The Way We Ate: 100 Chefs Celebrate a Century at the American Table
By Noah Fecks and Paul Wagtouicz
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About this ebook
Take a trip back in time through the rich culinary tradition of the last American century with more than 100 of the nation’s top chefs and food personalities.
The Way We Ate captures the twentieth century through the food we’ve shared and prepared. Noah Fecks and Paul Wagtouicz (creators of the hugely popular blog The Way We Ate) are your guides to a dazzling display of culinary impressionism: For each year from 1901 to 2000, they invite a well-known chef or food connoisseur to translate the essence or idea of a historical event into a beautifully realized dish or cocktail. The result is an eclectic array of modern takes and memorable classics, featuring original recipes conjured by culinary notables, including:
Daniel Boulud, Jacques Pépin, Marc Forgione, José Andrés, Ruth Reichl, Marcus Samuelsson, Michael White, Andrew Carmellini, Anita Lo, Gael Greene, Michael Lomonaco, Melissa Clark, Justin Warner, Michael Laiskonis, Sara Jenkins, Shanna Pacifico, Jeremiah Tower, and Ashley Christensen
An innovative work of history and a cookbook like no other, The Way We Ate is the story of a nation’s cravings—and how they continue to influence the way we cook, eat, and talk about food today.
Noah Fecks
Noah Fecks is a New York City-based photographer who has a desire to re-create, cook, and capture some of the best recipes of the twentieth century. Noah earned his BFA from the Parsons School of Design and has taught in the photography department at Parsons. Visit his blog at TheWayWeAte.net.
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The Way We Ate - Noah Fecks
AN AX TO GRIND
Carry Nation may be best remembered as the dour-faced woman who promoted a sober lifestyle by smashing bottles, bars, and taverns in an effort to further the temperance movement. Nation claimed that she had personally heard the voice of God, who instructed her to put an end to sinful saloons and to Take something in your hands to throw at these places . . . and smash them!
Later, wielding an ax as her preferred method of inebriant destruction (in so-called hatchetations), she also crusaded against tobacco, fine dining, tailored clothing, and just about anything actually fun at the turn of the century. May all of us saturnalian rummies rejoice that she was unsuccessful in her efforts to deny us each our drams, dumpies, and doubles.
I’LL HAVE WHAT G’S HAVING
COCKTAIL
GEORGETTE FARKAS
1901
MAKES 1 QUART JUICE
For the rosemary-infused fresh pink grapefruit juice
One 6-inch or longer sprig rosemary
1 quart freshly squeezed pink grapefruit juice
MAKES 1 COCKTAIL
For the cocktail
3 ounces rosemary-infused fresh pink grapefruit juice
1 ounce vodka
¹/2 ounce St-Germain elderflower liqueur
Splash fresh lemon juice
1 sprig fresh rosemary, to garnish
flower Prepare the rosemary-infused grapefruit juice: Place a sprig of fresh rosemary in a quart of juice and steep for 24 hours, refrigerated. Of course, you could infuse the vodka instead, but then you wouldn’t have rosemary-scented grapefruit juice in your fridge, and that would be a shame.
Prepare the cocktail: Pour the ingredients into a cocktail shaker with ice and let it rip. Strain into a highball glass and garnish with a sprig of fresh rosemary as a stirrer. flower
NOTE: As the sweetness of fresh grapefruit juice can vary widely from batch to batch and season to season, adjust the amount of lemon juice accordingly. Personally, I prefer this cocktail nice and tart.
This is the very first cocktail I created for the Rôtisserie,
Georgette says. While some might think it a shame to forgo the vodka, I like the virgin version just as much as the original, with the rosemary-infused grapefruit juice simply splashed over ice and topped off with bubbly water. Carry Nation would approve.
Georgette Farkas is the hospitality visionary behind Rôtisserie Georgette on New York City’s Upper East Side, where perfectly roasted chicken is elevated to new heights. Decades of working side by side with Daniel Boulud under his Dinex umbrella honed her reputation as one of the most respected names in the business and taught her much about cocktails and divining a balanced palate of sour, sweet, bitter, and boozy in every sip.
receipeFLY ME TO THE MOON
Le Voyage dans la Lune, widely considered the first example of science fiction film, is an emblem of French cinema based on the novels of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells, that sparked off a worldwide fascination with fantasy, travel, and science. Predating an actual visit to Earth’s majestic satellite by over half a century, the film depicts a celebratory voyage fraught with velvet waistcoats and European dancing girls, whose heroic travelers only narrowly escape death and disaster at the hands of lunar aliens. The film remains a benchmark from the silent era and set the stage for a century of Trekkies, comic book freaks, Carl Sagan fanatics, and geek culture at large.
