July 17, 2004

Dear friends,

As promised, today I am kicking off Tales Out of Eureka Springs with a story that has been told so many times that I almost feel compelled to turn it into stanzas, much like The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. Luckily for you, I will not.  I will simply call it the Tale of the Accidental Pie and leave it at that.  I could stop being pretentious and just refer to it as cherry pie, but I won’t because this is not my idea of a cherry pie.  On the other hand, it’s good enough to deserve a name of its own.

The road to the Accidental Pie began with a food adventure that ate up close to an entire damn day.  Part of the point of a writers’ colony is that in exchange for the money you send to them (or the money that your fellowship underwriters send to them), they will take care of your room and board.  At Dairy Hollow, we want for nothing.  The cook fixes us dinner on weeknights.  All other times, we are invited to use the kitchen and to take whatever food we want.  If we want something the Colony doesn’t stock, we are invited to write it on the board on the fridge and they will pick it up for us on their next supermarket run.  If you are lucky enough to stay in the room with that giant superb kitchen, i.e. me, you can take the food from the main kitchen back to your kitchen and cook it yourself.  I have to remind myself that the Colony will buy me anything to eat that I want, that I don’t have to spend my own cash on it.  The problem is that I like the whole process of shopping, and unless I tag along on market runs, crying “buy me this!  buy me this!” like a six-year-old, I won’t be able to indulge the shopping bug.  Said bug has only been made worse by a phone call two days before my departure, from a pal of mine who is also staying at the Colony, who says brightly, “Oh, you’ll love Eureka Market!  They have everything you can get at the health food store in New York, but they have a sign saying ‘Pie cherries are in!’” I can feel myself getting giddy at her words.  Pie cherries are a rare jewel, in season only for about eight weeks in the summertime.  I will have access to pie cherries in Eureka, and a grand kitchen in which to bake them.  On my arrival in town, I can’t get myself to Eureka Market fast enough.  “We can get them for you,” says the store manager, a very nice young man.  “We don’t usually stock them, but we can get them.  We have to order them by the case.  Can you use a whole case of them?” Well, golly.  I can probably make about two pies, which will still leave pints and pints of cherries, but heck, I can make cherry jam out of them.

It is my first Friday at the Colony, June 18.  I head to the kitchen to grab some cereal, when Jan, the assistant director of the Colony, tells me that I have a message:  Eureka Market has called and the pie cherries have arrived.  Off to the market, via two trolley lines, I go.  “I’m here to pick up some pie cherries,” I announce brightly to the young woman at the counter.  “Oh, you must be Jen,” she says, and hands me a small, densely packed case.  It is an odd shape for a case of fresh fruit, but I’m not overly concerned.  I can’t wait to open the case and bury my nose into it, to smell that bright bracing fragrance, just aching to be turned into pie.  I rip the case open.

What we have here is a case of two parties making assumptions and neglecting to define terms.  If you scroll down a bit, you will see what I consider pie cherries.  What I consider pie cherries are fresh, raw sour cherries, a/k/a tart cherries, Montmorency cherries, morello cherries, etc.  If you click here, you will see what the market staff considers to be pie cherries.  As canned cherries go, they are a fine product:  organic cherries, canned in organic pear juice, no added sugar, but they have two strikes against them:  they are canned, not fresh, and they are sweet black cherries, not tart reds.  I have a case of them.  12 cans.  It’s not what I want, but the market people are so nice and apologetic, and after all this is a special order for me, that I agree to take them, and see what magic can be worked with them.  I decide to pick up “a few more things,” which translates to a little bottle of arrowroot (just in case I can make pie from those cherries, after all), a pint of raspberries, a quart of little red new potatoes, half a dozen rapidly ripening and softening nectarines, a bag of almond meal, a quart of vanilla yogurt, a pint of heavy cream (in glass bottle) and a quart of whole milk (ditto) from Hosanna Hills Farm.  And, of course, a case of 12 cans of cherries.  I have just spent $70 and encumbered myself with 30 pounds of groceries, not counting the box of cherries.  It is entirely fitting that I am living in America’s Largest Open-Air Asylum.

This pie really had the odds stacked against it, and yet it came out on top, like the scrappy underdogs of Chariots of Fire, or Meatballs, or Disney Presents The Strongest Man in the World starring Kurt Russell.  I would call it the Little Pie That Could, but I won’t.  For starters, it was a pretty big pie.

