Best Food Writing 2013 (23 page)

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Authors: Holly Hughes

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Shortly after this last Christmas, my 9-year-old son and I were lucky enough to find ourselves walking past L'Escargot Montorgueil, an old Parisian restaurant with a giant bronze snail hanging over its awning. The previous day he had been stunned by the fact that a steak and fries is a widely available lunch option, and now he saw that snails were on offer. He can be an adventurous eater and our trip to Paris was bringing out the best in him.

It was morning, so the restaurant was closed. But when a friend and I planned the menu for our New Year's Eve feast, I mentioned my son's newfound fascination with escargots. Our friend's French
pride kicked into high gear and he insisted on buying the specimens himself.

The day of the party, he handed me an aluminum tray with a stiff white paper lid bedecked with the Le Grandgousier sticker on top. These weren't just snails, they were the best escargots from the snazziest
traiteur
on the Rue St-Honore. Inside were three dozen fat tan snail shells, each about two inches across and filled to the rim with bright green butter. We baked them in the oven for the recommended 15 minutes and brought them to the table already adorned with baguettes and a bottle of Montrachet.

As the other adults helped themselves to a few shells and sipped their wine, the snail buyer focused on my son, watching him pick up the first shell, dig around with a toothpick (for we had no designated two-pronged escargot forks), pull out a fat squiggle of gray meat dripping with seasoned butter, pop it in his mouth and chew. I'm not sure whose eyes lit up more brightly with delight when it became clear that the long-awaited taste of escargot lived up to so much expectation.

“Mom,” he said, “you should write a story about snails!”

Both the French and the Americans at the table laughed. No no, they all asserted, California garden snails aren't the kind you eat.

But they are. They are exactly the kind (or, to be exact, one of the kinds) you eat. In fact, according to UC Davis, California has brown snails (
Helix aspersa
) because a Frenchman brought them here in the 1850s in order to make escargots (we were actually tucking into
Helix pomatia,
the other snail species commonly eaten in France, which tend to be bigger and have distinctive tan shells). Heliciculture didn't take off in the Golden State, but like so many others before and since, the mollusks loved it here.

In Search of Helix Aspersa

Once upon a time, our garden was full of snails. Big fat dudes who left slime trails across the concrete stairs and hid under deck chairs and along the sides of plant containers. I went on a crusade that consisted of leaving saucers of beer all over the place. The snails drank and the snails drowned. And they haven't returned. It ends up that, like the French, raccoons are fond of eating snails. We definitely have raccoons—they dig up the ground cover under the gravel sections of
the yard looking for treats and leave their scat on the cocoa shells I use to mulch the center garden plot.

In short, I have no snails in my garden. This is, as most San Franciscans know, usually considered a good thing. It's not, however, such a great thing if you're writing a story about harvesting snails from your garden. Lucky for me, others are not so lucky, so one early March night I grabbed a flashlight and a large bucket and my son donned his camping headlamp and we headed out into the dark of a friend's yard and garden that we had been promised was infested with snails.

Snails are largely nocturnal and like things damp and dreary. Thus, they really dig foggy San Francisco. They like to hang out on the underside of succulents and stalk-y or long-leafed plants. Since it was dark, we found plenty of them just crawling about on rocks and sidewalk edges.

If you know there are snails in your garden, make things easy on yourself: Set up a board on some rocks or bricks or whatever will keep it a few inches off the ground over some soil in a shady part of your yard. Check it in the morning. Chances are there will be scads of snails clinging to the underside of the board.

At first the snails we saw seemed way too small. Their shells were less than half the size of the snails we ate in France. Then, we started noticing how big the snails were outside their shells. The phrase “bite-size morsels” came to mind. We started picking them up and dropping them in the bucket. In quick order, we had five dozen snails to take home.

The Tending of Snails

We covered the bucket, set it in the corner of my study—a place that stays cool and dark—and threw in a few stalks of fennel. My son went to bed. I sat down to read but had to retreat upstairs. The noise of the snails crunching on the fennel was distracting. Hilarious and distracting.

For the next nine days we fed them herbs, then cornmeal, then nothing in a process called “purging” to clean the snails from the inside out. The whole process can easily be sped up to five days. The key points are:

       
•
   
Choose a container from which the snails cannot escape but in which there is a free exchange of air. A bin topped with a screen
weighed down with a brick works, or a container with a plastic lid that snaps on and into which you have poked some holes is good. I used a plastic bucket with an old pair of black tights as a lid (legs of the tights cut off and tied closed). The tights had the advantage of being something that I could dampen each day to help keep the container slightly damp without having standing water in it. A large glass jar with holes punched in the lid lets you see just how much slime and poo they produce. Whatever container you use, sprinkle the snails with a bit of misty water each day after you clean the container, but make sure there isn't a bunch of standing water on the bottom.

       
•
   
Keep the container in a cool, dark place. That's what snails like. I wouldn't keep them outside. Both raccoons and skunks love to eat snails and who wants to bother with building a raccoon-proof snail bucket?

