Friday, 17 October 2008
American Cooking in France: Beef Pot Pie
I feel bad putting up another pie recipe so soon after the last two, but although I have written up a few more varied recipes, I don't have pictures of anything else on hand. So this one is going up in the mean time.
Anyway, encouraged by my success with cooking a chicken pot pie, I did decide to try making a beef one, which came out great!
Ingredients
Dough:- 2 cups flour
- 1/3 cup corn flour
- 1 cup margarine
- 2 tbsp parsley
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 cups diced beef, like they sell for making bœuf bourguignon
- 1 cup water
- 1/3 cup flour
- 1 beef bouillon cube
- 1-2 cups mixed frozen vegetables
Preparation
Prepare the dough: 1. In a big bowl, mix flour, corn flour, parsley, and salt. 2. Chop up margarine and incorporate with a pastry blender until you have pea-sized crumbs. 3. A tablespoon or so at a time, whisk in ice water with a fork until the dough starts to hold together. 4. Form into two balls, one slightly larger than the other, and put in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes.
Prepare the filling:1. Brown beef in a skillet 2. Dissolve bouillon cube in boiling water 3. Add water and bouillon mixture to beef and stir in flour and vegetables.
Prepare the pie: 1. Grease a pie dish. 2. Roll out the larger ball of dough on a flour-covered surface until it is bigger than the pie dish with some room to spare. 3. Wrapping the dough around the rolling pin, transfer it to the pie dish and get it in place. 4. Pour the filling into the pie. 5. Roll out the smaller ball for the covering, and place it on top of the pie in the same way. 6. Fold the edges of the top crust over the bottom crust and press with fingers all the way around (removing any extra crust as you go). 7. Cut four slits in the pie to allow steam to escape. 8. Bake at 220° C for 45 minutes. (If the cooking dough expands to close your slits, poke them open again with a knife.)
And there you have it, beef pot pie!
1. Rub the chicken all over with oil, salt, and pepper. 2. Drink half the beer, and plunk in the garlic cloves (the first time I made this I cut the top off the can completely, but I found that this risks getting bits of metal in your food! Instead now I cut a couple of slits across and fold the inside top of the can inward) 3. Stick the beer can in the chicken (leave the end sticking out, since you'll need to be able to get a good grip with tongs or pliers to pull it out later). 4. Put the chicken in a pan (to catch drippings), positioning it in such a way that all the beer doesn't spill out. (Most recipes will tell you to sit the chicken up vertically on the can; I've found that as it cooks it tends to fall over so I just prop it up on the edge of the drip pan, but maybe if you're well-equipped with skewers you can rig it to sit up.) 5. Cook at 175° C for 2 hours. 6. Remove the extremely hot beer can with tongs or pliers without burning yourself. 7. Serve with rice or potatoes and vegetables.
Save all the leftover meat for
Sometimes coming up with a recipe is as simple as remembering that something exists. Chicken parmesan is one of my go-to dishes when eating out in the States; if nothing else on the menu screams out to be tried, I know that by ordering that I will always get a meal that I enjoy. But for whatever reason, it never even occured to me that I could make it at home. That is, until I ended up living in France and suddenly realised that I hadn't had chicken parmesan in ages.
Chicken pot pies are a great example of an American dish that I miss not being able to get in France. When I was in college, frozen chicken pot pies were, along with ramen and pizza, what kept me alive. With no frozen chicken pot pies here to be had, I have had to make them myself. Luckily, this is not too hard (especially if you cut corners and settle for a one-crust pie—although for this article I was feeling inspired and went with a two-crust pie), and provides an excellent use for left-over cooked chicken (which I have a lot of every time I make
Nothing was missing more from the holidays in France for me than Egg Nog. I used to drink gallons of this stuff back in America, but it's unknown here. Well I don't know what took me so long, but finally this year it occurred to me to see whether I couldn't make my own Egg Nog myself. The good news? It is a success! I now have Egg Nog in France, and it's pretty darn easy to make.
This is easy to make. It's silly, but for the longest time I lamented not having Kraft macaroni and cheese in France, when in fact it's very easy to just make it yourself. A little more time consuming, granted, but if you make extra and freeze some you can make it go a long way.

Nothing says "gourmet cooking" like a good meatloaf. Ok, maybe not! But it is darn good food, easy to make, and makes plenty of leftovers, so I'm happy to make it anyway. Even if my French wife thinks we're just eating hamburgers without the bun :-)
This came about from a sudden need to use up a lot of spuds that I had bought for baked potatoes, but that had begun to sprout in the cupboard. We used to bake our au gratin potatoes with a pre-mixed canned version that we were perfectly happy with, but this was a good way to use up a lot of potatoes quickly, and was pretty easy to make. After discovering how easy it was to just make these from scratch, and at lower cost than buying the canned ones no less, from now on I think I'll always be making my au gratin potatoes myself.
Shepherd's pie is a big winner in my book because it's a complete meal in itself and you can make a lot of it at once—it's actually better as leftovers (the flavours have more time to blend). It also uses lots of Worcestershire sauce, something that French cooking, for all its many qualities, is sorely lacking. So having a good shepherd's pie from time to time is a great way to assert your Anglo-Saxon heritage as well :-)
The original recipe I used back home used Cambell's cheddar cheese soup, where you mixed in half the can in with the beef, and half with the potatoes. That really made the potatoes a lot better with this dish, but I haven't found a good substitute for it in France. Still, the recipe as given is pretty good too.
If there is one thing that one quickly comes to realise in France, it is that food here is sacrosanct. Not only do the French attach a very high importance to food, and its quality, in their lives, but this obsession works its way into nearly every facet of French life, from traditions, to employment law (hello two hour lunch breaks!), to the day to day rhythm of life.
That is the general backdrop of the situation here, although, especially in Paris, vegetarians can thrive just fine. But they do have to put up with a hostility that, coming from a North American context, can be quite shocking. (Lest the reader think I am exagerating, when I arrived as an exchange student my "Welcome to France" orientation book had a very short rubric on vegetarianism: "Vegetarianism is not practised in France. Adapt."
When Emilie and I got engaged, one of the first presents her family gave her was a French cookbook of "American Recipes". This was a cute present, but not one that I would say she ever got much use out of. With the changes brought on by the baby, and with her and me having different standards when it came to the dinner table, the last few months have seen me gradually taking over most of the food preparation (whether out of helpfulness or exasperation!)




