Authors: Molly Wizenberg
I
don't like being told what to do. In fact, when I see this page in a cookbook, I usually skip right over it. Of course, as a result, I've messed up quite a number of recipes.
So before we get this show on the road, as my mother says, I'd like to give you a few pointers. That way, you can make the recipes in this book without a hitch, right from start. Oh, the irony, I know.
Before you so much as lift a finger toward the stove or oven, read through the entire recipe, ingredients and instructions. That way, you'll know exactly what lies ahead of you.
Buy an oven thermometer. You can get one at any grocery store, and it'll be the best five bucks you've ever spent. Most ovens do not run true to the temperature on the dial, but with an oven thermometer inside, it doesn't matter. You can just peek in, see what the temperature reads, and adjust the dial as needed. My oven, for instance, always runs about 10 degrees too cool. When I want it at 350°F, I've learned, I have to set it for 360°F instead. (I could also, I suppose, have the oven guy come out and calibrate it, but even then, I would still keep the thermometer around.)
Buy a kitchen scale. Many common ingredientsâchocolate, for oneâcannot be measured reliably by volume. A cup of chopped chocolate is not the same around the world: we all chop our chocolate to different sizes, so no cupful is identical. But one pound of chocolate is always one pound of chocolate, no matter how you chop it. So in most cases, when I call for chocolate, I call for a quantity by weight. (Except where chocolate chips are concerned; those are pretty well standardized.)
When I measure flour, I use the spoon-and-level method. Short of switching over entirely to weight measurements, that's what I recommend. Whenever I open a sack of flour, I stir well with a spoon to aerate it, then I spoon it lightly into my measuring cup until it heaps above the rim. Then I sweep the straight edge of a knife across the top to level it, letting the excess flour fall back into the bag.
Last but not least, clean up as you go. My father taught me that, and I thank him for it almost every day. When you're cooking, if you have timeâany time at allâto stop and wash a few dishes or wipe the counter, do it. It'll mean less mess in the end, which means more time to enjoy your food, your company, your day, all of it.
I
had meant to start with something more glamorous than potato salad. I always thought it would be good to begin with hors d'oeuvres, something appetizing and sexy, or maybe dessert, to cut right to the chase. A bowl of chunked potatoes in creamy dressing isn't any of those things. But when you grow up under the wing of someone who felt as strongly about potato salad as my father did, your priorities are special.
Plus, you can tell a lot about someone by their potato salad. I like to think of it as the Rorschach test of foods. Potato salad means many things to many people. For some, it means mostly mayonnaise and starch; for others, it means oil and vinegar and fresh herbs. Some people add eggs; others swear by pickles. For Burg, as we called my fatherâa nickname my mother made up, a shortened version (and inexplicable misspelling) of our last nameâit was something in between. Like his potato salad, he was hard to pin down.
I guess the first thing to point out about his recipe is the presence of Ranch dressing. I'm not sure how to make much sense of it, since Burg was, in all other cases, against bottled salad dressing. He was a staunch advocate for homemadeâthe house vinaigrette maker, in fact, with a dedicated jar and a complex system for creating his signature slurry of oil, vinegar, mustard, and herbs. But he was also full of contradictions.
He was a doctor who never went to the doctor, a Republican on fiscal issues and a Democrat on social ones. He had a fat belly and pencil legs. He was, by the calendar, an old man, but he had an almost full head of black hair. He was a Francophile with terrible French. He liked foie gras on the one hand and Ranch dressing on the other. And I can't really blame him. It tastes good.
Then, of course, there were the caraway seeds. His recipe calls for one to two teaspoons' worth. He liked them in almost everything. Whenever he bought sandwich bread, it was Jewish rye, flecked with those tiny, canoe-shaped seeds. He was the son of Polish Jews, so they were in his blood, I imagine, along with bagels and beet soup. But much to his mother's chagrin, that was about as Jewish as he got. He married two
shiksas
(one a Catholic, even) and raised nonreligious children. I remember once, as a kid during the Gulf War, hearing one of my father's cousins in Toronto say something about Tel Aviv, worrying that it might come under missile attack. I'd never heard of Tel Aviv. I thought she had mispronounced “TV,” and that our television was some sort of military target. I would hear scarcely more about Israel until I was in high school and took a world history class, and it would take my going away to college to learn what Passover was, when I read parts of the Bible in a Western civilization course. I've always known, however, what a caraway seed was.