FRICASSÉE DE VOLAILLE, ESCARGOTS, ET CHANTERELLES AU VERJUS, PAIN PERDU AUX CROISSANTS
CHICKEN, SNAILS, AND CHANTERELLE FRICASSEE WITH SAVORY CROISSANT BREAD PUDDING
BRADFORD MCDONALD
1902
MAKES 6 SERVINGS
For the pain perdu
1 cup milk
1 clove garlic
1 sprig thyme
Pinch grated nutmeg
3 eggs
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 stale croissants
2 tablespoons clarified butter
For the snail butter
4 tablespoons butter, softened (en pommade, as they say)
1 tablespoon finely grated Parmesan cheese
1 tablespoon whole-grain Dijon mustard
2 tablespoons finely diced country ham
1 tablespoon verjus
¹/2 teaspoon minced finely garlic
For the fricassee
3 pounds skin-on, bone-in chicken drumsticks and thighs
Salt and cracked black pepper
¹/4 cup canola oil
2 shallots, minced
1 stalk celery, minced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 pound wild mushrooms (preferably chanterelles and/or morels)
Two 7-ounce cans snails, drained and rinsed
1 cup verjus
1 quart chicken stock
1 sprig thyme
1 fresh bay leaf
2 tablespoons minced fresh chervil
2 tablespoons minced fresh chives
Bouquet of thyme and other fresh herbs, for garnish
Special equipment
7¹/2 by 3¹/2 by 2¹/4-inch nonstick loaf pan
Parchment paper
Roasting pan
4-quart Dutch oven
flower Prepare the pain perdu: Preheat the oven to 325°F.
Gently bring the milk to a simmer. Remove from the heat and add the garlic, thyme, and nutmeg; infuse for 5 minutes. Strain the milk. Beat the eggs well. Stir in half the milk to temper, then the remainder. Season lightly with salt and pepper. Strain the savory anglaise.
Dice the croissants into roughly shaped ¹/2-inch cubes. Pour the savory anglaise over them and allow to soak for 1 minute. Drain off any excess liquid, although you still want the mix to be very wet. Line the loaf pan with parchment paper along the bottom. Pack in the soaked croissant and anglaise mixture. Cover with aluminum foil. Bake in a roasting pan, with water halfway up the sides of the loaf pan, for 30 to 35 minutes, until the bread takes on a spongy touch. Remove from the oven, allow to cool, then chill. Unmold and slice into 6 even portions. Reserve for later.
Prepare the snail butter: Mix all ingredients together in a small bowl until well combined. Chill and reserve for later.
Prepare the fricassee: Very lightly season the chicken with a small pinch of salt and cracked black pepper. In a large Dutch oven, brown the chicken skin side down in the canola oil over medium-high heat. Once browned, remove from the pan.
Degrease the pan of the excess oil without removing the fond (caramelization at the bottom of the pan). Add the shallots, celery, and garlic over medium heat. The moisture in the vegetables should begin to deglaze the fond. Using a wooden spatula, scrape the fond away and sweat the vegetables without letting them color.
Add the mushrooms and sauté lightly. If they release moisture, cook until the pan is almost dry again. Add the snails. Deglaze with the verjus and allow to come to a simmer. Add the chicken stock and allow to return to a simmer. Add the chicken back into the pot along with the thyme and bay leaf. Cover and let simmer gently for 30 to 35 minutes.
Uncover and remove and reserve the chicken, snails, and mushrooms. Discard the thyme and bay leaf. Boil the liquid to reduce rapidly to half. Add the snail butter to the reduced liquid and bring to a simmer to create an emulsion that has viscosity but is not soupy. Adjust the seasoning with salt and cracked black pepper.
Return the reserved ingredients to the pot and coat generously in the sauce.
Just before serving, add the chervil and chives.
To serve: Fry the pain perdu slices lightly in the clarified butter in a nonstick pan until caramelized.
Arrange the dish on a platter for table space. Garnish with the herb bouquet. flower
Brad’s entrée is a sublime combination of fantasy, fiction, and all things French. I thought immediately of croissants,
he says. The crescent moon–shaped objects, as Brillat-Savarin would have agreed, are perfect for a savory bread pudding.
Replacing the traditional white wine with verjus gives this dish a higher acid content that helps cut through the fat to produce more tender chicken and ensure maximum deliciousness.
