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May, 2011

  1. Stout-Poached Pulled Chicken Barbecue

    May 21, 2011 by Cas

    Dammit. I can’t keep dreaming of this stuff at night so herewith, from the files of “make it already and get it out of your damned system” is this recipe with southern flair, a bit of spice, and a whole lot of gravy for sopping with biscuits or, as I’m enjoying it right now literally as I write this, served over Down-Home Spoon Bread.

    Make both, put healthy portions in takeout containers, freeze it, bring it to work, and nuke up something for lunch you won’t find at a Midtown street cart or 7-11. I love a jealous coworker….

    12 oz. (1-1/2 Cups) Stout beer
    1/2 Cup Water
    1-1/2 to 2 lbs. Boneless, skinless chicken thighs

    1/2 Cup Worcestershire Sauce
    1/2 Cup Ketchup
    1/2 Cup Lemon juice
    1/2 Cup Cider vinegar or white wine vinegar
    1/2 tsp. Salt
    1/4 tsp. Crushed red pepper flakes
    1 tsp. Dried parsley
    3 Cloves garlic, minced (or 3 tsps. jarred)

    1 Stick Butter

    1 Tbsp. Corn starch
    2 Tbsp. Water

    Place chicken, beer and water in a medium sauce pan, and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat to medium and simmer, uncovered, for 20 minutes.

    In a mixing bowl, blend together all remaining ingredients except for the butter, starch and water. Set aside.

    Remove poached chicken to a separate bowl, and allow to cool for 3 minutes. Using two forks and working quickly, shred the chicken meat and return to the bowl. When all the chicken is shredded, add the poaching liquid and toss to coat. Set aside.

    In the same saucepan over medium high heat, melt butter and boil, stirring constantly until it becomes foamy and begins to turn a caramel color, about 2 minutes.

    Immediately remove from heat and stir in the reserved condiment mixture. Return to high heat and boil, stirring constantly, for one minute. Pour liquid off shredded chicken into a mixing bowl, and add chicken to the boiling sauce, along with 1/2 Cup of the poaching liquid. When the chicken and sauce return to boiling, reduce heat to medium and simmer, uncovered, for 15 minutes.

    Mix cornstarch in water, and stir quickly into simmering chicken. Allow to boil for one minute more, then remove from heat, and serve.

    IF you’re making biscuits as an accompaniment, and IF you’re a fan of Red-Eye Gravy (which is traditionally made by deglazing a skillet after frying up ham, with a cup of coffee and some salt and pepper), the remaining 1/2 cup or so of poaching liquid has the same deep, satisfying richness in its thin simplicity. G’head. You know you’re thinking about it now…


  2. Down Home Spoon Bread

    May 21, 2011 by Cas

    Dear Merciful God, somebody stop me.

    I’m promising to end my Southern Belle kick IMMEDIATELY, for two reasons:

    (A) I’m now completely obsessed and I have too much unpacking to do to be fucking around in the kitchen; but more importantly,

    (B) Cooking as I do in nothing but an apron, all the butter and flour and salt in these amazing dishes is causing me to hate myself when I walk past a mirror and catch what my ass is looking like sticking out in the back.

    So I COULD wear pants, but I think I’ll move on to small plates and finger foods and salads for a little while.

    But not until I finish eating stuff like this.

    I love corn bread, I love simple, I love starchy and creamy and eggy… this is all those things.

    More of a bready custard, this is real stick-to-yer-ribs grub. It starts on the stove then goes into the oven, and you serve it, if you’re a purist, with a spoon. A true Southerner would gawk at a Yankee trying to slice this like a quiche or a pan bread just the way we’d stare at an ape eating soup with his hands at a high tea. I know folks who prefer it sweet, served hot from the oven with a pat of butter, a drizzle of honey or maple, and a sprinkle of cinnamon. But I think it’s best in its basic form, served as we would above the Mason-Dixon line as a starchy base for a saucier main dish — like noodles with stroganoff or stew, or rice with chili or curries. So even though this is GREAT stand-alone with a bit of butter and some salt and pepper (did I hear someone say “sprinkle of parmesan”? Yeah you, in the back there — I caught that), instead of just a haughtier cousin of the soul-nourishing corn grits, try it instead of biscuits next time you make a saucy dish so good you don’t want to miss a drop.

