I could write about a lot of things.
Some things are right in
front of me: a mug of hot coffee, a warm scone, the wilting basil plant I’m
desperately trying to keep alive. My table is piled with read and half-read books by
friends and colleagues and mentors and writers whose minds I’d like to inhabit for just a second, surrounding me like a fort. My brain is filled with ideas,
bursting with them, for articles, for books, for projects—and yet I always want more. The heater clanks. The windows rattle against the
early-morning wind. My hair smells like lavender.
Other things to write about already took place:
namely, weddings. I went to three weddings in October. One in Beverly, MA, one
in Lancaster, PA, one in San Francisco, CA. Megan married Jeff. Emily married
Ryan. Becca married Justin. I drove to two of these weddings. Flew to one. I
was greeted by old friends, new friends, complete strangers; the Amish countryside,
the perfect produce of a West Coast farmer’s market, way too much wine.
Megan, a colleague at
America’s Test Kitchen, is passionate and detail oriented, especially when it
comes to food, and her wedding was a parade of perfectly-placed details,
luscious bites and a carefully-curated collection of desserts. Emily, one of my
oldest friends, looked radiant as she walked down the aisle—part woman and part
child, the clash no doubt a result of my own inability to completely separate
our individual presents from our collective past. I gave a reading at the ceremony of my
college roommate, Becca—part of the introduction to Mastering the Art of French Cooking,
a choice that seemed strange at first, until I realized
that it was the perfect way to talk about not only food but all that it stands
for (family, community, adventure, love).
I could also write about how
when November finally rolled around I was… tired.
But as I write it’s Sunday
morning—a beautiful morning just begging for me to go out for a jog—and I don’t
feel like using words to occupy either the sensory present or its weightier partner, the past. So I'm going to tell you about these sweet potatoes instead.
I’ve written about my love
of Ottolenghi’s cookbooks before. The newest one, Jerusalem, just came out and
of course I bought it right up. This is the first recipe in the book. Just one
glance and I knew. Roasted sweet potato wedges—served with fried slivers of red
chiles and green onions, drizzled with a balsamic glaze, nestled with
fresh figs and (if you want) chunks of goat cheese. It’s salty and sweet, cooked and raw,
spicy and tangy and warm. This is the kind of cooking I like best: simple yet
unexpected, casual but interesting, home cooking with a bit of an edge.
Roasted Sweet Potatoes & Fresh Figs
From JERUSALEM, by Yotam
Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi
4 sweet potatoes
5 tablespoons olive oil
3 tablespoons balsamic
vinegar
1 ½ tablespoons superfine
sugar (though I used regular sugar)
12 green onions, halved and
cut into 1 ½ inch segments
1 red chile, thinly sliced
6 figs, ripe ones, quartered
5 ounces goat cheese
(optional)
salt and pepper
Preheat your oven to 475
degrees Fahrenheit.
Wash and then cut your sweet
potatoes into wedges – (cut the potato in half, and then each half into three
wedges). Toss with 3 tablespoons oil, salt and pepper to your liking. Place on
a baking sheet, skin side down, and roast for about 25 – 35 minutes, until, as
Ottolenghi says, they are “soft but not mushy.” Let cool.
Make a balsamic reduction:
Combine vinegar and sugar in a small pan. Simmer for about 4 minutes, give or
take, or until it thickens. (Ottolenghi says: “Be sure to remove the pan from
the heat when the vinegar is still runnier than honey; it will continue to
thicken as it cools.”)
Heat up the rest of the oil in
a saucepan and quick-fry the chile and green onion slices (for about 4 – 5 minutes
over medium heat, stirring often to avoid burning).
Arrange the sweet potato
wedges on a big serving platter. Spoon the oil/chile/onion mixture over top.
Nestle the fig quarters among the potatoes. Drizzle with the balsamic
reduction. Season with salt and pepper to taste. This is great at room
temperature, with the goat cheese (if you want it) crumbled over top just before serving.
10 comments:
That first paragraph - poetry.
I can't wait to see how your ideas for projects/books/writing unfold.
Thanks to your instagramming, I ordered and received a copy of Jerusalem last week. I made the chicken sofrito and the roasted cauliflower and hazelnut salad last night (amazing!) and can't wait to make almost everything else in the book. I'm thinking about making the sweet potatoes and figs for Thanksgiving.
Happy Veterans Day.
Thanks, Lecia. I, too, can't wait to see how all my ideas unfold :) I've had my eye on the cauliflower and hazelnut salad -- that might be next up for me now. (I'm definitely making this potato/fig dish for Thanksgiving!) Happy Veterans Day -- xo
So many weddings! So happy to have you at ours. :) I so must make that dish... and buy Jerusalem, as soon as I have a house to put it in. :)
Oh my Molly this looks wonderful! And perfect for Thanksgiving. We are still getting boatloads of figs here (as you may have seen at your visit to an SF Bay Area market!) and sweet potatoes are a sure win with my little guys ... can't wait to try this one. And I'm hoping the new Ottolenghi book shows up, next to a menorah or under a Christmas tree, sometime in the next month or so :)
Megan: I LOVED being at your wedding. Fingers crossed on the house news!
Hannah: Yes! You'll have to let me know what you think when you make it. Fingers crossed for the book to show up at your place sometime soon :)
My best friend just gave me 'Plenty' a nd I cannt wait to cook everything in it!!
I am stewing over my Thansjgiving menu and this caught my eye ... I wonder if this could be my sweet potato component?
This might be blasphemous, but I like Jerusalem so much more than Plenty. Everything in Jerusalem is calling my name. I started putting post-its on all the recipe I want to make until I realized that I was still on the appetizer section and had already used about 20 post-its. I marked this one and I'm looking forward to making it on Thanksgiving, or perhaps the day after as part of a left over feast. I made the cauliflower salad this week and it was incredible, so fresh and flavorful, I highly recommend it. Hope your boundless projects find their way on here eventually. Great post.
Nicole: Yes, Plenty! I was definitely going to make this dish for T-day, though now I'm worried about the possibility of finding fresh figs. I might try and shake it up with some dried ones... Anyway, you'll have to let me know if you try it, and what you think. xo
Talley: Interesting! I need to spend some more time with Jerusalem before I make any grand statements about my preference. But, yes, almost every recipe in this new one calls to me, which doesn't often happen with me and cookbooks. I've heard great things about that cauliflower salad -- next on the list! Have a wonderful Thanksgiving.
This looks delicious! I'm adding it to my list of must-do's! Thanks for sharing!
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