{"id":843,"date":"2010-03-29T07:25:00","date_gmt":"2010-03-29T07:25:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/elitemporaryblog.wordpress.com\/2010\/03\/29\/a-lot-of-rhubarb"},"modified":"2016-02-15T14:39:30","modified_gmt":"2016-02-15T19:39:30","slug":"a-lot-of-rhubarb","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orangette.net\/2010\/03\/a-lot-of-rhubarb\/","title":{"rendered":"A lot of rhubarb"},"content":{"rendered":"
I am reliably fickle about rhubarb recipes. Every spring, I think, I am destined to fall for a different one. At this point in my life, if all goes well and life expectancy charts are accurate, I probably have about fifty springs left, which means fifty more rhubarb recipes to love. The fifty springs part is sort of depressing, but on the upside, it\u2019s really quite a lot of rhubarb. I\u2019m looking forward to it.<\/p>\n
This particular recipe was inspired by a series of seasonal recipe collections called Canal House Cooking<\/a>, which I learned about from my friend Maria<\/a>. Canal House Cooking<\/span> is hard to describe, and I love that about it. Written, photographed, illustrated, and published by Christopher Hirsheimer and Melissa Hamilton<\/a>, a founding editor of Saveur<\/span> magazine and the former food editor of the same, respectively, it\u2019s part magazine and part cookbook, published in three volumes a year: Summer, Fall & Holiday, and Winter & Spring. I bought a three-volume subscription when I first learned of it, and when the third volume arrived a few weeks ago, I renewed my subscription in under 24 hours. I think this makes me an official fan. I want to cook almost every recipe they print, and the books themselves are so inviting, so elegant but easygoing in tone, that I sort of want to carry one around with me everywhere, just to keep the good feeling going. I think this makes me an official creepy person.<\/p>\n Either way, in the most recent volume, the third one, Winter & Spring, there is a recipe for roasted rhubarb in red wine, and it caught my eye. So when I spotted some rhubarb at the farmers\u2019 market last weekend, I bought a couple of pounds with this recipe in mind. As it happened, however, when I got home, I discovered that I didn\u2019t have an open bottle of red wine lying around. It seemed wasteful to open a new one only to use a small portion, so I decided to use the open bottle of white wine that I did<\/span> have lying around. I\u2019m not sure how my white wine version compares to the original, and I may never find out, because now that I\u2019ve made it this way, I feel no desire to make anything else, ever. Not before next spring. You understand.<\/p>\n<\/a>
\nIn the meantime, I am pleased to announce that this spring, my allegiance lies in a pot of roasted rhubarb with white wine and vanilla bean. Eaten cold, ideally.<\/p>\n