    3 Large Eggs
    1 tsp. Salt
    3 Cups Milk

    1 Cup Yellow cornmeal

    2 Tbsp. Butter

    1 Tbsp. Baking powder

    Preheat oven to 350°.

    In a mixing bowl, beat the eggs well with the salt. Add 1 Cup of the milk and blend thoroughly; set aside.

    In a medium saucepan, mix remaining 2 Cups of milk with the cornmeal until well blended. Bring to a boil over medium high heat; once boiling, reduce heat to medium and, stirring constantly for another 3 minutes, work mixture into a very thick paste, being sure to scoop down sides and bottom. Remove from heat and add butter, stirring to melt and blend it in thoroughly.

    Add 1/2 of the milk and egg mixture, and blend in thoroughly working out any lumps. Repeat with remaining liquid until smooth and uniform.

    Add baking powder and stir thoroughly, folding in the resulting foam until the mixture is well blended.

    Transfer mixture to a greased casserole (or preferably, because this is home-cookin’, a cast iron or other oven-proof skillet). The fluffy mix will not rise much, so if it fits comfortably at this stage, you’re safe from puffy, drippy messes.

    Bake on rack in the middle of the oven for 30 minutes, or until the edges are browning and the top is showing signs of turning golden brown in spots. Remove from oven, and let cool.

    Yes it will deflate a bit. Yes it will be delicious anyway. And yes you will find a  million reasons to make this, from brunch to lunch to dinner to whythefuckamIawakeatfourinthemorning.

    Try this with our Stout-Poached Pulled Chicken Barbecue. Or just try it, as the name and the Confederacy demand… with a spoon.


  3. Vegan Worcestershire Sauce

    May 21, 2011 by Cas

    From the files of “You have to read your labels cuz you just never know”: TRUE WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE contains anchovy, thus rendering it non-vegetarian.

    Here, I’ve crafted a homemade substitute that I actually like as much, if not better, than the commercial brands.

    This recipe has a lot of ingredients in small amounts, but all should be readily available and, in my opinion, a part of your spice pantry. Yes: I have a spice pantry. A cabinet will suffice for normal mortals. It yields 2/3 of a Cup, so if you use it in a recipe such as Lady Bird’s Bird Sauce (which calls for 1/2 Cup) you can put the rest in a jar or bottle and keep in the fridge for seasoning just about ANYTHING…

    1/4 Cup White wine vinegar
    2 Tbsp. Molasses
    2 tsps. Sugar
    1/2 tsp. Onion powder
    1/4 tsp. Garlic powder
    1/4 tsp. Ground clove
    1/2 tsp. Mild chili powder
    1/2 tsp. Ground dry mustard
    1/4 tsp. Cayenne pepper
    1/2 tsp. Paprika
    1 tsp. Salt
    2 tsp. Soy sauce
    3 Tbsp. Red wine
    2 tsps. Lemon juice

    Mix all ingredients in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil over medium high heat. Allow to boil one minute, stirring constantly. Cool and use immediately, or store refrigerated.


  4. Bi-Partisan BBQ Chicken Sliders

    May 20, 2011 by Cas

    When developing this recipe for “Meet the Lady: First Ladies”, this creation was code-named the “LBJBBBBQBBB”. If you try to pronounce that you’ll sound like you’re having a grande malle seizure; it’s an amalgam and not an acronym, standing for:

    The “Lady Bird Johnson Barbara Bush Barbecue Baby Burger Biscuit”.

    In a nutshell, the reason — not for the name, necessarily, but for this particular recipe –  is this: Both First Ladies were “Texas Homemakers”  in their private lives — before and, more arguably, after their husbands’ terms in office. And each was known for her barbecue contributions (Barbara for her chicken, Lady Bird for her down-home sauce). So a barbecue chicken burger seemed a natural finger-food extension of this theme, and to cross party lines in this hand-held homage, I used my own version of the simple, though famed, marinade from Mrs. Bush’s chicken recipe, and I modified Mrs. Johnson’s sauce to give our finished product its classic Texas barbecue appeal.

