{"id":1289,"date":"2008-03-25T01:03:00","date_gmt":"2008-03-25T01:03:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elitemporaryblog.wordpress.com\/2008\/03\/25\/thats-all"},"modified":"2008-03-25T01:03:00","modified_gmt":"2008-03-25T01:03:00","slug":"thats-all","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2008\/03\/thats-all\/","title":{"rendered":"That’s all"},"content":{"rendered":"
We didn\u2019t really plan<\/span> to go to Brussels. We were just looking for a vacation, that\u2019s all. Then one December night, over a couple of glasses of prosecco and a pizza, our friend Olaiya<\/a> happened to tell me that she had just found cheap tickets to Brussels. I don\u2019t make, nor do I intend to make, a habit of mixing alcohol and travel planning, but this I can now say from experience:<\/p>\n Prosecco + 2 Girlfriends + Talk of Cheap Tickets to Brussels = Not that I have any regrets, mind you. I\u2019m just passing on information.<\/p>\n We met Olaiya a couple of years ago, shortly after she moved to Seattle from Brussels, where she had lived for four years. Olaiya is an effortless cook, the kind of person who seems to stir and whisk as easily as she walks and talks, and her kitchen is filled with remnants of Belgium: recipes for baked eggs and leek confit, old silver spoons and crackly bowls from the flea market at the Place du Jeu de Balle<\/a>. She was always telling us about Brussels, her old haunts and friends and favorite beers, and sometimes, I knew, she missed it more than she wanted to. Last December, in need of a fix, she started combing the Internet for cheap fares. And then Brandon and I invited ourselves – prosecco, you are the BEST! –<\/span> to come along.<\/p>\n And then, a few days before our departure date, we all, all three of us, came down with the flu. But we went anyway, and though the flight was miserable – and Brandon and I lost our luggage for a day, and the three of us landed in a graceless, coughing heap on the doorstep of Olaiya\u2019s friend Laurence and completely demolished her supply of honey, lemons, and Nutella and then slept for the better part of 48 hours – in the end, I really, really liked Brussels.<\/p>\n I don\u2019t have a recipe for you today, but I hope you might not mind. Instead – and in case you find yourself in Brussels one day soon, or maybe just in need of a vacation at your desk – I want to tell you about a few things we found there, with all due credit, bien s\u00fbr<\/span>, to Olaiya.<\/p>\n I should begin by saying this: do not<\/span> underestimate the combined power of fresh goat cheese, honey, and olives. (Or spicy olives, to be specific, coated in something akin to harissa<\/a>.) It is the trifecta. It will slay you. Several months ago, Olaiya told us about these cr\u00eapes – or cr\u00eape-like flatbreads; the sign called them m\u2019semen<\/span> – and explained that they could be found at a stand at the March\u00e9 du Midi on Sunday mornings. They make the best<\/span> breakfast, she said, and I am happy to report that she did not lie. Warm, messy, and made on the spot, they spill over with soft, tangy cheese, sticky honey, and whole green olives coated in a fragrant, oily sauce that makes your lips burn and tingle. You\u2019ll want to eat it on the spot, hunched over one of the wooden tables behind the stand, and be sure to order a glass of sweet mint tea to wash it all down. If it\u2019s cold outside, and drizzly, the steam from the tea will send up a small mint-scented cloud that hovers over the table while you eat, and that, too, is very nice.<\/p>\n Of course, now that I\u2019ve told you this, I wish I knew the name of the stand, but I\u2019m afraid that I don\u2019t. It also sells dried fruits and olives and marinated vegetables, if that helps, and of the stands selling those items – there are only a few of them – it is the largest. It\u2019s located right near the overpass where the trains go by, next to the woman who sells fresh eggs and butter.<\/p>\n I have been wanting to tell you about this for two weeks now, in part because <\/span>\u201ccannibal toast\u201d is the most fun thing to say in the whole, wide world. (Cannibal toast, cannibal toast, CANN-I-BAL TOAST<\/span>!) Of course, now that I\u2019ve gone and made a big deal about it, I should also tell you that in reality, it\u2019s not nearly as exotic as it sounds. It\u2019s actually kind of dainty. It\u2019s filet<\/span> on toast points, with a salad in the middle. But it\u2019s outlandishly good – tender and sweet and pleasantly rich, spiked with crisp, briny capers – and with a splash of Worchestershire and a cornichon on the side, you will want to eat it every day. Or at least once a week.<\/p>\n P.S. The fries were also very good.