       
•
   
To purge the snails, start by feeding them greens and herbs for a day or two. This lets you know what you're starting with. Then feed them cornmeal or oatmeal for a day or two. Since this diet turns their poo white, you'll know other stuff is out of their systems. (Note: Gordon Ramsay recommends giving them carrots for this stage, since it turns their poo orange!) Then give them nothing for a day or two before cooking them. (Note: Some people skip the starving stage, finding it cruel. I saw how much poo these little things make; I didn't want to eat snails full of it.) Some people chill their snails before cooking them—sending them into a fake semihibernation. I found no difference in the taste or texture of the snails that I had chilled versus those I had not.

       
•
   
Clean the container daily. You may be tempted to skip a day, thinking it won't be that bad. It will be. It will be more than twice as gross. Part of the ick factor comes from the poo, of course, but just as much (if not more) comes from the slime snails leave all over everything. Two days worth of slime takes more than twice as long to clean and scrub out than does one day of slime. Trust me.

       
•
   
Before you clean their container, transfer the snails to a large bowl or other container. You might want to keep the temporary
container covered. A snail's pace isn't quite as slow as it's made out to be.

Snail Cookery 101

You would think you could now just cook them, but turning snails into something not just edible but tasty and appealing is just a wee bit more complicated than that. There is parboiling, removing their shells, and then a quick cook in acidulated water to de-slime them. I tried skipping this last step and just cooked them with plenty of acid. I ended up with an inedible slimy mess that looked not unlike vomit.

Whether you're making traditional Burgundian escargots or another snail dish, the first steps of cooking snails are the same: Bring a pot of water to a boil. Add plenty of salt. Rinse off the snails—making sure they are poo- and slime-free before you start! Dump them in the pot and cook them for about 3 minutes. Drain the snails and rinse them with plenty of cold water. Use tweezers or a small fork to pull the snails out of their shells. Be warned that there will be more mucus involved here. In some cases a lot more mucus.

On the upside, when you pull the snails out most of them will stretch out as you pull and then spring back into a curlicue shape in a most pleasing and delightful way. On the downside, some of the snails will look like globs of gray diseased snot because they will be coated in so much mucus.

While you're removing all the mollusks from their curly shells, bring a pan filled with ½ water and ½ distilled white vinegar to a boil. Plop in the deshelled snails and boil them until they are slime-free, about 3 minutes. A snail you pull out of the water should not feel slimy and you will probably be able to see bits that look like tiny specks of curdled egg in the water—that's the mucus that's cooked off the snails. Drain the snails and, obviously, rinse them in plenty of cool water to get all the bits of cooked slime off of them. The snails are now ready to be cooked in a recipe.

I made traditional garlic butter–slathered escargots as well as a salad with crisped pancetta and sautéed snails. Snail lovers found them sweet and tender; I found them somewhat mushroom-like but, honestly, thoughts of slime and poo would not leave my head long enough for me to enjoy them.

My son, however, had no such trouble. He swiftly ate a dozen from their shells. Then, when I found a dish of eighteen un-shelled snails that I had accidentally left in the oven after the photo shoot, he downed those too.

When the big one hits or my son asks with verve, I am prepared, if necessary, to tackle buckets of slime and poo again. For the moment, though, I prefer my snails packed up in a neat ovenproof tray with a pretty French sticker on top. Better yet, I'll take them sizzling hot and set in front of me by an aloof but efficient Parisian waiter.

 

 

Y
ES
, W
E
C
AN
: S
UPPORTING
O
UR
F
ARMERS
, P
RESERVING THE
H
ARVEST

By Kim O'Donnel

From
EcoCentric

Former
Washington Post
food blogger Kim O'Donnel now lives in Seattle and marches to a different drummer: Writing vegetarian cookbooks for carnivores (
The Meat Lover's Meatless Cookbook
) and blogging on seasonal produce for the environmental website
EcoCentric.com
. She shares here the passion for preserving that led her to found the Canning Across America collective.

I
am a little piggy that goes to market, and I do so dutifully every Sunday (often twice during growing season). I am hip to what grows when, but without soil to call my own, I rely on the agronomical know-how and stewardship of folks who know a whole lot more about growing food than I do.

Usually, I survey the weekly offerings, then hone in on what looks good and inspires me to cook. It goes without saying that I care about where my food comes from and how it's grown and raised, and that I prefer farmers' market stands to supermarket aisles. But even with my reusable bag chockfull of heirloom this and organic that, by and large my experience is little more than an exchange of money and goods, with some conversational pleasantries thrown in for good measure.

Until now.

Summer in Washington is typically the dry season, but this
year
was historically parched, creating conditions that fueled explosive wildfires in one of the state's rich agricultural centers. We city mice watched the flames on the local news in mid-August and our coastal sunsets had grown hazy, even so far away from the scene.

That same week, I set out for one of Seattle's mid-week farmers' markets and stopped by to see what was on offer at the River Farm Organic Produce stand. As I gathered cucumbers and deliberated over melons, farmer Eric Welsch told me and another customer that his house in Ellensburg, Washington (about 75 miles east of Seattle) had just been destroyed, a casualty of the wildfires, and that he and his wife, Liz Goronea, had had just 20 minutes to evacuate. Their 50-acre farm, which has been in Goronea's family since 1976, was untouched, and everyone was safe. But as those who grow and eat seasonally know all too well, the produce doesn't wait, and here they were at the height of the growing season, which meant rebuilding would have to wait. For now, Eric and Liz, who is pregnant, were sleeping on the floor in their office.

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