    The biscuit — a staple in southern cuisine — was also a staple in the White House of the 60s, as Lyndon Johnson was such a biscuit addict that Lady Bird made damned sure they were served at absolutely every meal — private or otherwise — to satisfy her husband’s cravings. But giving due respect, it wasn’t just like baked, buttermilk crack to LBJ: he was known to work until he dropped and often took meals while working and even while standing. He would have salads served to him while toiling in the Oval Office, chopped finely enough that he could eat them mindlessly with a spoon so as to not even divert his stare from whatever state work was at hand. Biscuits, likewise, were found to be an easy way to transport anything liquidy from plate to mouth without becoming a diversion.

    I have to admit, Johnson being the sitting President during my birth, and stories such as these, coupled with my research on Lady Bird as the supportive, and herself substantial, woman behind the man… I’m sort of sporting a crush on the pair. Not in a dirty way, mind you; Eew.

    But in that lovely, innocent, “fading-of-Camelot, boy from Brooklyn, loving barbecue and loving the fact that despite her public stance which was kept as quiet as possible, Barbara Bush was pro-choice and ballsy, and Lady Bird had the highest hair and sweetest smile” kind of way.

    Love them, love their cooking. And I love to think that if they tasted these, they’d taste the tribute and the admiration that I’ve baked — or rather,  fried — into each bite.

    1-1/2 lbs. Boneless, skinless chicken thighs
    1 Sleeve (approximately 3 dozen) saltine crackers
    1 Batch of Bar’s Lemon Garlic Marinade

    Oil for frying

    1 Batch (approximately 2 Cups) Lady Bird’s Bird Sauce

    24* Buttermilk Biscuits, either store-bought in the scary exploding tube, or Homemade

    *(This recipe will stretch VERY easily to 36 sliders for cocktail party catering, and if the chicken weighs in at even closer to 2 lbs., don’t be surprised to find a yield of 40).

    Place chicken thigh meat in the bowl of a food processor, and pulse to coarsely chop. Roughly crush saltines into a separate bowl, and soften with the marinade, tossing to mix (for the frou-frou among us, the resulting softened-starchy component to be added to the dish is known as a panade).

    Add the panade (see? Now we’re ALL frou-frou!) to the chopped chicken in the processor, and pulse to combine well. Then, taking care to stop and scrape down the sides and make sure the mix is being evenly tossed about, pulse the mixture to blend completely, then process until a smooth, soft, dough-like paste forms. Transfer to a bowl.

    Spoon out balls of dough about the size of a walnut if stretching the mix, or golf ball-size for larger patties, laying them out on sheets of wax paper until you have (depending on your serving needs), between 24 and 36 portions. Wetting fingers frequently to prevent sticking, flatten the mounds out by pressing them down onto the wax paper. Space providing, you can do the entire batch at once, or work in shifts — forming the next batch while the batch before is frying.

    Heat oil in skillet to medium-high (about 1/2 inch deep, so patties will be just about submerged), or set deep fryer to 375°.

    Cooking sliders in batches of 6 or 8 (keeping care not to let the oil become too cool with each addition), fry about 3 minutes, turning once halfway through, until patties are a dark, golden brown. Remove from fryer and set on paper toweling to drain.

    Once all the sliders are fried, transfer to a mixing bowl, cover with Bird Sauce, and gently toss to coat. Set aside.

    Cut or split buttermilk biscuits, and place a patty on each biscuit bottom. Spread inside of biscuit tops with remaining sauce to complete each “sandwich”, and place sliders on serving platter (or oven-safe tray to keep warm until serving).

    Serve with remaining or additional Bird Sauce for dipping; you may also want to serve them, given the fact that this sauce is so close to what originally inspired (and is thus very reminiscent of) what we think of now as “Buffalo” style Hot Wings, with bleu cheese dressing and celery sticks as garnish.


