The leek, a winter vegetable

Leek, a winter vegetable, here are three dishes.

If you have grown up in the northern part of Europe, you would have had quite a bit to do with leeks. After all, it is one of the few  green vegetables available in winter.  To be fair, as a child, I did not like them so much. Now, it is different, I like their versatility and in winter I like using them in various dishes.

L’euf cocotte

L’oeuf cocotte is a bit like the onion tarte, a winter warmer. It is simple and easy to make.  Make it as an entry or a main.  The bottm, underneath the egg is where you will find the leek. The leek has been cooked slowly and has like melted to a soft conistency, and so tasty!   Recipe HERE.

oeufs cocotte ready for baking

 

 

 

 

 

The typical northern France soup

Poireau, carotte, pomme de terre, that is leek, caroot, potatoe.  This is the classic soup from northern France.  The potatoe helps binding the carott and the leek.  For 6 people, you will need one leek, 1 large potato and 2 carotts. Peel, clean and cut the vegetables, place them in a saucepan with one tablespoon of rock salt and cover with water. Cook until tender and blend.

You can add a spoon of sour cream in each soup plate or bowl when serving.

Also note, there is no ned to use chicken or vegetable stock, this would only add salt and there is plenty taste as is.

The flamiche or leek tarte

This is a tarte, not a quiche.  That means there is only one or two eggs and a little cream. It is rather light.  You will need at least two leeks. Similarl than for the oeufs cocotte above, you need to melt them in a covered pan. In the meanwhile, prepare a shortcrust pastry and place it over a tarte dish.   the pastry doesn’t need to be pre-cooked.

When the leeks are ready, remove from the heat. Still in the frypan, add salt and pepper to taste, a pinch or cumin or nutmeg is desired. Add 1 large tablespoon of flour, 2 eggs and up to 150 mL of cream. Mix all and put over the pastry. Cook at 180°C.

While I get around t0 do it for my blog, taking ice photos and posting a recipe, I am sharing one recipe from the Delicious magazine which doesn’t look so bad, although uses way more cream than the “real” flamiche.

Other cooking photos the last few weeks

I had been struggling with my croissants, the lamination (layeing of butter and dough for the non-techical) never seemed to work well. Last weekend it did, there is something to do with controlling temperatures, I will make more soon to make sure it was not a happy accident!

There are also these beautiful sourdough baguettes that seem to slide out of my oven twice a week.

Oeufs Cocotte (eggs on bed of leek fondue)

Oeuf cocottes, what a classic! But you kow what, it is part of these classic dish you forget for quite some times, even possibly some years and then somehow you think of them and they are so good! No nostalgia here, just simple ingredients put together. Beautiful. Healthy. Vegetarian and full of protein. Gluten free. What else? Ah! Easy to make!

oeufs cocotte ready for baking

Ingredients:
  • You will need one leek for 2 persons for the size of the ramequin dish
    ramequins you can use
    Left one for a main, right one for an entree

    on the photo.  Don’t worry if you cook too much leek, you can always use them in another serie of oeuf cocotte or in a quiche, in a vegetable tarte or served with a nice fish fillet.

  • About 15 g of butter for 2 person, up to 40 g if doing for 6 people.
  • 1 egg per peron (freerange)
  • 2 tablespoons of cream /person
  • salt, pepper, pinch of nutmeg or of cumin
  • Optional: 1 baby boccocini per person or a little grated parmesan
  • Sourdough bread to serve
Method:
  1. Remove any external leaf of the leek if old and brown. You may not have to remove any, up to 2  leaves maximum. Trim the top end bit if not from your garden.leek preparation
  2. On a chopping board, using a large knive to cut 2 cm pieces using the whole leek.  The darker part of the leek will need cleaning, it is not necessary for the lower hite part. Once the pieces are cut, place in water then in a salad spinner and drain of its water.
  3. In a heavy bottom fry-pan, melt the butter and add the leek. Cover and allow to cook slowly until melted and cooked. Add salt and pepper.  if it sticks or tends to burn, bring the heat further down and add 1/4 cup of water maximum just to rehydrate the whole mix.
  4. Fill each ramequin 2/3 full with leek. Add 2 tablespoon of cream to each, the pinch of nutmeg or ground cumin if using. Gently break the egg over the leek and add the cheese.
  5. Bake in the oven on 180°C for 5 minutes or until the egg white is just cooked (it will be all white and no longer transparent). The yolk should then still be runny. Remove from the oven and serve with fresh or toasted sourdough bread.

oeufs cocotte ready for baking