Tuesday, November 20 2007 10:15 PM EST2007-11-21 03:15:02 GMT
The Director of the Culinary & Wine Institute at Carolina, Patrick C. Duggan, is demonstrating two recipes for WIS News 10. The instructions and ingredients are below.More >>
Breads like Banana-Nut have won over the taste buds of many, and former WIS News 10 anchor Scott Hawkin's Banana Rasberry Bread makes over an old favorite. More >>
The folks at WIS are sharing their favorite holiday recipes with you. See how former WIS News 10 anchor Susan Aude makes her delicious, easy and quick corn bake.More >>
Stuffed with meats, veggies or cheeses, savory pies are a favorite on kitchen tables around the world. Dig in and check out this variety of recipes.More >>
Stuffed with meats, veggies or cheeses, savory pies are a favorite on kitchen tables around the world. Dig in and check out this variety of recipes.More >>
Shake up some of your favorite St. Patrick's Day ingredients with a twist on tradition. Click through for recipes featuring corned beef, cabbage and potatoes.More >>
What are your favorite things to cook your family? Once you have submitted your recipe, we'll post it online with your name and state for everyone to see.More >>
By Alexia Nader
Growing up, French food was never very prominent on my culinary radar. My experience with cuisine was limited to the occasional high-pressure family visit to one of Miami's starchy French restaurants, and as a result I spent much of my life subscribing to the notion of French food as lofty and inaccessible. But on a weeklong visit not too long ago to Lyon, arguably France's gastronomic capital, everything changed.
After just a few indulgent meals at Lyon's renowned bouchons, I realized to my dismay that at the rate I was going, my meager traveler's budget wouldn't stretch to cover quenelles, gratins, and pink praline tarts for the rest of my trip. I needed to adjust my dining plan, or be forced to wash dishes in the restaurants' kitchens to pay for my return ticket to Italy. So I set out to find the city's best, cheapest fare.
Once I opened my eyes to this other side of Lyonnaise cuisine, I found innumerable, simple pleasures. On Sunday morning, I stumbled upon freshly shucked oysters with sparking white wine served from a stand on the bank of the Saône. Lunch on Monday, eaten on some steps in the Place des Terreaux, was a flaky, custardy quiche and a basket of perfectly ripe currants from an outdoor market.
But above all other foods were the delicate crêpes to be found at stands and cafés around the city, exquisite, tasty proof that French food could be both more unassuming and more sublime than I had ever realized.
I'm convinced that crêpes are the perfect ambassadors for French cuisine. They're relatively simple to prepare, can be filled with an infinity of ingredients, sweet or savory, simple or complex — you can even layer them on top of one another to form a cake, or tear them up to garnish in soup.
My favorite variation of all is a simple version, perfect for summer: a sweet, golden crêpe folded in four, topped with homemade sour cherry compote, and a sprinkle of castor sugar. Bon appétit à tous!
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