The Accidental Pie was a two-fold accident.  Not only did I have the wrong kind of cherries, I also had a crust that should have been straightforward but left me near-to-weeping in confusion.  I should have just told the truth and begged off prettily, but I had told one of my fellow writers of my plans, and she looked so ecstatic at the thought of cherry pie—on her last dinner at the Colony, no less!—that I vowed to do it.  I had promised Karen a cherry pie, and cherry pie would we have.  Measuring revealed that once the pear juice was poured off, 1 15 oz. can = 1 cup of cherries.  I used four cans.  As I do with my “regular” cherry pie recipe, I took a cup of them, put them in a saucepan, shook a couple tablespoons of sugar over them and turned on the heat.  Eventually the cherries began to cook down, fall apart and bubble.  I tasted them and threw in a little more sugar.  Because the liquid looked a little low, I threw in some of the merlot I brought back from dinner.  If I had to guess, it would have been about 1/3 cup, although a more accurate unit of measurement would be “glug...hesitate...glug again.” When it looked about right to me, after maybe 5 minutes, I put 2 tablespoons of arrowroot into a custard cup and made a slurry out of it.  Again, I couldn’t remember if that was how much I usually used; it just seemed like a nice round number.  I’d like to say that I have an instinctive knowledge of the basic principles of kitchen science, but let’s be honest:  dumb luck was on my side.  I added the arrowroot slurry to the boiling cherry-wine syrup.  It turned to mucilage in about 20 seconds.  Through the fog of panic I reminded myself that this was what it’s supposed to do, because I have another three cups of cherries going into that pie, and that arrowrooty paste will help to gently thicken the juices that are exuded by the rest of the cherries in baking.  I turn the paste into the bowl of cherries, stir, stir, stir, and add almond extract, a trick I learned from my teacher Nick Malgieri at Peter Kump’s New York Cooking School.  Cherry pie needs almond extract; I believe this with the fervor of one who has just found Jesus.

But I am getting ahead of myself, describing the filling.  I did something dumb, namely try something new on a crowd of strangers.  I was so convinced that this pie would need all the help it could get that I had the bright idea to make the almond pie crust from Sherry Yard’s The Secrets of Baking.  Normally when I make cherry pie, I forgo my old standard flaky pie crust for something called pate sucree, a sweeter, cakier dough.  So I didn’t think it would be as much of a stretch to use a more cookie-fied recipe.  Chef Yard’s recipe calls for all-purpose flour, pastry flour, almond meal, butter, egg and a full cup of sugar.  “It has a tendency to crumble,” she warns.  There’s a funny object there, that tendency.  I was already in an advanced state of nerves from opening up the pastry flour from the health food store and discovering that it was, in fact, whole wheat pastry flour.  Wait, that’s not what I bought!  Ohhhh...there it is, running up the side of the package in the thinnest Bodoni font imaginable:  “Whole-Grain.” I reached into the bag and made a fist:  well, it sure feels like pastry flour, low-protein flour made from soft wheat.  What the hell, between the butter and the almonds, no one will be able to tell.  The resulting pastry chilled to rock-hardness in the fridge, as pastry doughs do...only it stayed that way after I took it out.  This dough does not have a tendency to crumble.  It has a mandate.  Despite my careful flouring and reflouring of the marble, despite my gentle and persistent loosening of the dough from the work surface with my bench scraper, it would not behave.  Split, rip, shatter.  I had to apply the mud-pie technique, patting sections of it into the pan, patching and patting until I was sure that all the air that had been incorporated into that lovely dough would be mooshed out, leaving only heaviness and soddenness behind.  With great care and effort, I rolled out another sheet, cut some strips for a lattice, and banged everything into the freezer, where they would await the completed pie filling.

Feel free at this point to sing to the tune of “Bang Goes the Drum and You’re in Love.” On goes the oven.  Out comes the shell.  In go the cherries.  Out come the lattice strips...and here everything falls apart, literally and figuratively.  I cannot lift the strips off the pan without their breaking into three pieces.  Those few pieces that do leave the sheet tray intact crumble upon being placed on the pie.  Finally, in a voice that my mom and I jokingly refer to as “That’s it!  No tip!,” I announce to an empty kitchen:  “That’s it!  We’re having streusel!” And I whale on these strips, ripping them to shreds, flicking them off my fingers and onto the surface of the pie, not so much as to cover the whole surface, but enough to be considered proper topping.  On goes the egg wash, in goes the pie.

And my word, but doesn’t that crust bake beautifully?  For a split second I’m afraid it’s burning, but no, it’s just baking to the deep brown that comes with a lot of sugar in the dough, plus the presence of milk solids in the butter.  The cherries are dark and shiny in their bubbly juice.  Did I manage to cheat the universe?  I’m still not convinced.  As with pudding, the proof of the pie is in the eating.