  5. Tofu BBQ Sliders

    May 20, 2011 by Cas

    Back in the day when I was a vegan (“Shiite Vegetarian”, I used to call myself) it dismayed me greatly that attending parties I’d have to make myself happy with cruditee platters (and usually not the dip) and the potato chip bowl because nobody ever thinks of the vegetarian. And I was a FAT vegan, so I wasn’t afraid of calories back then, but the cholesterol my doctor threatened to treat with massive doses of pharmaceuticals if I didn’t find a way to clean up my act on my own.

    So now, eating animal products as I do (though most of the time avoiding red meat and dairy more for middle-aged digestive reasons than moral or medical ones) I feel beyond compelled to make sure that I offer vegetarian fare whenever I cook or cater, because first and foremost I want my Veg-Heads to be Well-Fed-Heads, and second, I love when a meat-eater tastes something totally off his perceptual map in terms of vegetarian food and just has his mind blown.

    “I never knew I liked tofu!”

    That’s because you’ve only seen it all bloated and flavorless — a necessary last resort to fill the protein needs of gaunt, transparent-skinned PETA activists, and not a versatile and delicious component of a well-crafted dish.

    Trust me: I know how to fake people out. I also know how to illuminate them. And while the initial fun is in the wool that’s pulled over their eyes when they THINK they’re eating something that formerly walked on four legs, I get the most enjoyment out of seeing the “aha!” happen when I clue them in. I have, at various dinner parties, heard the following raves about my blind tofu swaps:

    “FINALLY you used whole-milk ricotta in your lasagna!” (No, I pureed extra firm tofu).

    “Oh yum! I love paneer!” (Actually, instead of the firm, white, Indian cheese cubes you USUALLY love in this vegetable dish, you’re currently loving cubed, drained tofu).

    “This chicken is so tender for something potted in a casserole.” (Actually, it’s strips of marinated, baked tofu, but I’ll pretend it’s FREE-RANGE tofu if that makes you feel better).

    I also love using grains and vegetable to make burgers and loaves you’d usually associate with meat. One time my black bean and brown rice meatloaf disappeared at a birthday party while its beef-based cousin sat and watched jealously from across the table. Go figure.

    And go try these.

    Since the tofu is pureed I didn’t craft this to be marinated in the marinade, but to incorporate a small amount of the marinade in the actual mix to impart the same flavor. And the bacon flavor in there is just to remind your palate that this is a barbecue-inspired creation. When I whipped up a batch of these at first, I just kept noshing on the patties as they were, because they’re flavorful and satisfying all on their own. So feel free some time to just serve up a plate of these with a dip of your choice.

    You can also skip the marinade and smokey bacon bits and just puree the tofu with the crackers and, making larger chunks versus flatter patties, fry them up and serve them with ramekins of various dippers like honey, BBQ sauce, ranch or bleu cheese dressing, and ketchup, and you’ve got a veggie version of McNuggets that’s sure to please.

    But try it this way first…

    1/4 Cup Bacos (or similar) bacon flavor bits
    1/2 Sleeve (approximately 18) saltine crackers
    1 (14 0z.) Block extra firm tofu, drained
    1/4 Cup Bar’s Lemon Garlic Marinade

    Oil for frying

    1 Batch (approximately 2 Cups) Lady Bird’s Bird Sauce

    24 Buttermilk Biscuits, either store-bought in the scary exploding tube, or Homemade

    Grind the bacon bits and the crackers in a food processor (or blender) until fine. Break up tofu and add to dry mix along with marinade.  Pulse mixture to blend completely, then process until a smooth, soft, dough-like paste forms. Transfer to a bowl.

    Wetting hands frequently to prevent sticking, spoon out balls of dough about the size of a walnut, and pat flat to form a mini-burger or “slider”. Lay sliders out on sheets of wax paper until all patties are formed.

    Heat oil in skillet to medium-high (about 1/2 inch deep, so patties will be just about submerged), or set deep fryer to 375°.

