her wallet. Without being asked, the clerk punched in the five digits. Reality set in. 
She closed her eyes in an attempt to focus. 
She couldn't…could she? 
There was the economy to consider. And the mortgage, the cars, college tuition (x2), the economy, the apartment on CPW (a student room is HOW MUCH?). Oh…and the economy.
Maybe if she held it…
The clerk passed it to her, loosely wrapped in waxed paper.
Up close, the scent was intoxicating, clouding her judgement.
Maybe…she could. 
She remembered that her birthday had just passed and she had been very good. Just that morning, she had walked past a display of Louis Vuitton bags without even a sideways glance. Later, she found a bottle of Vintage Port that she had lusted for, then reluctantly replaced it on the shelf. That one hurt. And, last night, hadn't she forgone a spendy tasting menu for a soulful bowl of ramen in the East Village?
She sighed and handed it back to the clerk.

Her day went downhill from there. The uptown train was 15 minutes late, sending her scrambling into the apartment to pack her bags and catch a taxi to the Metro-North station in Harlem.
The taxi driver was uncharacteristically slow. She watched the time anxiously and twice reminded him that she was catching a train. He would nod, unfazed, and continue his crawl.
She knew that she was cutting it close when she arrived at the station, rushing past the elevator to climb the stairs with bags in tow. From the landing, she caught sight of the train, waiting with its doors open. 
Yes! she was going to make it. 
As her foot left the top step, the doors closed. From inside the train, a man in a business suit looked up from his newspaper to give her a sympathetic smile. The train pulled away and disappeared down the track.
Dropping her bags, she let out a string of expletives that were reserved for times of extreme frustration. The hard guttural consonants usually had a purging effect. Not this time.
She paced the platform restlessly, considering her options. Waiting there for four hours for the next train was not one of them.
She could return to the apartment, providing that her son was still there to let her in. Or, she could wait for him in the park across the street, reading the massive book that she had brought with her. Barring that, there was the Turkish cafe at the end of his block with free wifi and strong coffee. 
Calmer now, she sat down on the wrought iron bench atop the elevated platform and looked down at the lively street scene below her. 
She carried a special place in her heart for Harlem. As a student, she would often ride the subway to 125th St from her room near Union Square. Even with the train fare, meals and groceries were cheaper than what she could find in her neighborhood. The simple, honest food was what drew her there. The vibrant cultural tapestry kept her coming back. Her roommates, though concerned for her safety, refused to accompany her. She once told them that Harlem was where "the real people were". She had been trying to make a point. They had cut her off, guffawing from their ivory tower.
The sun was starting it's descent into the Hudson, washing the scene with golden light. Her favorite time of day. Things were not as bad as they had seemed a moment ago. She realized that she had been given a gift—a stretch of time to do with as she pleased in a city full of possibilities. How was that a bad thing?
Besides, there was nothing urgent to return home to. Her husband and dog would be sound asleep. Work could wait another day. There was only one thing distracting her, but that, too, could wait for tomorrow.
She unzipped her bag and pulled out a half-pint deli container. The dry rice rattled against the plastic as she brought it up to her face. She peeled back the top, only enough to admit her nose, then inhaled deeply. 
Things were looking up.