REPASTS: REGENCY-ERA ROUT CAKES

Rout cakes have faded into obscurity, as podgy and forgettable as Joseph Sedley of "Vanity Fair", writes Jon Fasman ... read more »
COMMENTS: 0 | ADD NEW COMMENTREPASTS: CANVASBACK DUCK

Though canvasback ducks have fallen from favour since Edith Wharton's time, they remain delicious, "with the gamy taste and muscular chew of wild meat," writes Jon Fasman in his latest column about meals in books ... read more »
REPASTS: SYLLABUB, ELIZABETHAN EGGNOG

A frothy bubbly drink chronicled by Samuel Pepys, preparing syllabub is "a sure way to carpal-tunnel syndrome," writes Jon Fasman in his latest column on literary treats ... read more »
REPASTS: WARM, SOFT, YIELDING TRENCHER

Trencher is a chewy bread that once served as plates in medieval times. Jon Fasman considers its literary roots in his latest Repasts column ... read more »
REPASTS: THE CROWNING GLORY OF THE CLASSICAL RUSSIAN KITCHEN
"Russians will stuff dough with anything that doesn’t stuff them first," writes Jon Fasman. He devotes his latest RePasts column to the layered fish pie kulebyaka ... read more »
REPASTS: JOHNNYCAKES FOR BREAKFAST

Hoecakes and johnnycakes are like bouillabaisse: "the only thing their partisans agree on is that everyone else gets them wrong", writes Jon Fasman ... read more »
REPASTS: IN PRAISE OF CALVES-FOOT JELLY
COLD FEET | August 7th 2008

"A basin of melted calves-foot jelly was, I'm sure she thought, a cure for every woe" ~ Elizabeth Gaskell, "My Lady Ludlow" (1858)
From INTELLIGENT LIFE magazine, Summer 2008
Calves-foot jelly has two forms: sweet, common in 19th-century Britain and America (likely the version Gaskell mentions above); and savoury--called petcha, a standard of Ashkenazi Jewish cooking. Both dishes start with a long braise of split cow's feet. The latter adds garlic, onion, salt and pepper, and usually retains the meat that falls from the feet; the former adds sugar, Madeira wine, brandy, cinnamon and citrus, and discards the meat. In both cases the stock is chilled until it sets, and the fat that rises to the top is skimmed off.
The key component of both is collagen--a protein found mainly in connective tissue, in which feet abound. Collagen makes meat tough, but it also makes the same cut, after stewing, silky and rich. Smart cooks have long begged chicken feet from the butcher: they give chicken soup extra body. Hot, collagen imparts richness; chilled, it turns to gelatin. read more »

