The Food Almanac: Wednesday, October 19, 2011
In The Food Almanac, Tom Fitzmorris of the online newsletter, The New Orleans Menu, notes food facts and sayings.
Great Inventions in Dining
Today in 1879, Thomas Edison worked out the details of the electric light bulb and built the first one. The effect of that invention on human behavior is almost incalculable. What were restaurants like before electric lighting? Although many do most of their business by day (Tujague's, for example), surely Antoine's and other venerable dining rooms were open at night. Gas lighting was common. Gasoliers still exist in some French Quarter buildings. There's one in the Gold Room upstairs at Brennan's. I asked once to have the electric lights turned off so we could see what it was like to eat by gaslight alone. I must say it made the food and the ladies look better.
Today's Flavor
It's Seafood Gumbo Day. Seafood gumbo is much more distinctly a New Orleans dish than chicken gumbo. Which is not to say it's better. But while you can get chicken gumbo from Campbell's, canned seafood gumbo is a rarity. So is edible seafood gumbo in places outside southeast Louisiana.
The number of variations on seafood gumbo in New Orleans is equal to the number of cooks preparing it. Each version is regarded by the cook and his or her cadre of supplicant eaters as the One True Seafood Gumbo. The diversity is a good thing. It means the dish is still a living thing.
That said, a few guidelines ought to be followed. Okra, for example, seems essential. It gave gumbo its name, and in combination with the local seafood it creates the classic gumbo flavor. The second essential is a shrimp or crab stock. Many recipes don't include that, but those that do are clearly better. Stocks are easy to make, take less than an hour, and use cheap ingredients (shrimp or crab shells).
Then there's the roux. Although the vogue in recent years favors rouxless gumbo, it makes the gumbo better. Medium-dark in color, it should be a smaller percentage of a seafood gumbo than it is for a chicken gumbo.
The most controversial matter in the making of seafood gumbo is whether it should contain any tomato. I think it should — but not very much. It not only adds another flavor dimension, but solidifies the gumbo's Creole bona fides.
The final touch in a great gumbo is to have the seafood added at the last minute. The shrimp, crabmeat, or crab claws should be just barely cooked in advance, then added to the gumbo only enough ahead of serving to allow them to heat through. That avoids hard little shrimp and soft crabmeat. Oysters should go in raw, right before serving, with a couple minutes of simmering before serving.
Gourmet Gazetteer
Gumbo Lake is in an unlikely place, at least from the perspective of use Louisiana gumbo lovers. In the high (5,000 feet) dry plains of northeastern Wyoming, it's a far piece from anywhere. The nearest town you might know is Rapid City, S.D., the gateway to Mount Rushmore — 182 roundabout miles east. Don't go to Gumbo Lake for water to make a pot of the soup, because much of the time it's bone-dry. The wind blows, the cattle are ranched, oil and gas are pumped up, and that's about the whole story. The nearest restaurant is a Subway, 10 miles west in the little town of Wright. Right.
Food at War
Today in 1917, volunteers working for the Salvation Army began frying doughnuts for American troops fighting in France during World War I. This was not the first appearance of the doughnut — it has been around since 1847. Nor is it the origin of the name "doughboy," a name for American soldiers in World War I. In fact, I'm not sure why I brought this up.
Wine in War
Today in 1453, the British were pushed out of Bordeaux, France, bringing the Hundred Years' War to an end. However, the presence of Englishmen in that prime wine district had a lasting effect. To this day, many Bordeaux wine chateaux are owned by families with roots in England. And the English have always been the greatest consumers of the best Bordeaux wine, even creating an English word for it: claret.
Food Science
Today in 1688, English physician William Cheselden was born. He discovered that the secretions of the alimentary canal are what digest food. Before his noting this, it was believed that food was digested by muscular action in your innards. You can prove he was right by holding a bite of cracker in your mouth for a few minutes. You will detect after a while that it starts to turn a little sweet. This is caused by the digestive action of saliva.
Edible Dictionary
Creole gumbo, n. — A gumbo made with a medium-dark roux, with both seafood and meat. The two principal categories of gumbo in its homeland of southern Louisiana are seafood okra gumbo and chicken filé gumbo. These taste very much different from one another, and allow for an almost limitless range in the ingredients. Creole gumbo has aspects of both those gumbos, in approximately equal degrees. A typical recipe contains shrimp, crab claws, sausage, and chicken, with both okra and filé powder. It is historically the dominant variety of gumbo in New Orleans restaurants with an African heritage. It's at least as delicious as any other kind of gumbo out there.
Food Writer Hall of Fame
Today in 2000, Julia Child was awarded the French Legion of Honor. She won that for her long championing of French cooking, beginning with her first book and television show, Mastering the Art of French Cooking. That work woke Americans up to the possibility that they could cook in the French style, and many people took it up.
Food Namesakes
Pro footballer Reggie Rusk kicked his life off today in 1972. A rusk is the hard, light bread you find under eggs Benedict . . . Speaking of which, Ruud Bread, pro soccer player, was born today in 1962 . . . Jazz trumpeter Don Cherry died today in 1995.
Words to Cook By
"Stock to a cook is voice to a singer." — Unknown.
Words to Write Cookbooks By
"Having your book turned into a movie is like seeing your oxen turned into bouillon cubes." — John LeCarre, novelist, born today in 1931.
Words to Drink By
"For each glass, liberally large, the basic ingredients begin with ice cubes in a shaker and three or four drops of Angostura bitters on the ice cubes. Add several twisted lemon peels to the shaker, then a bottle-top of dry vermouth, a bottle-top of scotch, and multiply the resultant liquid content by five with gin, preferably Bombay Sapphire. Add more gin if you think it is too bland. I have been told, but have no personal proof that it is true, that three of these taken in the course of an evening make it possible to fly from New York to Paris without an airplane." — Isaac Stern, classical violinist.