    Cooking sliders in batches of 6, fry about 3 minutes, turning once halfway through, until patties are a dark, golden brown. Remove from fryer and set on paper toweling to drain.

    Once all the sliders are fried, transfer to a mixing bowl, cover with Bird Sauce, and gently toss to coat. Set aside.

    Cut or split buttermilk biscuits, and place a patty on each biscuit bottom. Spread inside of biscuit tops with remaining sauce to complete each “sandwich”, and place sliders on serving platter (or oven-safe tray to keep warm until serving).

    Serve with remaining or additional Bird Sauce for dipping.


  6. Southern Buttermilk Biscuits

    May 18, 2011 by Cas

    Light and fluffy and amazing just out of the oven. I love these with some melted butter and a drizzle of honey, but you can also use them as substitutes for buns or rolls in finger sandwiches and sliders.

    The key here is to handle the dough as little as humanly possible. I’ve also used the food processor method, though if you’re more comfortable (or only equipped) with hand tools, use a pastry cutter, forks or a box grater as you see fit.

    3 Cups all-purpose flour
    4 tsps. Baking powder
    1 tsp. Baking soda
    1 tsp. Salt

    1 Stick cold unsalted butter, cut into chunks

    1-1/2 Cups buttermilk or substitute
    2 Tbsp. sugar or honey

    Preheat oven to 425°.

    In the bowl of a food processor, pulse the dry ingredients to mix. Add butter chunks, and pulse to combine just until mix is the consistency of coarse meal with visible chunks of butter remaining. Add buttermilk and sugar or honey, and pulse again just until dough comes together.

    Turn dough out onto a floured work surface. Working quickly to handle as little as possible, form into a rectangle, dusting top with flour, and folding in thirds (as you would a letter for an envelope). Flatten again into a rectangle, dust top with flour, flip upside-down, and repeat fold.

    Repeat flattening, flouring and folding 3 more times. Finally, press dough out into a rectangle roughly 1/2″ – 3/4″ thick. Using a 2″ round cutter or the mouth of a juice glass or clean, dry tin can with top and and bottom removed, cut biscuits;  re-roll scraps and pat and cut (again, handling as little as possible).

    Place biscuits, sides just touching, on a buttered, greased, or parchment-lined baking sheet. Bake 15 minutes or until golden brown.

    Allow biscuits to cool 2 minutes before serving warm, or on a baking rack cool the biscuits completely, place in an airtight container or ziplock bag, and refrigerate or freeze.

    Note that it never hurts to brush the tops with melted butter before baking, after baking, or whenever the hell you feel like it. It’s butter and it’s biscuits and it’s all good, y’all!


  7. Un-Buttermilk

    May 18, 2011 by Cas

    Usually when a recipe calls for Buttermilk, I have to turn to a substitute for three very important reasons: First, buttermilk comes in quarts and recipes never call for that much so I never think to buy something that’s called for in short quantity; second (and you’d think this was counter-intuitive given the first reason) it’s not the sort of thing I ever just seem to have hanging around the ‘fridge; and finally, third: unless it’s an ingredient in something like biscuits, I think “Buttermilk? Eew!”

    That being said, when you find for baking or what have you that what you don’t have is Buttermilk, try this very simple substitute:

    1 Tbsp. white vinegar or lemon juice
    1 Tbsp. sugar
    1 Cup whole milk

    Place the sugar and acid in a measuring cup and stir to mix. Add about 1/2 Cup milk and stir to dissolve sugar. Fill with enough milk to make 1 Cup, stir, and let stand 5-10 minutes. Mixture will thicken a bit.

    Stir mixture, and use as you would regular buttermilk.


  8. Bar’s Lemon Garlic Marinade

    May 18, 2011 by Cas

    First, First Lady Bush was known for her barbecue chicken. Being a Texas homemaker in one phase of her life, I guess she had to be known for SOMETHING southern, or she would have been drummed out of the D.A.R.

