The Second Avenue Deli Cookbook (31 page)

BOOK: The Second Avenue Deli Cookbook
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1. In a large skillet, sauté pine nuts quickly in 2 tablespoons olive oil, stirring constantly. Remove to a small bowl with a slotted spoon, and set aside. Sauté onions in remaining oil (add a bit if necessary); when they're nicely browned, add garlic and sauté quickly. Add lemon juice, white wine, plum tomatoes, 1 teaspoon of the thyme, and ½ teaspoon of the salt. Simmer for 8 minutes. Transfer onion sauce to a small saucepan, and leave it on an unlit back burner.
2. In a shallow dish, thoroughly mix flour, garlic salt, 1 tablespoon thyme, 1 teaspoon salt, and pepper. Dredge fish fillets well in this seasoned flour, and set them aside on a large plate. Do not stack.
3. Pour sesame oil into a large skillet and, when oil is hot, fry fillets on medium to high heat until underside is golden brown. Turn with a spatula, and brown the other side. (Use 2 large skillets, each with ¼ cup of oil, to cook all your fillets at once.)
4. While fillets are frying, mix cornstarch thoroughly with 2 tablespoons cold water, and pour mixture into sauce. Bring to a boil, stirring, until sauce is moderately thickened.
5. Remove fish with a spatula to a platter covered with paper toweling and drain excess oil. Serve individual portions, topped with onion sauce and some of the pine nuts.

C
ULINARY WUNDERKIND AND OWNER
of the elegant but comfortably simpatico Gotham Bar and Grill, Alfred Portale is famous for his exquisite vertical food presentations and his brilliantly innovative contributions to New American cuisine. After graduating first in his class from the Culinary Institute of America, he went on to work in the great kitchens of France with such luminaries as Michel Guérard, the Troisgros brothers, and Jacques Maximin. A few years ago, he received a James Beard Award naming him Best Chef in New York. Abe often said the Gotham was the only restaurant he knew where everything—food, presentation, and service—was always perfect.

Alfred Portale

Twelve years ago, I hosted a cooking class in the kitchen at the Gotham Bar and Grill. This subterranean room was brightened immeasurably that evening by an astonishingly enthusiastic “pupil,” who was shocked at how much of our seasoning was accomplished with simple salt and pepper. He turned out to be a fan, and went on, in a thick Eastern European accent, to heap an embarrassing amount of praise on me.
The man, of course, was Abe Lebewohl, and we saw each other often in the years following that class.
Abe continued to prove himself a kind and wonderful man during his once-a-month visits to the Gotham dining room … and he made a special point of complimenting our food and service each time. When
I commented on his generous praise, he remarked—with a humility that defined him—that “It doesn't cost anything to be nice.”
Over the years, Abe was a regular at my cooking demonstrations, and I suppose I was a regular at his “classes”—learning something about how to make people feel good from a real master. It may not cost anything, but it's an all too rare gift that he possessed in abundance.
Alfred Portale's Whole Roast Red Snapper with Tomatoes, Lemon, and Thyme
SERVES
4
TO
6
This fish dish—quick, delicious, and presented whole—makes an impact. And it actually makes its own colorful sauce, replete with Provençal flavors.
1 (6-pound) whole red snapper, cleaned and scaled
Coarse salt and freshly ground white pepper
¾ cup thinly sliced shallots
6 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
1 cup peeled, seeded, and chopped ripe tomatoes (or use canned tomatoes if ripe are not available)
1 small lemon, thinly sliced, seeds removed
1 tablespoon coarsely cracked coriander seeds
4 sprigs fresh thyme
4 sprigs flat-leaf parsley, plus 2 tablespoons chopped, for garnish
½ cup extra-virgin olive oil
1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Lightly oil the bottom of a roasting pan large enough to hold the whole fish. (If necessary, trim the fins with scissors to get a better fit.) Rinse the red snapper inside and out with cold running water, and pat it dry with paper towels. Slash 4
X
's about ¼ inch deep into the thickest parts on both sides of the fish to ensure even cooking. Season well with salt and pepper. Place the fish in the roasting pan, and scatter a few of the shallots and garlic in the cavity.
2. Strew the tomatoes, lemon, the remaining shallots and garlic, the coriander seeds, and thyme and parsley sprigs over the fish, and drizzle with olive oil. Cover with aluminum foil.
3. Roast until the fish is cooked, 35 to 40 minutes. To test the fish for doneness, make a small incision near the head. It should be just opaque near the bone. Using 2 large metal spatulas, transfer the fish to a warmed serving platter. Spoon the vegetable garnish over the fish, sprinkle with the chopped parsley, and present the whole fish at the table.
4. To serve, use a long, thin-bladed knife to cut vertically through the top fillet to the backbone. Make an incision down the backbone, and remove the back and dorsal fins. Use a large fork to lift off the 2 portions of the top fillet, and place on warmed dinner plates. Lift off the bone structure and head, and discard. Cut the bottom fillet in half, horizontally. Transfer to dinner plates. Serve with the vegetables.

