Venison to NYC


I have to admit I was horribly nervous about sharing the way I had learned to cook venison in Tennessee with my snobby sophisticate gourmet New York friends. Bringing an entire back strap with me from Knoxville (not a tenderloin as I had thought), I was determined to show off and impress. With some fancy unsweetened cocoa from Simon's favorite Jewish market and the perpetual Baleine fine sea salt, I set out to prepare an unforgettable dish. Dressed as a clown (literally), not sober, and surrounded by good friends, I loosened up and just went to it. As I let the meat rest before bringing it to Simon's skilled sashimi slicing hands, I did not know what to expect. What happenned as I passed the sliced thin 4 inch diameter disks of perfectly cooked meat for ninja turtles and ravens and Yosemite Sam to eat should not have surprised me. Simon had prepared a warm space for his friends to enjoy a beautiful beautiful fall day in NY, and this dish was able to complement it. Smiles to laughs to the visceral pleasure of a great bite, I was really happy to be able to share. Great memories of people place and food. Thank you.

Sanguinaccio!

The resident gourmand from Napoli, Marco (student in the same school as me), told me about Sanguinaccio. It's chocolate and pig's blood... can you imagine? And apparently it's absolutely delicious. He was telling me how his mother used to make it often, and as a kid he'd be scared because he'd open the refigerator and there would be a jar of pig's blood in there. But he claims that the taste is divine. Does anyone know more about this, or tried it before?? (p.s. I don't think they make the real ones in the US, and though they've apparently created a version without the blood...)