Caroline
Pique-nique printanier français or French picnic was the theme for our May lunch. It was up to each and everyone to create their garden picnic look. Tables were set out on the patio allowing for proper SD. Everyone was asked to bring:
We patiently waited for spring to warm up and jumped at the first sunny and warm day to set our date.
My pique-nique consisted of smoked salmon, grilled asparagus crêpes with a twist on béarnaise sauce (tasty and butter free!) and a side salad dressed with a traditional French vinaigrette and poached egg.
Diane
Being somewhat pressed for time I ended up curating my plate to create a classic French meal with ingredients from my favourite grocery store, McKewans. Grilled salmon on top of salad niçoise with a Normandy camembert, and fizzy lemonade on the side. I packed everything into a cooler so it was wonderfully chilled when served.
I so look forward to time together and the time to savour each other's company. This month's get together was definitely fun, but I really did want a taste off my Epi's plates as the food looked absolutely delicious! Now I will simply have to make their recipes at home.
Kaarina
Now — where was I? Pan Bagnat. Mine started with the best baguette in Toronto, which is baked by the Cliffside Hearth at 3047 Kingston Rd. in the Scarborough Bluffs. I followed — quite religiously, I might add — Patricia Wells directions from her Bistro Cooking cookbook, although there are many, many versions of Pan Bagnat online.
Slice the baguette lengthwise, and brush both sides generously with garlic oil (6 cloves minced into quarter cup olive oil.) Stir 2 tbsp of capers into a can of undrained tuna. Spread the tuna on one half of the baguette, then layer on sliced onion, tomatoes, egg and strips of red pepper. Pile on rinsed and dried anchovy fillets (yes, the whole can) and top with a half a cup of roasted red pepper confit (recipe follows) and the second half of the baguette.
Wrap the baguette tightly in plastic wrap. Refrigerate and place a heavy weight on top for at least four hours, even overnight. I used a cutting board and a cast iron frying pan. This pushes all the yummy juices into the bread. It’s a bit messy to eat, as sandwiches go, so be prepared with lots of napkins.
Makes four servings. I sliced my quarter sandwich into one-inch slices at the table to facilitate eating.
A favourite rose, La Fage Miraflors from Roussillon, is a perfect match but you can’t go wrong with any dry rose from Provence.
Red Pepper Confit
Paraphrased from Bistro Cooking
by Patricia Wells
- 2 to 5 oz hot peppers (depending on the peppers and your tolerance for heat) cut into strips or 1 tsp hot pepper flakes
- 5 large red bell peppers, cut into thick strips
- 2 heads garlic, minced
- 1/4 cup olive oil
Preheat oven to 400F. Layer everything into a shallow roasting dish.
Cover with foil and bake for 45 to 60 min. Remove foil and bake for
another 45 minutes. Serve as side dish or spoon into a jar and
refrigerate to use as a condiment.
For more picnic fare, stir Red Pepper Confit into fusilli at room
temperature for a no-fuss pasta salad. For cocktail hour, pile on
baguette rounds and top with anchovies. For a garden brunch, dress up a
cheese omelette.