    Barbara’s secret (look… she’s even TELLING you here not to tell anyone!) was this marinade in its basic version. After marinating she’d toss the sauce and then barbecue the chicken with her own homemade barbecue sauce. I’ve made a few minor tweaks to her recipe, but overall I feel that in its simplicity it imparts so much tenderizing flavor to meat, veggies and other grill fare that it deserves its own spotlight.

    This batch should be enough to marinate about 2 lbs. of meat, but with so few ingredients, all readily available, you can whisk together extra at a moment’s notice to use as a basting or topping if need be (see notes after).

    1/3 Cup lemon juice
    2 Tbsp. vegetable oil
    2 Cloves minced garlic (or 2 tsps. jarred)
    2 tsps. salt
    1 tsp. ground black pepper

    Optional:
    1 Tbsp. corn starch
    1/2 Cup cold water

    Whisk together all but the optional ingredients.

    If marinating meat (chicken sections or cutlets, or pork loin or chops): place meat and marinade in a ziplock bag. Seal, work marinade through meat, and refrigerate for up to 24 hours.

    If marinating tofu: drain extra firm tofu, slice into grilling or baking-sized portions or cubes, and using paper toweling or cheese cloth, gently press out as much extra water as possible. Place in a shallow plate, coat with marinade, and refrigerate up to 24 hours, flipping and coating slices a few times while it marinates to insure even coating.

    Also great for meat and/or vegetable kabab skewers.

    When grilling or roasting, use the remaining marinade to baste during cooking.

    As an optional sauce, to brush on cooked meat, veggies or tofu, mix corn starch and water, add to remaining marinade in a saucepan, bring to a boil stirring constantly over medium-high heat, and adjust salt to taste.


  9. Lady Bird’s Bird Sauce

    May 18, 2011 by Cas

    Actually, this works well on birds, pigs, cows, turkeys, tofus — anything you have roaming around the farm and want to slaughter, slice and serve.

    President Johnson and his family were good ol’ Texas folk. Up here in the North, we think of barbecue sauce as a sweet, thick condiment akin to a browner, sweeter, smokier ketchup.

    Not down there, y’all.

    Buttery and spicy and acidic; THOSE are the hallmarks of a good down-home bar-bee-kyoo. And it’s usually thin enough that it can really soak into meat, which further allows it to tenderize and infusicize and flavortize even the cheapest, slow-cooked cuts of meat.

    I can’t wait to use this in a pulled pork dish, which of course I’ll report here in full. But keep this one handy for a my next “Meet the Lady” dish, and make plenty to refrigerate or freeze and keep on hand.

    I did modify it with a bit of thickening so it can be used more easily and with less need for something to sop it up (read: BISCUITS), but it’s pretty true to the Lady’s old standard, and once you taste it you’ll say “oh… NOW I get it!” and it will quickly become a totally different animal in your culinary vernacular than Open Pit or Heinz.

    1 Stick unsalted butter

    1/2 Cup tomato ketchup
    1/2 Cup worcestershire sauce (or try our Vegan Worcestershire)
    1/2 Cup apple cider vinegar
    1/2 Cup lemon juice
    2 Cloves garlic, crushed or chopped (or 2 tsps. jarred)
    Dash of Tabasco sauce or dried cayenne pepper, to taste
    Salt and ground black pepper, to taste

    1 Tbsp. flour
    2 Tbsp. cold water

    In a saucepan, melt butter over medium heat.

    In a separate bowl or liquid measure, combine remaining ingredients except flour and water.

    When butter is melted, whisk in liquid mixture, raise heat, and bring to a boil.

    Combine flour with water and mix into smooth paste. Reduce boiling sauce to medium heat, whisk in flour mixture, and allow sauce to boil 1 minute.

    Serve immediately, or remove from heat, allow to cool to room temperature, then store refrigerated in an air-tight container.

    Think of this as something you can use as a marinade (try chicken cutlets, pork tenderloin, or steak, left soaking in the sauce overnight in the refrigerator) and then the final sauce (if you use your marinade as the finished serving topping, ALWAYS cook it to the boil to remove any hazard of food-borne contamination after the meat is removed and cooked). Or add 1/4 – 1/2 cup and some crushed white bread or crumbs to a pound of ground beef for a supercharged burger, meatloaf or meatballs.

