Find out what it’s like in a French kitchen
August 5, 2015 by JaneSusan Herrmann Loomis was born in Orlando, Florida. Her childhood was spent moving around the USA and from country to country with her military father. She now lives on Rue Tatin in Louviers, France with her husband and two children. She’s written many cookbooks, and her latest is In a French Kitchen: Tales and Traditions of Everyday Home Cooking in France. (Enter our contest for your chance to win a copy, and get details on Loomis’ book tour on our Calendar of Cookbook Events.) Loomis has provided us with a peek inside her cookbook, which contains lovely prose in addition to recipes:
The French love Food.
I know, that’s like saying “The sky is blue.” But the French love
of food isn’t just carnal. The French love of food is primordial.
They love food the way we love our Grand Canyon, our freedom, and
our waves of grain-primitively, instinctively, fundamentally. Their
love for food is overwhelmingly universal-it permeates the air, the
life, the lifestyle, and the habits of all in this country.
This love of food resonated from the day I set foot in France and
smelled butter in the air. It was a chilly day in March, and I had
just arrived on an early flight. nothing was open in Paris that
morning, and I walked to stay warm, inhaling that buttery smell
that would balloon into intensity each time I passed a
boulangerie.
When one finally opened its doors, I stepped inside and bought
my first French croissant. It shattered all over me when I bit
into it, and I’ve never been the same since. This
buttery, shattery moment led me to a French life. There was, of
course, a lot more involved. But that croissant was like a perfect
first kiss at the start of a lifelong romance.
Since then, I’ve discovered just how much the French love food,
which has allowed me to openly love it, too. I always loved it,
which made me something of an extra-terrestre when I was
in college and after. Then, friends and colleagues greeted my love
of cooking with skepticism and friendly derision, as if to say,
“Who on earth would want to spend time cooking?” The minute I came
to France I was surrounded by like minds, and my somewhat
suppressed passion came fully out of the closet.
Fast-forward to a life in France raising children, writing books,
teaching cooking classes, settling myself into a culture where food
is the linchpin, the gathering point, the warmth in a cold world of
politics, social upheaval, complex religious persuasions, and
every- thing else that composes our contemporary French world.
Here, I’m surrounded by people who love food.
Take Edith, my friend and cohort in many an exploit for thirty
years. She is the antithesis of the stay-at-home mom, though that’s
what she’s been for nearly thirty years. The thing is, she coddles
no one, believes that a harsh life is better than a soft one, wears
Birkenstock sandals every day of the year regardless of the
temperature, and is always dressed in items of designer clothing
that she assembles with the flair of a diva. As for her four kids,
they were born, they were fed, they were schooled, and now they’re
out of the house, all of them strong individuals with passions of
their own.
What did Edith do with her time? She painted, landscapes and
portraits that enchant everyone who sees them. She has
many other passions-remodeling, sewing, hunting down bargains
on eBay. One of her most notable passions is her love of eating.
I’ve never encountered anyone who approaches meals with so much
gusto. When she sits down in front of something she loves, you’d
better be sure to serve yourself quickly because otherwise she is
likely to eat it all, with big, appreciative mouthfuls, down to the
last crumb.
I see a lot of Edith. For one thing, I often swim in the pool she
and her husband, Bernard, thoughtfully put in their backyard. If
she isn’t making lunch when I arrive, she’s about to sit and eat
it, and it’s always a hot meal. Lately it’s been boiled potatoes
with mustardy vinaigrette and smoked herring (it’s herring season).
But it might as easily be thick, herb-rich potage, or pasta with
lots of garlic and a shower of Comté, or a mass of vegetables that
she pulled from her garden and braised with bay leaf and
thyme.
Edith wouldn’t dream of eating something she considered less than
scrumptious, which for her is heavily weighted to vegetables,
garlic, and olive oil. Her refrigerator is mostly empty, but half
their property is given over to a vegetable garden where her
neighbor, Mr. Harel, has tended the same few crops for at least
fifteen years. There are leeks and carrots, lettuces and potatoes,
onions, green beans, and a big row of red currants. It never varies
(which would drive me crazy because I like variety, but which suits
Edith just fine). As long as she has these fresh staples, her
life-and her diet- are complete.
What I find fascinating about Edith, aside from her colorful
nature, is the time she spends cooking. She has absolutely no
passion for it, yet her intense passion for eating drives her into
the kitchen twice a day. She’s efficient there like she’s
efficient everywhere. Nothing she cooks takes long-leeks are washed
and cut in seconds, then set to braise in olive oil and garlic;
potatoes are put on to boil; cheese comes out of the fridge. Edith
loves good bread and while she might not take time to go to the
market for vegetables, she’ll drive miles for a great loaf. She
loves dessert and whips up a chestnut and honey cake in five
minutes, or a thick chocolate sauce, which she’ll pour over
homemade ice cream, or a fruit tart made from the figs off her
prolific tree.
Her meals are all impromptu and very simple, whether she’s cooking
for herself at noon on any old day or has ten people coming for
dinner. For a dinner party, she’ll just multiply that warm potato
and herring salad, preceding it with nothing more than some
delicious cured sausage, fresh walnuts (from her tree), and perhaps
a chickpea or avocado purée; she might decide to splurge and grill
perfect little lamb chops, which she’ll cook in the fireplace;
these she’ll serve with buttery tender green beans or sautéed
leeks. If she doesn’t want to eat meat she won’t serve it and will,
instead, offer an extra-ample cheese selection and call it good.
Her meals are direct and no frills, like her. And because she’s an
artist, while guests might be surprised, they allow her this
peccadillo.
Most of Edith’s dishes are based on memories from her austere
grandmother Juliette’s farm, where she spent many a summer and
school holiday. I swear, there isn’t a flavor or food memory she’s
forgotten. If she’s making braised endive, she’ll tell the story of
how her grandmother forced her, at age twelve, to sit in front of a
plate of braised endive every meal for three days until she ate it.
(This is a true story. Then, she hated endive; now, miraculously,
she loves it.) When she bites into a butter cookie, it reminds her
of those the housekeeper made with fresh top cream when she was a
girl; when she makes chocolate sauce with water, it’s because
her aunt at the farm did it that way.
Edith wasn’t surrounded by a lot of warmth and affection
when she was growing up, so food became the vehicle for emotion.
She is much like her grandmother, somewhat austere to those who
don’t know her. Yet eat at her table and you’ll feel as though
you’re wrapped in a down comforter. Food, for her, is memory and
warmth all wrapped up together.
Reprinted from In a French Kitchen by arrangement with Gotham Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, A Penguin Random House Company. Copyright © 2015, Susan Herrmann Loomis. Photo credit: Francis Hammond.
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