Take this dish we had at Lokal, which you may recall from my last post:
Roast beef in a thick root vegetable gravy, cranberry cream sauce, and those big, carby dumplings to soak it all up. Delicious, to be sure ... but I likely won't be making a faithful reproduction of this until sometime around Thanksgiving.
So, to get this flavor profile without the heaviness, I used grilled portabellas rather than meat, a fluffy carrot puree instead of a gravy, whole grain wheat berries in place of starchy white bread, and a lemony, tart cranberry creme fraiche. This was, in a word, a hit.
Grilled Portabella with a Garlicky Carrot Puree, Wheat Berries, & Cranberry Creme Fraiche
Carrot Puree:
8 oz carrots, peeled
1/3 cup table cream
1 T lemon juice
3 large cloves garlic, minced
1 T butter, unsalted
salt & pepper, to taste
Boil the carrots until very soft, and plunge into cold water. Pat dry. Mash by hand and combine with the cream and lemon juice. Puree with an immersion blender or in a stand blender until smooth. Heat the butter in a skillet over low heat until melted. Add the garlic and allow it to infuse the butter. Add the carrot puree and heat until warmed through. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Wheat berries:
1 cup wheat berries
2 1/2 cups vegetable broth
1 T fresh chopped flat leaf parsley
Toast the berried in a saucepot over medium heat for about 5 minutes. Add the vegetable broth and bring to a boil. Cover and simmer until soft and the liquid has absorbed; about 1 1/2 hours. When finished, stir in the fresh parsley and season with salt and pepper.
Cranberry Creme Fraiche:
2 T dried cranberries
1 tsp lemon juice
1/2 cup creme fraiche
pinch salt
Combine ingredients and blend until almost smooth
Portabellas:
2 portabellas
olive oil
salt and pepper
Remove the stem from the mushrooms and gently wipe any dirt from the caps. Brush with olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Grill either on a grill pan or an outdoor grill over medium heat for about 6 minutes per side.
I think the dish is best when you get a forkful of mushroom, carrot puree, and cranberry altogether - the sweet, salty, tangy and umami is in great balance ... if I do say so myself. As I am a firm believer that all leftovers taste better in taco form, if you have any, chop up the portabella and mix it with the wheat berries and carrot puree and eat it on a corn tortilla.
Stay tuned for more adventures in Prague!
What a beautiful dish - the composition is incredible!!!
ReplyDeleteThis is quite unique very pretty and refreshing flavors with the cranberry cream lovely presented. As always hope you have a great Easter!
ReplyDeleteI love recipes you post!!! Hugs, Flavia
ReplyDeleteAwesome dishes, love the grilled portabella, mushrooms are my weakness.
ReplyDeleteOh, yeah! This looks scrumptious!!!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic looking dish. I'm excited to try it since I've never made any Czech recipes before.
ReplyDeleteThe old world dish is good, you uped it in style and I would go for your dish first hands down
ReplyDeleteI am DROOOOOLING
ReplyDeleteI am ALL about purees these days! The carrot puree sounds amazing! Exquisite plate!
ReplyDeleteSorry the mushroom dish comment was for here...I am backwards today :) Gorgeous dish!
ReplyDeleteTrix, your interpretation of that Eastern European dish is modern, minimalist and ubercool! I like the flavors you've put together on your plate and also the fact that you've kept it vegetarian. Gor-jus!
ReplyDeleteOh wow... I think I like your better. It looks so good!
ReplyDeleteI am so jealous! I didn't know you were in Prague!
ReplyDeleteThe classic roast beef and dumplings sounds tasty and very bolstering, but I'm pretty sure I would pick your sprightlier and so much more elegant version over all those hefty carbs...
well now you know I am not gonna pass up a gravy dish but your carrot version sounds pretty darn good and with the creme fraiche along with a nice slice of, well say a pork roast, I would be in pure porky prague heaven...
ReplyDeleteWhat a creative take on the classic! I love the idea of a carrot puree. I have to use portabello mushrooms more often, as only my husband is an avid meateater (my girls and I overrule him every time, LOL!)
ReplyDeleteI think you'll do fine with German. I am slowly learning Spanish - grammar from the book, and spoken language from the Mexicans I work with:) Perfect combination!