Gefilte Fish
MAKES
12
Gefilte fish, today a prized delicacy, dates from the late Middle Ages in Germany, where it was conceived as a fish stretcher—an ancient relative of Hamburger Helper. Religious Jews embraced it as a highlight of Friday-night dinners, because it solved a spiritual dilemma: though the Talmud suggests eating fish on Friday nights, it is forbidden (because it's considered work) to separate fish from bones on the Sabbath. We've found that most people who say they don't like gefilte fish have only tasted the supermarket variety, sold in jars, which is like saying you don't like filet mignon when you've only tasted beef jerky. Happily, preparing authentic gefilte fish from scratch is not an arcane skill possessed only by Jewish great-grandmothers. With today's food processors, it's not even especially difficult. Our recipe is sweet, in the Polish tradition; Russian gefilte fish is more peppery.
FOR THE GEFILTE FISH BALLS
1 1½-pound fillet of whitefish and 1 ½-pound fillet of carp or pike (at fish store, ask for whole fish, filleted and skinned. Retain the heads and bones. Many stores will also grind the fish for you)
2 large onions (about 2 cups when grated; don't tamp it down)
1 stalk celery
½ medium carrot
6 eggs, beaten
4 teaspoons sugar
2½ teaspoons salt
⅜ teaspoon pepper
¾ cup corn oil
1 cup matzo meal
FOR THE COOKING
Heads and bones from fish
4 medium onions, peeled and quartered
2 stalks celery, trimmed and chopped into 3-inch pieces
2 medium carrots, peeled
1. In a food processor or grinder, grind fish (refrigerate heads and bones for later use), 2 onions, 1 stalk celery, and half a carrot. (If you use a food processor, make sure you leave no large pieces of fish or bones; you may want to transfer the mixture, bit by bit, into a wooden bowl, and go over it vigorously with a hand chopper.)
2. Place fish mixture in a large bowl, and add eggs, sugar, salt, pepper, and corn oil, mixing thoroughly with a wire whisk. Stir in matzo meal, and continue to mix until everything is thoroughly blended. Refrigerate for 1 hour or more (longer, even overnight, is better).
3. Fill 2 large stockpots three-quarters full of water, and bring to a vigorous boil. In each, throw in half the fish heads and bones, 2 onions, half the celery, and a carrot. Divide batter into 12 patties of equal size. (Don't worry that your batter is a little loose; it has to be that way to keep your gefilte fish light.) Transfer each patty to a large cooking spoon, shape into an oval, and very gently lower it into the boiling water. Put 6 in each pot. Lower heat and simmer for 1½ hours.
4. Remove fish balls and carrots from pots, and refrigerate on a covered plate. Discard everything else. Serve chilled with red and/or white horseradish. Slice carrots for garnish.

Abe's annual Israel Day Parade float celebrating “A Slice of Jewish Life.”

PROMOTIONS, PITCHES … AND PITCHING NO-HITTERS
Bring out the Hellmann's, and Bring Out the Best
I
N
1987, Best Foods, which manufactures Hellmann's mayonnaise, celebrated the seventy-fifth anniversary of its sandwich spread by challenging seven top New York delis to compete for the title of best sandwich (it had to be slathered with mayo, of course). In addition to the Deli, contestants included Katz's, the Stage, Sarge's, Lox Around the Clock, Wolf's, and the New York Delicatessen; Leo Steiner of the noted Carnegie refused to take part, stating, perhaps a tad churlishly, “I'm a solo, not a choir, act.” And even Abe was a little doubtful, expressing his personal horror at
goyische
desecrations like mayo on pastrami. Judges were major media personalities, such as NBC weatherman Al Roker. The event culminated with the wheeling out of a vast birthday cake in the shape of a Hellmann's bottle. Actor Phillip Douglas, got up as an eight-foot jar of mayo, led everyone in singing “Happy Birthday.”
Sad to say, we didn't win that competition. We were beat out by the New York Delicatessen's creation: smoked salmon and sable with cucumber, radish, and red onion on pumpernickel, smeared with herbed mayonnaise.

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