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The Catholic Foodie

Where Food Meets Faith!

John Besh’s “My Family Table”

December 16, 2011 By Jeff Young Leave a Comment

Christmas is almost here.

And Christmas is a time for family and friends, get-togethers, parties and meals.

Oh, and I should mention that Christmas is not just one day. In the Church we call it an Octave. Eight full days to celebrate the birth of our Savior! But we don’t stop there. Eight days is a great start. But, it’s still just a start.

We’re talking about the birth of our Savior here!

In the Church we also celebrate the Christmas SEASON, which starts on Christmas Eve and goes through the celebration of the Epiphany to the shepherds and wise men. Epiphany is traditionally celebrated on January 6, but the US Bishops are free to move it to the closest Sunday. This year it will be celebrated on Sunday, January 8th.

As the season of waiting (Advent) draws to a close next week, we start to turn our attention to the immediate preparation of family gatherings.

If you’re like me, you have several gatherings over a period of a few days. It’s fun. It’s holy. It’s really a blessing. But it can also be stressful.

That’s why I am so glad that I recently discovered my new favorite cookbook, Chef John Besh’s My Family Table.

I know. I know. I was recently on an Alton Brown kick, one that lasted for weeks and inspired not one, but two, podcast episodes. (Alton Brown still ROCKS!)

But this is different.

It’s local, first of all.

But it’s also in the family.

You see, John Besh is Catholic.

He lives not too far from me, just outside of New Orleans. I’ve met him a few times. I’ve dined in his restaurants. And I am very impressed with his work and with who he is… with what he stands for.

I’m not saying that he wears his Catholicism on his sleeve. He doesn’t. But you can tell that it influences everything that he does.

In a word, you could say that Besh is all about family. And his cookbook, My Family Table, is a home cooking manifesto. I love it.

As a matter of fact, I love it so much that I have given away several copies as gifts.

I also love Amazon.com. As I was ordering a gift for someone the other day, I noticed this “review” of My Family Table. I thought it was perfect and I want to share it with you.

We gave away 50 cookbooks the other week.

Now I see we could also have given away “The Joy of Cooking.”

What? Eighteen million copies of “The Joy of Cooking” have been sold since it was published in 1936. (Correction: Irma Rombauer, a widow, was the first to publish it — to self-publish it — in 1931.) There is no more classic cookbook in America. Even restaurants use it. What could possibly replace it?

For the America of the 2010s: “My Family Table: A Passionate Plea for Home Cooking,” by John Besh.

Besh, for those who have not had dinner in New Orleans recently, is the movie-star-handsome Louisiana homeboy who has, at a tender age, built a six-restaurant empire. He was a Marine who kept up with foodie journals as he led troops in the first Gulf War. He is still married to his first wife. He has four kids.

After Katrina, Besh was everywhere, talking up his city. He produced a terrific cookbook: “My New Orleans.” Then he started to simplify. And to listen to his wife (never a bad idea), who said, “Yeah, but what about our kids?”

So, at last, a family-friendly cookbook, short on cooking time, shorter on preservatives and junk food substitutes. A book for the way we live now? Some chapter titles: “Sunday Supper,” “School Nights,” “Breakfast with My Boys,” “Barbeque Wisdom” and “Fried Chicken (& Other Classics).”

Here are ten reasons to fall in love with this book:

1) The first recipe is “Risotto Almost Anything.”

2) The second recipe is “Creamy Any Vegetable Soup.”

3) The third recipe is “Simple Meat Ragout for Any Pasta.”

4) The fourth recipe is “The Perfect Frittata.”

5) The fifth recipe is “Curried Anything.”

Getting the idea? Simple fare. Simply presented as master recipes, 140 in all.

6) Good advice. In a Roast Chicken recipe: “Pan drippings are pure gold. Any time you strain the liquid from the vegetables [from the roasting pan], you’ll have equal proportions of fat and natural juice. Refrigerate that for a day, and the fat will solidify and rise to the top. Remove the chicken fat and save it separately to use for making a roux or sautéing vegetables. The strained juices make a natural sauce for roast chicken, or add them to a soup for a great hit of flavor.”