<\/p>\n In Belgium, there are two general types of waffle: the Brussels, and the Li\u00e8ge. The Brussels waffle is what most of us, in the US at least, would call a Belgian waffle. It is thick and evenly golden, with deep recesses for holding pools of butter or whipped cream or whatnot. Though delicious, is it rarely that<\/span> remarkable. The Li\u00e8ge waffle, on the other hand, is what you see in the first photograph above, and it is nearly impossible to find outside of Belgium. It is sold on the street as a snack, and it, blessed be, is what people come back from Belgium swooning about. It is made from a rich, yeasted batter and cooked quickly in a heavy iron – often in an oven filled with gas flames – until it is tender and lightly caramelized, with a dense, stretchy crumb that looks a little like that of a particularly rich cinnamon roll. But what really makes it special is that it is sweetened with a particular type of sugar called pearl sugar<\/a>. When the dough bakes, the little beads of sugar inside soften into sweet, melty pockets, and any beads facing the surface of the hot iron ooze like caramel.<\/p>\n All told, the whole thing is both deadly sweet and deadly, deadly delicious, and if you decide to share it with someone – like, maybe, your spouse – you had better be prepared to duke it out to the last crumb, and believe me, people, it will get dirty<\/span>. Don\u2019t say I didn\u2019t warn you. Oh, and when you buy your waffle, be sure to choose a vendor with a gas oven, not an electric iron. And choose a vendor who is actively making his waffles, not just selling some that he baked, la di da<\/span>, an hour before. (Belgaufra is a small chain that\u2019s especially good; there are a couple of outposts on rue des Fripiers, not far from the Grand Place.) You want a fresh waffle, still warm from the oven, not a cold (or reheated) specimen. And then you might want another.<\/p>\n
2 Girlfriends + 1 Husband in<\/span> Brussels, 2 \u00bd Months Later.<\/p>\n<\/a>
I had been to Brussels once before, when I was 18 years old, for approximately 36 hours. It was the summer after my high school graduation, and I went backpacking around Europe with my cousin Katie. We started out in London, took a couple of trains and a ferry to Bruges, and then, somewhere around day 8, arrived in Brussels. I remember next to nothing of our brief stay there, save for finding our hostel and showering for the first time in days, eating a mediocre waffle, and having a stranger come up close behind me on a street corner and say, breathing heavily into my ear, what I understood as, \u201cNice neck<\/span>.\u201d Of course, as it turns out, the words for \u201cneck\u201d and \u201cass\u201d sound almost identical in French. But hey, you know, either way. By now, I was long overdue to a return visit.<\/p>\n<\/a>
Oddly enough, it reminded me a bit of Seattle. I\u2019ve thought about it for a while, and a fair comparison might be this: that Brussels is to Paris, say, as Seattle is to San Francisco. Let me explain. Seattle and Brussels are both a little gritty around the edges. They\u2019re gray; there\u2019s a lot of construction; and the architecture is an endearingly odd mishmash of old and new. For large cities, they still feel a little quiet somehow, still sort of undiscovered. Both are composed of many small, discrete neighborhoods, but those neighborhoods are fairly spread out, so if you don\u2019t know exactly where to go, you might not find a single thing. (Except Pike Place Market and the Grand Place<\/a>.) In San Francisco or Paris, on the other hand, you\u2019d be hard-pressed not to find something scenic, exciting, or at least pleasantly edible on most any street corner. (I exaggerate, but not by much.) What I mean by all this is that in Seattle and Brussels, you have to try a little harder. When you do, what you get is every bit as worthy; it just takes a little digging. Which, in its own way, makes it all the more charming.<\/p>\n<\/a>
1. The Moroccan cr\u00eape.<\/p>\n<\/a>
2. Belgians have an impressive way with raw beef. There is a powerful school of thought, I know, that holds that the only way to deal with raw beef is to cook it, but these people will not be daunted. Witness filet am\u00e9ricain<\/a>.<\/span> Also known as steak tartare, it is a dish composed of minced or ground beef mixed with onions, capers, fresh herbs, and other seasonings, and occasionally an egg yolk. It is also delicious<\/span>. <\/span>I<\/span> had not been terribly interested in eating raw beef before – although I do like a good carpaccio, and my mother loves to steal pinches of raw meatloaf from the mixing bowl – but now I want to eat it forever<\/span><\/span>. Olaiya and Laurence took us to a tavern called Le Trappiste, a classic old place with red leather booths and wooden chairs and waiters with slicked hair and bow ties and vests, and there we chose from three different presentations of filet<\/span>: the standard one, a mound in the center of the plate, served with toast; the sandwich one, in which the beef is piled onto a baguette; or my favorite, called toast cannibale. <\/span><\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<\/a>
3. Do not be fooled by the impostor commonly known, in the United States, as the \u201cBelgian waffle.\u201d It is not only inferior, but it bears no resemblance, none whatsoever, to the loveliest of true Belgian waffles, the gaufre de Li\u00e8ge<\/span>.<\/p>\n