Husband and father Brad McDonald is a southern chef who cut his teeth at some of the leading restaurants in the world and made his mark as executive chef at the famed (albeit short-lived) Governor Restaurant in Brooklyn, New York.
receipeWHEN PIG FLIES
Ohio brothers Wilbur and Orville Wright’s successful bicycle business didn’t really take off until 1903, when their growing interest in aeronautical experimentation led to their first powered flight at Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina. In the years spent preparing for their great adventure, days of inclement weather would often send the pair back indoors to tinker with their machines. Here is a down-home, hearty feast that would have sustained two mechanically minded minds through days that weren’t quite right for flight, save for this bit of porcine delight taking off from their plates.
RAINY SUNDAY PORK SHOULDER WITH SESAME COLE SLAW
DARIN & GREG BRESNITZ
1903
MAKES 8 TO 10 SERVINGS
For the pork shoulder
6 cups warm water
2 cups dark brown sugar, plus more as needed
2 cups kosher salt
¹/2 cup whole black peppercorns
¹/2 cup chili flakes or powder
¹/2 cup dry mustard
One 8- to 10-pound bone-in pork shoulder, rind removed
¹/4 pound unsalted butter
3 pounds McIntosh apples, peeled, cored, and quartered
1 to 2 quarts sparkling apple cider
Potato rolls or other bread, for serving
For the sesame cole slaw
1 large shallot, thinly sliced
2 tablespoons kosher salt
Juice of 1 large lime
¹/2 cup sesame seeds
2 cups shredded carrots
2 cups shredded red cabbage
2 cups shredded green cabbage
About 1 cup mayonnaise (Kewpie preferred)
1 tablespoon freshly ground black pepper
1 teaspoon sweet paprika
1 teaspoon ground Himalayan pink salt
flower Prepare the pork shoulder: Combine the water, sugar, salt, peppercorns, chili flakes, and mustard in a large container. Submerge the pork shoulder, cover, and refrigerate at least 12 hours or up to 48 hours.
Preheat oven to 300°F.
Melt the butter in a heavy-bottomed roasting pan over medium heat. Add the apples and sauté until soft. Push them toward the sides of the pan. Remove the pork from the brine, brush away any excess, and pat it dry with paper towels. Place the pork in the center of the pan and sear it well on all sides, ending with the fat side facing up. Use a knife to slice a crosshatch diamond pattern ¹/4 to ¹/2 inch into the fat, taking care not to expose the meat below it. Fill the pan with cider until it reaches 1 to 1¹/2 inches up the sides of the pork. Cover the pan with foil. Roast for 7 to 8 hours, basting the pork once every hour with the braising liquid. Once the pork is tender enough to easily shred with a fork, coat the pork with dark brown sugar. Set the oven to broil and cook, uncovered, until the sugar has caramelized.
Remove the pork from the roasting pan and set aside. If there is substantial braising liquid left in the pan, blend it with a handheld blender until smooth and reduce over medium heat to one-half to one-fourth its original volume to make a dipping sauce.
Prepare the sesame cole slaw: While the pork is cooking, combine the shallot with the kosher salt and set aside for 30 minutes to draw out bitterness. Rinse off the salt completely, drain, then mix the shallot with the lime juice and let stand 30 minutes. Lightly toast the sesame seeds in a dry pan and set aside to cool. Combine the carrots, red and green cabbage, and shallot in a large bowl and mix with mayonnaise—more for a creamier consistency, less for a drier slaw. Add the pepper, paprika, Himalayan salt, and sesame seeds while continuing to toss. Mix until fully incorporated. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Shred the pork shoulder with the tines of a fork on a large serving platter, board, or dish. Discard the bone, or fight over who gets to suck it. Serve the pork with the cole slaw, dipping sauce, and potato rolls or your bread of choice. flower
Twin brothers Darin and Greg Bresnitz have traveled the world as the consulting team Finger on the Pulse, bringing New York’s music and food cultures to points beyond. They are the creators of the IFC television show Dinner with the Band and weekly radio show Snacky Tunes, where they explore the intersection between food and music, as well as their popular Summer BBQ Blowout Series, where Brooklyn’s culture vultures stuff their faces in the heat of the summer night, set to live music. When they’re not hustling to bring the party to the people, Finger on the Pulse has been known to enjoy good whiskey, cheap whiskey, and all the whiskeys in between.
receipeA BOWL OF CHERRIES
The Cherry Orchard was the handsome and iconic playwright Anton Chekhov’s final work for the stage. Intended as a comedy, the play combines elements of humor and tragedy into a grand irony that can only be called Chekhovian,
as the characters oscillate between slapstick humor and pained sadness. The play, which premiered on the Moscow stage in January 1904, proved an unintended coda to Chekhov’s career, as he succumbed to tuberculosis just a few months later at the age of forty-four. The Cherry Orchard has since undergone several incarnations under countless directors in a multitude of languages. Its unique, visionary approach to presenting the highs and lows of human experience has kept the piece in production almost continuously for over a century.