Then there's mayonnaise. My father did not mess around when it came to mayonnaise. His potato salad called for 1¾ pounds of baby red potatoes and, to bind them, a ballsy
3
/
4
cup of mayonnaise (mixed, of course, with Ranch dressing). If my math is correct, that works out to approximately one tablespoon of mayonnaise per small potato. You can't be timid when you're dealing with ratios like that. You have to be the type to go after life with your arms open and your teeth bared. That's the type Burg was.
He could be pouty, of course, and a real huffer-and-puffer. His favorite weapon was the silent treatment, and he wielded it with impressive skill. But he had more love, and more passion, and more enthusiasm for pretty much everything than you and me combined. He loved being
a doctor. He loved Dixieland jazz. He loved the old Alfa Romeo Spider that sat in the driveway and never ran. He loved crossword puzzles, Dylan Thomas, and Gene Krupa banging on a drum kit on the stereo upstairs. He loved omelets and olives; murder mysteries and short stories; and a hideously ugly ceramic wild boar that sat on his bathroom counter. He loved his children, even while he forgot our birthdays; loved a cold beer on Saturday at noon; loved lamb shanks, smelly cheese, and my mother in high heels; loved mayonnaise, and me.
He was the kind of person who could teach you a lot of important things, such as how to ride a bicycle or drive a stick shift, or that dill and potatoes were made for each other. He always put dill in his potato salad. We had a kitchen garden out back that he and my mother planted, thick with tomatoes and herbs. He would rub rosemary under the skin of roasting chickens and stir thyme into his corn chowder. He got such a kick out of that garden. He taught me to make pesto from the basil we grew there, using a recipe by James Beard, who I'm sure, would have gotten a kick out of it, too.
When your father dies, especially if he is older, people like to say things such as, “He was so lucky. He lived a long, full life.” It's hard to know what to say to that. What often comes to mind is, “Yes, you're right. He was seventy-three, so I guess it was his time. But did you know him? Did you see how he was? He bought wine futures seven months before he died. He saw patients the afternoon he was diagnosed. He
wasn't finished.
”
My father woke up each morning wanting that day. You could see it on his face. He was the one at the end of the table, laughing so hard that his round face split open like an overripe watermelon and his fillings shone darkly like seeds. He laughed so hard that he gagged a little and pulled out his handkerchief to wipe his mouth. He knew what he had, and he loved it.
He could have taught me a lot of things. We'd hardly begun. But I have his recipe for potato salad, and when all else fails, it's a place to start.
BURG'S POTATO SALAD
i
am biased, no doubt, but I love this potato salad. The key is to prepare it the day before you want to eat it. It needs to sit overnight in the refrigerator, so that the flavors can mix and mingle, so to speak.
Also, you'll note that I've made the caraway seeds optional. Not everyone loves caraway seeds as much as Burg did, and I'm sure he wouldn't mind if you left them out. (I usually do.)
FOR THE SALAD
1¾ pounds red waxy potatoes, scrubbed
4 large eggs
8 scallions (white and pale green parts only), thinly sliced
¼ teaspoon salt, plus more to taste
FOR THE DRESSING
¾ cup mayonnaise, preferably Hellmann's/Best Foods or homemade
4 tablespoons bottled Ranch dressing, preferably Hidden Valley
2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh dill
1 to 2 teaspoons caraway seeds (optional)
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Put the potatoes in a Dutch oven or large saucepan and add cold water to cover by 1 inch. Add a generous dash of salt, and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce the heat to maintain a gentle simmer and cook, uncovered, until the potatoes are tender when pierced with a small, thin knife, about 15 minutes. Drain them into a colander, rinse with cold water, and set them aside to cool. (If you're in a hurry, put them in the refrigerator to speed the process along. You want the potatoes to be completely cool when you dress them.) When the potatoes are cool, cut them into rough 1-inch chunks. For the smaller potatoes, I halve them; for the bigger ones, I cut them into quarters or eighths. Put them in a large bowl.
Meanwhile, cook the eggs. Place them in a small saucepan, and add cold water to cover. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. When the
water begins to boil, remove the pan from the heat, cover it, and let it sit for exactly 12 minutes. Immediately pour off the hot water and run plenty of cold water over the eggs. When the eggs are cool, peel them, chop them coarsely, and add them to the bowl of potatoes. Add the scallions, sprinkle with ¼ teaspoon salt, and toss to mix.
In a small bowl, stir together the mayonnaise, Ranch dressing, dill, and caraway seeds, if using. Pour the dressing over the potato mixture, and stir to evenly coat. Taste, and adjust the salt as needed. Cover and refrigerate overnight before serving.
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Yield: about 6 servings