To dinner the pie goes, to be served with Blue Bunny vanilla ice cream.  There are four of us at dinner, three women, one man.  Karen, for whom I made the pie, opens her eyes wide at first bite.  “This is such a wonderful crust!” she cries.  “It almost tastes like blueberry pie,” says Alison, and she’s right, it does.  Forrest eats without making a sound, eventually concurring that it’s a successful pie.  Everyone looks happy as they eat it, except for me.  I look relieved.

Dear friends, for your consideration, the Accidental Pie is below, as well as a picture of the real pie cherries I bought at the Greenmarket this morning, the ones that will be turned into real cherry pie tomorrow.  Will there be a picture of Real Cherry Pie?  Oh, of course.  Will there be recipes?  You bet.

accidental_pie

pie_cherries

Posted by Bakerina at 08:20 PM in incoherent ravings about food • (12) Comments • (1) Trackbacks
July 16, 2004

The rumors are true.  Well, some of the rumors are true, anyway.  Leave us draw up our chairs, grab a hot cuppa or a cold glassa, and snuggle up whilst I separate the wheat from the chaff, the eggs from the Egg Beaters™, the truths from the, uh, falsies…

Enough with the cute, already.  Are you home or not? Yes, indeed I am.  After a week of ominous warnings about thunderstorms in northwest Arkansas and thunderstorms in New York City, I had a near-perfect, clear-as-glass flight home yesterday morning.  I say “near-perfect” because once we landed at LaGuardia, we discovered that American did not have a jetway available for us, nor would they for another half-hour, and thus did we wait on the tarmac until a bus was made available to transport us to a dark and odd-smelling stairway into the terminal, where we were further treated to a last-minute, unannounced switching of the baggage claim carousel where our bags were being unloaded.  Welcome to New York.

So are you glad to be back in New York? It depends on when you ask.  Now that I have been back at LuthorCorp for seven hours, I wonder what I was thinking when I turned down that offer to serve hush puppies for minimum wage at Ozark Kitchens.  If you had asked me last night, when Lloyd surprised me with dinner at the lovely new French restaurant in my neighborhood, I would have said oh yes, without a doubt. If you had asked me after we returned home from dinner, giddy on good food and a bottle of cheapish but wonderful New Zealand sauvignon blanc and overall reunited-and-it-feels-so-good vibes, I would have answered uhhh…yeah...why don’t we talk about this in the morning?

Have you cut off the guest bloggers yet? Damn no, baby!  Frankly, I don’t know why I just promote myself to Blogger Emeritus and permanently turn over day-to-day operations to the guest bloggers, as they did a brilliant job and were much more entertaining than I’ve ever been on even my best days.  Proper kudos will follow, defined and given three examples, but let me start with big thanks to everyone who kept it fast, frosty and downright dirty around here.  And the recipes!  Such recipes, such a delightful variety, so correct in form and function, so round, so firm, so fully packed, so easy on the draw!  No, there will be no deep-fried hell administered by me.  There will be no fumigating, simply because I love that sweet friendly ‘mouse.  And for those of you who are still waiting for that infamous look at my snoobs, trust me on this:  you got a better deal getting to see orionoir’s.

Did you really show your snoobs to ‘mouse as an incentive to blog? You’ll just have to consider my character and make up your own mind on that one.

This is all very amusing, except when it isn’t, but don’t you want to tell us what actually happened down in Eureka?  Did you write at all, or just do research?  How was the room?  How was the town?  How was the weather?  How was the food?  What were the other writers like?  Did you really have to teach a class?  Did anyone survive it?  Did you take any more pictures?  Can we see them?  Damn, woman, don’t you have anything to say? Yes, yes I do.  I have so much to say, so much to share, and it’s killing me that I can’t do it now.  I’m really trying to, but LuthorCorp has other plans for me.

Bitch, you too good for us now?  I’ve been trying to e-mail you all damn morning and you act like you’re all too cute for the room or something.  You think you’re better than us?  Do you, huh?  I’ll smack that look right off you, don’t think I won’t. I know, I know.  In their infinite benevolence, LuthorCorp has put firewalls up that effectively cut off all of my web-based e-mail.  No Yahoo mail, no Plasticmail, no spiffy new Gmail account (yes, I have Gmail, and I didn’t even have to show Billiam my sausages!).  I’ll be checking all of these e’s tonight, but if you’ve been trying to reach me, just leave me a comment and I’ll e you from work.  Trust me, it would be a pleasure.

Barring the obvious consideration of a paycheck, remind us again why you went back to LuthorCorp? (sound of crickets)

Was it worth all that foofaraw from last winter, where you threatened to quit your job?  Was it worth giving up all your vacation time? Absolutely.  It was absolutely, positively, 100% worth it.  I’m still trying to figure out what I did in my past lives to deserve this opportunity.  I can’t believe I have this wonderful memory to call my own.

