{"id":1595,"date":"2006-10-27T07:00:00","date_gmt":"2006-10-27T07:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elitemporaryblog.wordpress.com\/2006\/10\/27\/a-tokaji-for-your-tarte-tatin"},"modified":"2015-09-24T03:54:00","modified_gmt":"2015-09-24T03:54:00","slug":"a-tokaji-for-your-tarte-tatin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2006\/10\/a-tokaji-for-your-tarte-tatin\/","title":{"rendered":"A tokaji for your tarte Tatin"},"content":{"rendered":"
It doesn\u2019t take much to make me bake something. A ripe banana crosses my path? I\u2019ll bake a banana cake<\/a>. A hunk of chocolate lands in my grocery cart? Clearly, I\u2019m supposed to make some brownies<\/a>. That pound of butter in the freezer? It\u2019s very pushy, always begging to be used, foisting itself into batters and stuff. Gah<\/em>. And with apple season upon us, you can well imagine the pressure I\u2019ve been under. I must, I must, I must<\/em> bake something! So when Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page \u2013 authors of the must-have book Culinary Artistry<\/em><\/a>, among others \u2013 dropped me a note to tell me about their newest title, What to Drink with What You Eat<\/em><\/strong><\/a>, I was elated. Not only did it give me a perfect excuse to bake a little something \u2013 all in the name of beverage pairing, you see \u2013 but it gave me good reason to drink a little something, or somethings, too<\/strong>.<\/p>\n As for what to bake, it was easy. Ever since I made my first tarte Tatin \u2013 in preparation for this piece over here<\/a> \u2013 my stomach has rumbled at more or less regular intervals for its dark, winy flavor. Both complex and comforting, it is the <\/em>flavor of fall, if you ask me \u2013 although I won\u2019t exactly refuse it in winter, spring, or summer, either. [I\u2019m a real pushover.] And given that it is<\/em> late October, it seemed only fitting that I pick up a few local apples at the market, tuck them into a skillet, cover them with puff pastry, and turn them into a tarte Tatin.<\/p>\n Andrew and Karen suggest no fewer than 22 possible pairings for apple desserts, but for the sake of sanity \u2013 and so that I wouldn\u2019t slump my way to work the next morning \u2013 I decided to choose just three: a sauternes, a Hungarian sweet wine called tokaji, and bourbon.* The first I had tasted before, but not with apples; the second I had read about but never tried; and the third was a shoo-in, seeing as a bottle of Woodford Reserve <\/a>was sitting in our liquor cabinet. With the help of my preferred local wine shop<\/a>, I chose a 2003 Ch\u00e2teau Lamothe Guignard Sauternes – a good year, the merchant told me – and a 2000 Royal Tokaji. A couple of hours and one warm tarte Tatin later, we were ready to taste.<\/p>\n Now, far be it for me to make bold exaggerations – I usually leave that to Brandon<\/a> – but I discovered something momentous at the table that evening. It is this: apples were invented, I believe, for the express purpose of being served alongside a Hungarian tokaji<\/strong>. Sure, bourbon is lovely: smooth, spicy, with a whiff of vanilla and a delicious afterburn that together bring intrigue to the simplicity of apple. It\u2019s awfully hard to quibble, too, with the soft sweetness of sauternes, or with its satisfying, syrupy mouthfeel. But the amber-colored tokaji was the only one that had us pausing to mull over its complex flavor – brown butter, butterscotch, silky, delicious<\/strong> – and then reaching for a refill. It not only made the tarte Tatin\u2019s deep, caramelized flavor taste even deeper, but in turn, the tarte somehow made the tokaji taste even better too. Less sweet than sauternes and less cloying than bourbon, this stuff is addictively good; as Brandon said, \u201cI want to drink the entire bottle<\/em>.\u201d But thank heavens he didn\u2019t, because the little bit we have left – not to mention the other 19 pairings to be tried – gives me good reason to bake another tarte. Andrew and Karen, I owe you one.<\/p>\n * Brandon, Mr. Bourbon Man<\/a>, was surprised to see that his beloved booze was not listed as a possible pairing under the word \u201capples.\u201d But we flipped to the listing for whisky, and sure enough, there it was: \u201capples.\u201d We assumed that whisky \/ bourbon\u2019s absense from the apple listing was just a simple oversight, and so we forged ahead. Please pardon our boldness.<\/span><\/p>\n Tarte Tatin<\/strong> Don\u2019t be intimidated by this classic dessert\u2019s fussy look, or by the length of this recipe: it\u2019s very straightforward. And I\u2019m very verbose.<\/p>\n<\/a>
And then \u2013 here comes the fun part \u2013 I would send said tart down the gullet with sips of, well, whatever Andrew and Karen<\/a> told me to.<\/p>\n<\/a>The plan thus hatched, I sat by the door and waited for the book to arrive. A big, glossy tome with an inviting close-up on the cover, What to Drink with What You Eat<\/em> is laid out in a fashion that reminds me \u2013 in a good way \u2013 of a foreign language dictionary. In this case, the \u201ctranslations\u201d are pairings: part of the book matches beverages to foods<\/span>, and another matches foods to beverages<\/span>. If you\u2019re wondering what to drink with miso soup or cheese straws, you\u2019ll want to search the first portion. On the other hand, if you\u2019re curious about what foods go with the bottle of Chimay Blue<\/a> in your fridge, you\u2019ll want to flip to the second. Each type of food or beverage comes with a list of recommended pairings, some classic \u2013 pineapple with rum, or Stilton with port \u2013 and some surprising. [I would have never thought to put a glass of Fizzy Lizzy<\/a> sparkling orange juice alongside a dessert with plums, but come to think of it, it just might work.] And for those seeking general principles and guidelines, there are also a few introductory chapters that explain everything from the sensuous science of balancing flavors to the temperature at which red wine is best served, with chatty, down-to-earth anecdotes. As for me, I headed straight for one page in particular: the one about apples, and apple desserts, more specifically.<\/p>\n
Adapted from David Rosengarten\u2019s Taste<\/em><\/a> and Julia Child\u2019s The Way to Cook<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n