7) He’s not scared of butter. In a recipe for mashed potatoes that serves ten people: an entire pound.

8) For Chicken Fricassee, he rejects skinless and boneless birds: “Not only is the flavor brought out by browning with the skin on, but the bone is the source of so much of the deep flavor of the fricassee.”

9) In an American cookbook, a recipe for pho, the Vietnamese soup.

10) The final recipe is for Lemon Ice Box Pie.

In the acknowledgments, Besh writes: “If asked what my last meal would be, I’d reply, “Any Sunday supper at home, cooked with love, for people I love.”

With this cookbook, what other answer is possible

- Review by Jesse Kornbluth from HeadButler.com.

Filed Under: Advent, Blog, Cookbooks Tagged With: Catholic, Christmas, cookbook, dining, family, family gatherings, family table, john besh, la provence, luke, my family, my family table, New Orleans, restaurant

More on the O Antiphons

December 17, 2008 By Jeff Young Leave a Comment

I just came across an article posted on the Catholic Cuisine blog.

It is a great article and I highly recommend it. You can find it here.

Filed Under: Advent Tagged With: Advent, O Antiphons

The O Antiphons

December 16, 2008 By Jeff Young Leave a Comment

This episode is a special contribution to the Catholic New Media Roundup Advent Calendar.

You can find the calendar at www.catholicroundup.com.

Today, December 17, marks the beginning of the octave leading up to Christmas. This is the high point of the Advent season.

The Church marks this period by inserting the O Antiphons into Vespers each evening.

Listen to this episode to find out more about Vespers and the O Antiphons.

To leave feedback for the Catholic Foodie, call 985-635-4974 and leave a message. You can also leave feedback for me at jeff@catholicfoodie.com.

Download the Special O Antiphons episode here or listen to it below:

[Read more...]

Filed Under: Advent, Blog, Podcast Tagged With: Advent, Divine Office, Liturgy of the Hours, O Antiphons

Advent is Here!

November 30, 2008 By Jeff Young Leave a Comment

Yes it is here!

Advent. Our yearly time of preparation for the coming of the Savior.

Wreathes, Advent candles, Jesse trees, Christmas trees, special hymns and carols, Advent is a special time of the year. Over the course of the next four weeks, I will share stories and customs of Advent. I will also include links for further information.

My family loves the Advent wreath. We keep it on the dining room table and light the appropriate candles just before dinner each night. We like to say a little prayer, read a short Advent meditation, and then sing a verse of O Come, O Come, Emmanuel. We also make a Jesse Tree.

For the last few years, we have had help keeping the Advent season. My children were in the children’s choir. They sang Advent and Christmas songs ALL day EVERY day. It was awesome! This year, however, the kids are not in choir. Scheduling conflicts prevented their participation. So we will have to really work on staying in the season this year. I plan on trying to incorporate evening prayer each night.

There is something else that I will be doing for Advent this year… an online Advent calendar. Sean, the “Ductapeguy” from the Catholic New Media Roundup, has organized a special media morsel for each day of Advent. Here is the promo for the Advent calendar:

So, what are you doing for Advent?

Leave a comment below!

Filed Under: Advent

Thanksgiving and Advent

November 23, 2008 By Jeff Young Leave a Comment

Catholic New Media Advent Calendar

Today we celebrate in the Church the Feast of Christ the King, which marks the end of the liturgical year. Next Sunday is the 1st Sunday of Advent, the beginning of a new liturgical year. It is also a very special time of preparation for Catholics around the world.

This year, in addition to beginning Advent, I am also beginning a new podcast. The first episode will be up this week. Can you guess the theme of the episode? Surprisingly enough it is Thanksgiving! Please check back this week as I will post the episode here. It will also be available on iTunes.

Today I am working on a promo for the show. I hope to complete it today and post it here as well.

On November 30, the Catholic New Media Roundup will begin an online Advent calendar. Each day of Advent a catholic contributor will provide a surprise (a special blog post, audio clip, podcast, music, short videos, or art).

You can find the calendar here or click on the image above.

Filed Under: Advent Tagged With: Advent, Advent Calendar, Catholic New Media, Thanksgiving

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