A new edition, a new book, and anniversary fritters

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February 3, 2015 · 24 comments

It’s been a long while since I’ve written, but I have a (semi-) decent explanation: I’m coming in to the end zone on my next book, which will be published by Berkley Books, most likely in autumn of this year. (I’m very happy to also announce that Poor Man’s Feast: A Love Story of Comfort, Desire, and the Art of Simple Cooking is coming out in paperback this August, also from Berkley, the fact of which makes me want to shriek with glee. If it weren’t so very out of character.) Here’s the gorgeous new cover, for which I’m so totally grateful to Berkley’s design team. Damn, they’re good.

I wrote Poor Man’s Feast over a period of about sixteen months, from late 2010 into very early 2012, and I’d forgotten what it’s like — the sitting down every single day, the isolation, the writing bird by f**king bird, the forgetting to have breakfast or lunch as I get Hoovered deep into the wormhole that writing memoir seems to require. When I was writing Poor Man’s Feast, I spent days reliving the early part of my new relationship and food’s role as our third, silent partner: I relived that primal urge to cook for someone during our first year together, and what it tasted like, looked like, and felt like to us in that narrow sliver of time where we managed, against all odds, to find each other and make it work. I had been a single city woman for so very long. She had ended a longtime relationship a year or so earlier and retreated to the place where she grew up, in the (very) rural Connecticut countryside. One afternoon a few months after we met, I mistook a large bear emptying the contents of the neighbors’ bird feeder into its mouth for a purebred Bouvier I was certain had just escaped from a nearby Litchfield manse after winning a local AKC competition.

That’s how it went for a while with us: all country girl/city girl.

There was, of course, a lot of food in Poor Man’s Feast: there were the illicit, fancy French meals that my father and I shared under the wire when I was a child and my mother wasn’t looking. There were the cavernous restaurants we frequented in 1970s Manhattan — Maxwell’s Plum and Mr. Chow and Sign of the Dove — which gave way to my brief stint at cooking school in the late 1980s, where I failed chocolate, and two years working at the original Dean & Deluca, where my days were filled with six-figure, brain-sized truffles from Alba. There were the obscenely tall meals I made in a pompous, fruitless attempt to woo my new partner; unmoved, she simply knocked them over like the fragile house of cards they were. There were the less-expensive butcher’s cuts I learned to prepare as we began our parsimonious life together — the shanks and the oxtails and the cheeks — that demanded I stop cooking with hysterical bursts of fire and flash and instead commit myself to slowness, focus, and care. In learning how to cook this way for Susan, I learned how to live this way, which I still mostly do, unless my mother is visiting or Mercury is in retrograde. Or both.

So with that story — a tale of how sustenance for the belly goes hand in hand with nourishment for the heart and spirit — about to appear in paperback, I find myself back at my desk and writing the next book: Treyf: A Memoir of Family, Food, and the Forbidden. I can’t/won’t talk too much about it beyond the fact that it’s about human transgression — in the kitchen, at the table, in love, even at prayer — and what happens when we use taboo — including prohibited foods — as a way to separate past from present. Pre-hipster Williamsburg, Brooklyn makes a guest appearance in Treyf (my great-grandfather, Marcus Gross, owned a kosher butcher shop within spitting distance of what is now the pork emporium, Marlow & Daughters); so does 1970s Queens, The 2000-Year-Old-Man, Peggy Lee, Spam, Devils-on-Horseback, fondue pots, and the pork dumplings and shrimp and lobster sauce served at my best friend’s Bat Mitzvah in 1974.

In addition to food and family, there also seems to be a lot of music showing up in Treyf, so here’s a short playlist just to sort of grease the contextual skids:

Jumble Jamboree

Fever

Blue Velvet

Billy, Don’t Be A Hero

Time and Love

Lady Marmalade

Maggie May

Loving You

Heartbeat, It’s a Lovebeat

Half Breed

Meanwhile, amidst all of the writing and re-writing and editing, Susan and I just celebrated our fifteenth anniversary. We met in 2000, on a freezing January Saturday afternoon and have been together ever since, with mercifully little time apart; this year, we celebrated with dinner at home on a bitter January school night during a recent snowmageddon when the car had just about frozen to the driveway and the roads were like a luge run, leaving me gastronomically stranded. I had been to our wonderful fishmonger a day earlier for the main course, but I wanted to make something a tiny bit different for us to nibble on while I cooked us dinner. We’re not big appetizer people — there’s only two of us — but I considered my options: I could fry the three sad Castelvetrano olives that were languishing in the back of the fridge. I could roll up the thin-sliced ham I’d bought on a whim at the coop and pipe them full of low-fat cream cheese, like my grandmother would have done in 1976. Or I could head down to the dusty Metro shelves in our basement, where we keep the weird canned goods that Susan’s late mother, God bless her soul, used to send us home with in the event of nuclear disaster.