WHOLE-GRAIN SWEET CHERRY CRUMBLE
(GLUTEN FREE)
JULIA GARTLAND
1904
MAKES 6 TO 8 SERVINGS
For the topping
1 cup chopped walnuts
²/3 cup gluten-free rolled oats
¹/3 cup brown sugar, plus more for dusting
¹/4 cup almond meal
¹/4 cup corn flour (fine masa harina)
¹/4 cup sorghum flour
¹/4 cup gluten-free all-purpose flour (such as Bob’s Red Mill)
¹/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
¹/8 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
8 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon unsalted butter, chilled and cubed
For the filling
3 cups pitted cherries, fresh or frozen and drained
¹/2 cup granulated sugar
2 tablespoons tapioca starch
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
¹/8 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
Unsalted butter, for the pan
flower Prepare the topping: Stir together the walnuts, oats, brown sugar, almond meal, and corn, sorghum, and all-purpose flours in a large bowl. Whisk in the salt and nutmeg. Add 8 tablespoons of the butter and combine well, using your hands to work in the cubes. The topping will become crumbly and moist. Set aside.
Prepare the filling: Combine the cherries in a medium bowl with the sugar, tapioca starch, and vanilla. Mix gently until the dry ingredients absorb the liquid. Stir in the nutmeg. Lightly coat a baking dish with butter. Pour in the filling.
Assemble and bake the crumble: Preheat the oven to 350°F. Crumble the topping over the filling. Top with the remaining 1 teaspoon butter and dust with brown sugar. Bake for 45 minutes to 1 hour, until the fruit is bubbling and the crumble topping is golden. Cool for 20 minutes before serving. flower
Julia Gartland is the cook and photographer behind the blog Sassy Kitchen. She cooks, shoots, and eats (gluten-free) out of Brooklyn, New York. Hers is an excellent alternative dessert that will please all of your guests, not just the gluten-free folks. If you can’t find corn flour, Julia suggests putting cornmeal in a food processor to grind into a flour, then running this mixture through a sieve to form a fine powder.
receipeMIRACLE YEAR
When Albert Einstein published the annus mirabilis (Latin for miracle year
) papers, he shook the world’s perceptions of space, matter, and time. Included in the four articles that changed the foundation of physics were his groundbreaking findings on Brownian motion, mass-energy equivalence, and his special theory of relativity, but it was his work on photoelectric effect that would eventually earn him a Nobel Prize in 1921. Diners of the time might especially relate to this electric dish, which is miraculously energizing and browned to perfection. In a word: genius.
ROASTED FOWL WITH SHALLOTS, CHANTERELLE MUSHROOMS, GARLIC CONFIT, AND VINEGAR SAUCE
ERIC KORSH & GINEVRA IVERSON
1905
MAKES 4 SERVINGS
For the garnish
12 whole medium shallots, peeled
16 medium chanterelles (select mushrooms that are firm, dry, and aromatic)
2 tablespoons olive oil
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 shallot, cut in ¹/8-inch dice
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
For the garlic confit
12 cloves garlic, peeled
Extra virgin olive oil
For the sauce
Heads, necks, and feet from 8 quail
Chopped chicken bones (optional)
2 tablespoons duck fat
4 shallots, diced small
4 stalks celery, diced small
2 medium carrots, diced small
1 head garlic, cloves separated and chopped
2 cups white wine
1 quart rich chicken stock
1 sprig thyme
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, chilled and cubed
Good-quality sherry vinegar
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
For the fowl
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
8 quail, plucked and gutted
Fresh thyme leaves
Duck fat
Unsalted butter
flower Prepare the garnish: Roast the whole shallots in a 275°F oven until completely soft and golden. Reserve.
Sauté the chanterelles in the olive oil over medium-high heat with a pinch of salt and pepper. When the chanterelles are light gold, add the diced shallot, the garlic, and butter. Cook until the chanterelles are deep gold. Cool on paper towels.
