{"id":1191,"date":"2008-07-08T00:59:00","date_gmt":"2008-07-08T00:59:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elitemporaryblog.wordpress.com\/2008\/07\/08\/hot-and-sweet"},"modified":"2008-07-08T00:59:00","modified_gmt":"2008-07-08T00:59:00","slug":"hot-and-sweet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2008\/07\/hot-and-sweet\/","title":{"rendered":"Hot and sweet"},"content":{"rendered":"
I regret to inform you that we have now reached, it seems, the time of year when I can hardly motivate to cook a single thing. Uh oh.<\/p>\n
Maybe you know the feeling? I hope so. For me, the problem is not so much the heat, although that\u2019s certainly part of it. Here in Seattle, it only occasionally gets too hot for the stove, but when it does, it\u2019s memorable. Last week, I was working on developing a recipe for p\u00e2t\u00e9 de campagne, and I can now say with a good deal of authority that pork fat is not at all pleasant to work with when the ambient temperature of your house is approximately 80 degrees. Also, though sweat is not a traditional ingredient in country p\u00e2t\u00e9, mine contained a decent amount of it. It\u2019s a good thing I went easy on the salt.<\/p>\n
But heat aside, the main reason for my near-complete lack of desire to cook is that summer doesn\u2019t want me to. Its best foods – all the fruits and vegetables at the market right now – want little in the way of preparation. They want to be left alone, allowed to do what they do. Today, for lunch, I ate tomatoes and mozzarella and olive oil, and for dessert, I had some raspberries. In just a minute, I might have some cold peanut butter on a spoon. For dinner, we\u2019re going to make a salad, and I\u2019m not sure what else. This is a little bit troubling, especially when I\u2019m supposed to show up here with a recipe for you.<\/p>\n
Luckily, our friends Matthew, Laurie, and Iris invited us to dinner on Saturday night, and Matthew, by some miracle, actually cooks in the summertime. He is a very good friend to have. He also, incidentally, writes an excellent blog<\/a> and is a contributor to Gourmet.com<\/a>. If you haven\u2019t read him yet, do. For our dinner, he made a Thai green mango salad, gai lan<\/span><\/a> in a brothy peanut-coconut sauce, mackerel with ginger and other aromatics that I ate too fast to identify, and rice. (For my part, I brought along some p\u00e2t\u00e9, albeit not the one that I sweat into. Only the best for my friends!) Everything was delicious – this bite spicy, the next bite rich, the third one a little tangy – but I was especially smitten with the mango salad. It was cool and sour, hot and sweet, and utterly refreshing. Brandon declared that he wanted to eat it every day until the end of summer. So, before we left, I asked Matthew if he would share his recipe, and he generously agreed.<\/p>\n