For whatever reason, I chose the third option and uncovered some Laurel Hill Artichoke Hearts (NOT the marinated sort). Susan adores artichokes in whatever form they come, but especially Carciofi alla Giudia, which there was absolutely no chance of my turning these things into. So I settled for artichoke heart fritters, dunking them whole in a traditional, egg-based batter and bread crumbs, and then shallow-frying them in a straight-sided saute pan. Eating them hot and golden as they came out of the oil reminded me of the way we used to feed each other back in the early days of our relationship, when we lived in tiny Harwinton and simply cooked whatever we could find, devoid of show or pomp, and celebrated the miraculous fact that we had found each other against all odds.

Artichoke_Fritters_Snapseed

Artichoke Heart Fritters

There are a few (important) keys to making this very easy appetizer: first, if you’re using canned artichoke hearts, buy the highest quality you can find, and make sure that they’re not marinated (they should be packed in water and either lemon juice, or citric acid, and that’s it). Second: when you pop the can, rinse and then drain the hearts in a sieve and shake it well to dry them out as best you can. Otherwise, the batter will roll right off them and into the hot oil. Finally: Lest I upset any of my anti-canned food readers…I am not advocating eating canned food over fresh. But my car was frozen to the driveway and, well, you know how the Donner Party ended up.

Serves 2

1 14-ounce can best quality artichoke hearts, NOT MARINATED

sunflower or grapeseed oil

1 large egg

1 tablespoon all-purpose unbleached flour (GF if you’re GF)

1/4 cup whole milk

3/4 cup Panko breadcrumbs (GF if you’re GF)

Maldon salt

Freshly ground black pepper

Wedges of fresh lemon

Drain the artichoke hearts in a sieve, give them a quick rinse, and shake to dry the hearts as best you can. Set aside. In a large, straight-sided saute pan, slowly heat half an inch of oil over medium heat.

While the oil is heating, assemble the batter: in a small bowl, beat the egg and whisk in the flour until the mixture is thick. Pour in the milk and beat gently — the batter should be lump-free. (If it’s too thick, add a bit more milk; if it’s too thin, carefully whisk in a bit more flour. The consistency should be that of pancake batter.)

When the oil reaches a temperature of 375 degrees F and using spring-action tongs, dip one of the hearts first into the batter, allowing any excess to drip off, and then into the breadcrumbs, coating it uniformly. Carefully set the heart into the hot oil, and repeat with the rest of the hearts. Turn the first heart over after about three minutes, and follow suit with the rest. (They should be a deep golden brown, but no darker.)

Remove them to a plate draped with a paper towel, season them well with salt and pepper, and serve them immediately with fresh lemon. They won’t keep (and they won’t have the chance to).

1 Rosa February 3, 2015 at 9:47 pm

Congratulations on all fronts. I look forward to your new book eagerly; your themes and wonderful way with the written word never fail to resonate and amaze. Thank you for sharing these glimpses of your life and your delicious (to read and to make) recipes.

2 Elissa February 3, 2015 at 10:30 pm

Thanks Rosa!

3 Nancy February 3, 2015 at 11:36 pm

mazel tov on 15 years and a new book! I look forward to reading it.

PS you mentioned a coop? There’s a co-op in Fairfield County? I know there’s one in New Haven but I found that one to be a disappointment. I end up just going to the co-op in Albany when I’m visiting my folks.

4 Sarah February 4, 2015 at 4:08 am

Maggie May! I unironically LOVE Rod Stewart.

Looking forward to all this, and so happy for you. See you in a couple months! xx

5 mimijk February 4, 2015 at 5:31 am

A time worthy of much celebration – to help offset any angst that accompanies the arduous work of writing another book 😉 congratulations dear friend!!