    Or just put a little pitcher of this out alongside your ketchup and mustard at a picnic or barbecue, and see which topping your guests rave about.


  10. Pomegranate Tiramisu

    May 10, 2011 by Cas

    From the “Meet the Lady” files…

    This recipe was created by me to fit the bill for the recent “Meet the Lady” performance (which, if you’ve not heard or read, is a monthly variety show that really rather defies description), titled “Death and the Maiden”.

    I toiled with possible ideas that had to do with death and maidens, figuring most easily that a “death by chocolate” offering would at least use one of the title words. Then lady fingers came into the thought process because, well, if you dismembered a maiden you’d have two byproducts: death, most notably, and lady parts — including, but not limited to, her fingers.

    Lady fingers naturally led to Tiramisu fantasies, but I didn’t want to go the traditional route. And after discussing it and brainstorming, I got smacked in the back of the head with the realization that the mythical Persephone — a maiden — kidnapped as she was by Hades — who, by way of his being the god of the underworld, was death its very self in semi-human form — ate nothing but pomegranate seeds during her detainment in hell.

    If this doesn’t spell fucking dessert, I don’t know what does.

    Herewith, my scaled-down recipe (in scope, not in structure or composition; I doubt you’ll need to serve 75 people with yours, though even at half-size this will serve a small army). You can pare it down even further if you feel such need, or instead of making it into one big sheet cake, assemble several smaller ones (I found this worked BEAUTIFULLY in loaf pans) and send them straight to the freezer for future enjoyment.

    A few other flexible considerations: I made mine in a full-size deep steam table pan for presentation and food service purposes. These things measure roughly 20 x 10 x 3.5”, but you can use the smaller (12 x 9 x 2.5”) disposable aluminum half-pans for this recipe, or as stated above, any other configuration of sizes that suit your needs. If you want to unmold it and slice it after freezing, line your pans first with cellophane wrap. After just a minute or two out of the ice box, you’ll be able to lift it out of the pan (perhaps with the help of a hungry friend) by the ends of the cellophane, place it on a cutting board, and have at it. Tres artistique, even weighing in as mine did at about eight pounds. This last conclusion required me getting on the scale both with and without the final dessert in my arms and subtracting the first weight from the laden number, which could have been quite a site, as I generally refuse to step on a scale until I’ve removed every last stitch of clothing including my socks, and spit out any spare saliva and shaved every last facial hair so NOTHING will add even a bazillionth of an ounce to my readout, lest I suffer a deep fit of depression. And being depressed when you’re holding what turns out to be 8 pounds of really good cake is a recipe for emotion-eating disaster. But I staved off the need to feel slimmer than normal in light of the facts that (a) I was mid-movie shoot that week, and thus had to maintain a larger-than-usual mane of face-hair for my role; (b) spitting near food meant for others would be gross; (c) being naked around the same food would be even grosser; and (d) the tile floor in my bathroom could be a bit chilly, so why risk taking off my socks?

    Socks, spitting, scanty clothing — nothing could have made this less enjoyable. The audience that night devoured what was served to them, and all but attacked the leftovers on the way out of the theater. I had sent samples of this creation to my usual team of taste-testers for input as part of the development process, and perhaps the most poignant and fitting critique came from my dear Mom who, just having started a new diet regimen, had the following to say during our brief check-in on the phone:

    “Hello. This is your mother. Fuck Weight Watchers, and Fuck You.”

    I love you, Mom. And not just because you loved this surprising new take on an old favorite.

    60 Lady Finger cookies

    4 Cups Pomegranate juice
    1-½ Cups plus 2 Tbsp. sugar
    1 Packet unflavored gelatin

    4 Egg whites
    1 tsp. Cream of Tartar

    1 Cup Mascarpone cheese (or our substitute)
    3 Cups Crème Fraiche (try ours)

    1 Tbsp. Corn starch
    ¼ Cup water (or as needed)

    ½ Cup sliced almonds
    ¼ Cup Pomegranate seeds (or dried sweetened cranberries)

    Reserve 6 Lady Fingers for garnish.