Did you miss us? Dear friends, you have no idea.  I missed each and every single one of you.  I missed you like mad.  Start saving your change now, because I’m going back next year, and I want all of you there with me.  We’ll get a nice group rate at the Crescent Hotel.  No excuses, no substitutions.

Posted by Bakerina at 04:57 PM in valentines • (13) Comments • (0) Trackbacks

Yes, it’s true.  The lovely and talented Egg Fellow has returned from her sojourn to The Natural State.  They really call it that, yes, although I don’t believe the people who live there run around in their natural state all the time.  Jen will have to enlighten us when she’s able to blog.

“Snowball, what have you done with Jen?  Why is she not ready to blog yet?” I hear you asking.  It should come as no surprise to you that our beloved Bakerina is a bit knackered from riding on a smallish plan half the day, enduring a cab ride, and finding a lonesome Lloyd eagerly awaiting her return.

She’ll be back tomorrow at some stage, I promise.  Unless I change her password while I still have the chance. 

This has been a public service announcement.  If it had been an actual emergency, Tom Ridge would have shown up and insisted that intelligence shows there is no clear threat.

Posted by Bakerina at 12:47 AM in Travel • (3) Comments • (0) Trackbacks
July 15, 2004

There’s a rumor about that the landlord is coming back from her summer vacation and she’s going to fumigate the place.  Bring cats.  Rid the place of the dirty ‘mouse that ran wild in her absence. 

Well folks, I could run and hide.  But I’m going to stand up and take it like a ‘mouse.  Perhaps she’ll find me cute.  If I promise to stay out of the flour and not nibble through the bag of sweet jasmine rice again, and if I put on my cutest sad look, maybe, just maybe, she’ll hesitate at the last minute and the cleaver won’t come down. 

I’m pushing this offering of a beautiful, sweet mango into the middle of the table and sitting down next to it.  I’m pouring a shot glass of tequila for our hero who needs it after braving a certainly harrowing plane ride. 

If this is the end, I’m ready.  Love to all.  (sniff)

Posted by 'mouse at 11:56 AM in • (2) Comments • (0) Trackbacks

in the quest for better food, i cook.  it was at first in big part to the two dumpy little grocery chains that rule my area; one never stocked fresh bread.  what happened to the fresh bread?  was there an accident with the truck?  is the breadman ok?  i voiced my concerns over and over again to little avail.  the chain that kept passable bread, also kept un-passable lunchmeat.  i caught it on the side of a package that some incompetent double pierced child had left on the counter while trying to find the on switch for the slicer.  now i am forced to ask.  and if i had been forced to buy one more package of ‘country style’ rib cuts that have absolutely no mention in any cook books at all, i would have lost it entirely.  so i bought sharp knives and cutting boards, yeast and flour of all kinds.  ‘game on’- i said to myself.  sure, it required that i spend a lot more time in the kitchen and not on-the-couch, but hey- being spared running golf commentary and supernineiron infomercials- no big loss to me.

now i get this on the morning news, ‘is food an addiction?’ ‘is food an addiction like drugs and alcohol?’.  ogod, well it is the local news and my ‘it’s not the heat it’s the stupidity’ rule does fairly apply in disclaimer, but i’m positive this one has gone national by now.  and then this, this bit of unbelievable genius from the anchor, ‘do you need rehab?’ o yeah, i need rehab boys and girls, perhaps a stint on survivor.  sure it would crush the remaining tendon holding my sinuous marriage together, but i could lose 50 fucking pounds!  hell, what’s more important anyway?  you’re integrity, or a million dollars?  hm.  don’t answer that.

when are we going back to being upset by little things, like peta’s new campaign to keep people from chaining their dogs up.  recently a tiger escaped captivity and was on the loose in my state and the woman who offered a 5-month old pig to use as bait- is now facing animal cruelty charges because she made him ride there in her trunk. - it’s the little injustices that get me.

anyhow, i took a picture of this bread for you, perfectly shaped and untouched on the plate, a few toasted slivered almonds sticking up but otherwise seamless, a little cornmeal and wheat flour thrown in for texture.  i intend to make bakerina proud...yes.  i have been a bad guest blogger previously and should be beaten with a wooden spatula promptly.  well...the proper pre-show drama is in place what with accusations of ‘perv magnet’ flying about.  i wonder even now if my guestblogging privileges have been revoked already.

bakerina, you have been missed.  welcome home.

Posted by Bakerina at 11:36 AM in Go Outside and Play! • (2) Comments • (0) Trackbacks
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