Aunt Emma's Never Fail Pie Crust

3 c sifted flour
1 1/4 c Shortening
1 tsp salt
1 egg, well beaten
5 Tbsp water
1 Tbsp vinegar

Cut shortening into flour and salt.
Combine egg, water, and vinegar in a separate bowl.
Pour liquid into flour mixture all at once. Blend with spoon until flour is all moistened.
It can be re-rolled without toughening. Will keep in refrigerator for two weeks or divide into balls enough for one pie and wrap in Saran wrap and freeze indefinitely.

Makes 2 crusts

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Not a Wimp Or a Blimp

But Flounder is here!  Perhaps I've seen "Animal House" too many times!  Yay!

This time the choice for our online group, French Fridays with Dorie, is Almond Flounder Meuniere.  Oh yum. I look forward to anything that includes nuts. 

Dorie describes this dish as an inventive cross-breeding of the classic sole amandine, in which the fish is finished with sauteed sliced almonds, and sole meuniere, in which the fish, often whole, is sauteed in browned butter. Flounder is easier to find here in the U.S.

Due to previous purchase of a giant bag of sliced almonds from Costco, the only ingredient I had to go out and buy were the flounder fillets.  Other ingredients include butter (of course), lemon zest, flour, and an egg yolk. What could be easier?

Some of the almonds are ground then mixed with 1 Tbsp of flour, the zest, salt and pepper.  Pat the fish fillets dry and brush them with beaten egg yolk. Dip that side of the fish in the nut mixture.

Flounder Fillets brushed with egg yolk
Sauteeing in browned butter
Heat a large skillet over medium heat, add 1 Tbsp butter and a small pinch of salt if your butter is unsalted. Cook the butter until it is light brown, about 3 minutes. Slip the fillets into the brown butter, nut side down. Don't crowd the pan, lower the heat. Spoon browned butter over the fish as they cook, about 3 minutes per side. Garnish with some toasted almonds and parsley if desired.


We had ours with broccoli seasoned with almonds and red pepper flakes.  This was DELICIOUS!!  Quite simple and very tasty.

You can always see what other Dorie followers have to say at www.frenchfridayswithdorie.com.

Home Made Boursin Cheese


On this day I'm trying Dorie's recipe for cheese spread that she nicknamed "Boursin's mama".  If you're familiar- Boursin is a soft, flavored cheese you can purchase to spread on crackers. Dorie says it's as popular in the stores in France as it is here.

Lyonnaise Garlic and Herb Cheese sounds a whole lot more tasty and interesting to me. I decided to take this recipe to a baby shower. One of my coworkers was bringing crackers.

The ingredients list looks wonderful: ricotta cheese, minced and rinsed shallot, garlic, snipped fresh chives (from my garden), minced fresh parsley (also from my garden!), minced fresh taragon (too hot here to grow this one), red wine vinegar, olive oil, salt and freshly ground white pepper. Actually, the ricotta is a replacement for fromage blanc. I didn't have time to go in search of that one.



The ricotta is drained in a fine mesh strainer for a few hours to thicken its texture. After straining, mix the other ingredients into the cheese. Dorie advises to taste and adjust seasonings as you wish. I always struggle with this kind of instruction. How do I know what I wish if I've never had this before?  Refrigerate for at least 3 hours.



At the 3 hour mark it was time to take off for the baby shower. Off we went.  Much to our dismay, coworker and I, the kitchen was packed with food. Seems party hostess took it upon herself to make TONS of food on her own, so that each guest arriving, carrying additional dishes, was just so much more. The kitchen counters were overflowing. Talk about a miscommunication.  I don't think anyone tried my dip except me and I have to say it was pretty bland.  Perhaps trying so many other dishes with it overwhelmed the dip's subtle flavors? I don't know.

Mother-to-be is a real fan of giraffes.
Thank goodness the quilt I made was a hit!

I took my dip home and hubby and I tried it again later. Still not impressed.  To me it was ricotta cheese with barely any other flavor, shallot maybe, perceptible. Seems like a time-consuming process to arrive at something so plain.

Sardine Rillettes

Let me just say right now that I never met a sardine.  Really. Or not that I know of.  Buying my first can I'm thinking, huh?  But then this whole Dorie journey is one new thing after another so why not?

Dorie explains the term "rillettes", not so long ago, typically meant a rich, salty spread made from pork, goose or duck cooked slowly in its own fat. Really?  I don't know anyone who is that brand of typical, I guess. Salmon is more typical these days, Dorie says.  Looking back, I might have stayed with the more current, trendy favorite...

Dorie offers the wisdom that this recipe comes together in 10 minutes. Well, maybe, if you don't have to dissect each little oily fish first, to remove its teeny tiny little spine.  My cans o' fish were not "boned". (It did not take me one second per fish, but I'm new at this.)

Slice each fish in half horizontally.
Use the tip of your knife to lift 0ut the little spine.


Other ingredients include cream cheese, minced shallot, green onion, lime or lemon juice, minced fresh herbs, piment d'Espelette or cayenne, salt and pepper. Sounds tasty!

I followed Dorie's instructions which include mixing all ingredients together then mashing the sardines into the mixture with a fork. She says, "Taste for seasoning, adding more juice, salt and pepper if you like.". Well I did. I guess it has to sit for a while. Aren't all dips and spreads better after they sit a while? You cover the surface of the dip with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 2 hours or over night.



We tried this with crackers as a light supper.  Neither one of us cared for it much.  Defnitely not a do-over.

Sable Breton Cookies



The name for the classic French version of the buttery-good shortbread cookie is "sable" with an accent mark over the e, which this blog site seems to be unable to provide.  Or I am incompetent. (Technicality unrelated to baking).

Dorie explains that the northwestern region of France known as Brittany is known for its fleur de sel and salted butters. We can't mimic the Breton butter here in the States so Dorie came up with a recipe where she calls for unsalted butter then adds salt in the recipe to perchance get close to that region's renowned butter cookie, le sable Breton.

This recipe comes from Dorie Greenspan's Around My French Table, page 465.

One thing you must remember about this type of cookie is the dough is always refrigerated for a lengthy period of time before you bake them (minimum 6 hours!). You have your choice of rolling the dough into a log and doing the slice-and-bake routine, or rolling the dough flat and cutting shapes. I chose the latter. That French rolling pin I bought is not going to live its life in the drawer!



Dorie calls for the usual ingredients: flour, baking powder, one stick of unsalted butter, sugar, fleur de sel or fine sea salt, and egg yolk. It is very firm. Shape it into a disc, wrap it well and leave it in the fridge. When ready to bake it's better to roll it thicker rather than going town to make it thin, like pie dough. Dorie recommends about 1/4" thick. Bake until firm but not brown.  I chose the traditional fluted cutter. While I was searching through my cutter stash I discovered I had two plain 2" cutters. One of my favorite bakers will be the recipient of one of these for the next time she is cutting cookies or biscuits in Philadelphia.


These didn't last long. Every time coffee was made the cookie stash got smaller.