    In a saucepan, mix pomegranate juice with 1-½ cups sugar, and sprinkle gelatin on top. Stir or whisk until gelatin is dissolved with no lumps remaining. Bring mixture to boil over medium-high heat, stirring constantly until sugar and gelatin are fully dissolved. Reduce heat to medium-low and continue to boil, stirring often, for 10 minutes. Remove from heat and set saucepan into a larger bowl filled with cold water. Stir frequently and change cold water bath often, allowing juice reduction to cool as close to room temperature as possible.

    In the bowl of a stand mixer or with electric beaters, whip egg whites with cream of tartar until stiff. Remove to a separate, clean mixing bowl (preferably chilled in the freezer) and set aside.

    In stand mixer or large mixing bowl with electric beaters, mix mascarpone with 1-½ cups of cooled juice reduction until well blended. Beat on medium-high for one minute. Add 1 cup of the crème fraiche and blend until smooth. Finally, fold in beaten egg whites, half at a time, just until fully incorporated.

    Assembling the tiramisu: Here’s where Food Daddy starts getting anal (but this works easiest, so just shut up and do as I say. Love you!). On your prep surface, set your plate or bowl of unpackaged lady fingers (you don’t want to be messing with cellophane and plastic bags and such mid-project here); next to that, set your remaining juice reduction; and next to that, set your cake pan.

    Working from left to right (or for my Hebrew or dyslexic foodies, right to left), dip a lady finger lightly in the juice by placing it on the liquid’s surface, flipping it over with your fingers, then removing it by hand and placing it in the cake pan. Working quickly, repeat this process, building a tightly packed layer of side-by-side, row-by-row, lightly soaked lady fingers on the bottom of the pan. Nobody will see the inside of the tiramisu in its entirety, so if to make a uniform layer with few gaps you need to rip a finger here or stuff a finger there, I won’t tell a soul if you have to be a bit forceful or creative.

    Spoon half of the pomegranate mousse mixture over the bottom layer of lady fingers. Using the back of a spoon or a rubber spatula, spread the mixture evenly. Lift the pan and drop it gently a few times on your work surface, just to make sure all the gaps are filled and big air bubbles are removed.

    Repeat with a second layer of dipped lady fingers, and then a second layer of pomegranate mousse, again tamping pan to release air bubbles and distribute the filling evenly. Top with one final layer of dipped lady fingers.

    Spread the top with the remaining 2 cups of crème fraiche, tamp pan to settle the layers, and set aside.

    Pour remaining juice mixture into a measuring cup, and add enough of the water, if needed, to make 1 cup of liquid. Return to saucepan, and stir in the corn starch and the remaining 2 Tbsp. of sugar until starch is dissolved. Place pan over medium-high heat, and bring to a boil to thicken. Remove from heat.

    In a food processor or with a cutting board and knife, coarsely chop the almonds and the fruit, then add the reserved lady fingers and pulse (or chop and crumble) until the whole thing looks like somebody pawed at a poor helpless berry-nut muffin until there were no big chunks left.

    Sprinkle the crumb mixture evenly over the top of the tiramisu. Drizzle with the pomegranate syrup mixture.

    Chill tiramisu at least 2 hours in refrigerator before serving. For overnight storage or longer, cover with cellophane wrap gently pressed against the top surface.

    This will “cure” and the flavors will blend and the whole combination really pull together if left refrigerated for two days. For storage beyond that or to deal with leftovers, this freezes BEAUTIFULLY. Just allow to come to room temperature before serving, or enjoy it “semi freddo” by removing from freezer and slicing wide, inch-thick slices, laying each on its side on individual serving plates and eating it cold and firm. A dollop of additional crème fraiche and a sprinkling of chopped almonds (did I hear someone say “mint sprig”?) sure would make this anything but a “leftover” dessert.