Prepare the garlic confit: Put the garlic cloves in plenty of cold water and bring to a boil. Let the cloves boil hard for 1 minute. Do this three times, discarding the water each time. Finally, cover the soft, sweet cloves in a small amount of extra virgin olive oil. Reserve.
Prepare the sauce: Chop the quail heads, necks, and feet into small pieces. (Reserve the quail bodies.) If there aren’t enough bones to cover the bottom of a small rondeau, supplement with chicken bones. On the stove, in just enough duck fat to cover the bottom of the rondeau, brown all the bones evenly. Remove the bones, drain in a colander, and reserve. Add the shallots, celery, carrots, and chopped garlic and cook until soft and with light color, taking care not to burn the bottom of the rondeau. Deglaze with the white wine, bring to a boil, and add the bones and chicken stock. Simmer for 1 hour. Pass the sauce through a sieve and while it is still hot, add the sprig of thyme to steep.
Finish the sauce right before you cook the quail. Discard the thyme sprig. Bring the sauce to a boil in a medium saucepot. Immediately remove from the heat and let the sauce relax. (NOTE: Butter emulsifies well into a sauce close to 180°F.) Swirl the butter into the sauce while adding a few teaspoons of good sherry vinegar (to taste). The sauce should be sharp but not overpowering. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Reserve, keeping warm.
Prepare the fowl: Salt and pepper the quail and stuff the cavities with a small pinch of thyme leaves. In a heavy pan, roast the birds in duck fat and butter until they are golden on the outside but pink in the middle. Do not overcook.
To serve: Place the chanterelles, garlic confit, roasted shallots, and sauce on a large plate or shallow bowl. Arrange the quail on top. flower
NOTE: Ideally, a red-legged partridge would be used for this: shot and hung for a week, roasted rare, and finished, after breaking the bird into quarters, in duck fat. Quail, however, make a fine substitute as red-legged partridge are available only September through December.
Eric Korsh and Ginevra Iverson are the husband-wife owner-chef team at Calliope in New York City’s East Village, where they are leading a renewed obsession with French cuisine, turning out an authentic vintage-before-vintage menu and impeccable standard of service. Eric notched his knife at the iconic Waverly Inn in the West Village, Patio Dining, Jerry’s, Patroon, and Café des Artistes; Ginevra has consulted for restaurants and been a private chef, with tenures at Prune and Jack’s Luxury Oyster Bar. The two met while working at Picholine on the Upper West Side, and went on to found their first restaurant together, a French-Mediterranean destination spot called Restaurant Eloise in Sonoma County, California.
receipeGRAND HOTEL
At the turn of the century and after the Gold Rush, San Francisco rose as a cosmopolitan center of art, society, commerce, and glamour. Its famed Palace Hotel (the largest in the West) was a true jewel of the city, known throughout the world. The original hotel, with over seven hundred opulent guest rooms, a grand atrium, and palatial dining rooms, was tragically destroyed in the famous earthquake and subsequent fires of 1906. The hotel’s legacy of regal and decadent service is still credited for introducing European grandeur and elegance to America’s dining culture.
RASPBERRY-CURED SALMON WITH SALMON TARTARE, GINGER, AND MEYER LEMON
BEN POLLINGER
1906
MAKES 4 SERVINGS
For the cured salmon
One 1-pound boneless, skinless king salmon fillet, cut from the top of the fillet, with no bloodline
¹/4 cup raspberry vodka
10 turns of a pepper mill filled with black pepper, set to a very coarse grind
2 cups kosher salt
1 cup sugar
One 1-inch piece ginger, peeled and grated
Grated zest of 1 Meyer lemon
For the tartare
1 Meyer lemon
6 ounces king salmon belly, diced ¹/4 inch
¹/4 teaspoon coarse sel gris de Guérande
1 teaspoon Indian coriander seed, lightly toasted and cracked medium-fine
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
Fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
For the raspberry sauce
1 cup fresh raspberries
1¹/2-inch piece ginger, peeled
Juice of ¹/2 Meyer lemon
¹/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
For the garnish
Reserved Meyer lemon zest from the tartare
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
Watercress leaves
flower Prepare the cured salmon: Place the salmon fillet on a plate. Pour the raspberry vodka over the salmon, then wait 5 minutes, turning once or twice. Season with black pepper.
Mix salt, sugar, ginger, and lemon zest. Place a 1 gallon zippered plastic bag flat on a tray. Lay half the salt mixture in the bag. Lay the salmon fillet on top of the salt mixture. Cover the salmon fillet with the remaining salt mixture. Seal the bag, pressing out air. Marinate