6 Elissa February 4, 2015 at 8:08 am

Thank you! X

7 Monica February 4, 2015 at 10:14 am

Gorgeous new cover — very uplifting. Congratulations on all the great news.

8 sharon eisen February 4, 2015 at 10:19 am

I am so looking forward to reading your next book. I’ll be in my new living room, fireplace going, tucked under a nice cozy throw, cats and Lola sitting on top of me and enjoying every morsel of your book.
Thank you

9 Elissa February 4, 2015 at 10:26 am

Thank you Sharon -x

10 Elissa February 4, 2015 at 10:26 am

Thanks!

11 Mallory February 4, 2015 at 10:51 am

Congrats on so many fronts and thanks for a simple and delicious recipe!!

12 Sarah February 4, 2015 at 11:55 am

Wonderful news, Elissa! Congratulations, I can’t wait to dive in to book 2.

13 Deb February 4, 2015 at 11:59 am

I want to be a guest on my elbows at your counter watching, talking, lending a chopping knife, trading anecdotes with you and Susan and Congratulations, too for this milestone. I foolishly believed I was alone in my predilection to cook, entertain, cavort in my kitchen—with music. Now that I know you also do this, makes the world a brighter place. Kidding! I figured some people do like music and I always think those who do, lead richer lives and those are the people I want to be around. My husband and kids suffer for me; but it’s really good for them! I am long overdue in saying thank you for the insights, recipes, observations and great things I’ve learned from your blog site over the years; thank you for writing about your explorations with food. I am giving your book as a gift to a good, old-longtime friend who has the heart and soul of a great chef and works on diesel engines out in the So. Cal. dessert; maybe this will inspire him to put those myriad commercial kitchen parts together and get himself into the kitchen more often. Thank you with butter on top for all your enjoyable and often thought provoking insights. xoxolovedeb

14 Elissa February 4, 2015 at 12:03 pm

Thanks Deb!

15 Amanda February 4, 2015 at 2:10 pm

Retrograde, indeed! Missed this until today! Bah! Everyone has already said it but it bears repeating: Congrats on the 15 years! Gorgeous cover! Too bad I’ll have to give it away. And, so, so looking forward to whatever your Treyf has up her sleeves.

16 Elissa February 4, 2015 at 2:40 pm

Why will you have to give it away?!

17 Ben C. February 4, 2015 at 8:00 pm

Best wishes as you prepare to launch book#2. The PB cover for PMF is really beautiful, nice work by the art dept, but I can’t help but wonder why there isn’t a ham knuckle nestled into those pears.

18 Wendy February 4, 2015 at 9:38 pm

Wow – we must be just about the same age! Bill Don’t Be a Hero! My friends and I used to act it out while blasting the 45 in one friend’s basement. And Half Breed? Watched the Sonny and Cher show every week just to see what she wore. Look forward to reading your next book!

19 Carole @ Emu Bliss February 5, 2015 at 10:23 am

Sooo looking forward to your new book. I always feel calmer when reading your words.

20 Elissa February 5, 2015 at 10:27 am

Thanks so much Carole!

21 Evangeline February 9, 2015 at 12:00 am

I just finished reading your first book last month, so it’s perfect timing – I’ll be looking forward to this one, too. I’m amazed at your memory – how you can remember so many facts, details, brand names, and so on, from your childhood! My memories are more like short movie clips or vignettes. I love your detail, and I especially enjoyed the sections of your time spent in Susan’s house – sounds like a lovely rambling place to live, my kind of home 🙂

22 Elissa February 9, 2015 at 6:30 am

Evangeline, thanks for your message. I find that the memory thing is both a blessing and a curse — it’s always been that way for me, for as long as I can remember (so to speak).

23 sonya February 10, 2015 at 11:13 am

I just stumbled on this most recent post, so good to hear from you. Wonderful news about the paperback edition and Treyf, as well as your 15 yr anniversary — congrats on all of that! Also, many thanks for posting the link to 2,000 Year Old Man — I too grew up hearing my parents play it and it gave me a really good belly laugh this morning!! Hope you’re surviving the snow, and that your car melted off the driveway long enough to be able to restock provisions.

24 Jeana March 6, 2015 at 4:48 pm

Congrats on your new book and on you and Susan’s anniversary. Your artichoke fritters transcends cultures. My mother, 1st generation Italian would make these all the time. I can almost smell them in the cast iron pan. Thank you for sharing, it brought back sweet memories.

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