Friday, November 27, 2009

Thanksgiving a la Movies

Of course, we cooked for Thanksgiving, and we used recipes that we've written for Cooking with the Movies. How could we pass up an opportunity for another taste-testing?

The turkey was Pavo Mexicano (Turkey Mexican-style) with mixed vegetable stuffing from the film What's Cooking?:
We provided an assortment of cheeses (not from a film, but it's a nice spread) with guacamole and pate:

These are the Candied Sweet Potatoes with Walnuts, Cranberries, and Marshmallowettes from the movie Once Upon a Time When We Were Colored:

Southern String Beans, from the same film, simmered with bacon for two hours--just amazing!

A few of our guests, in mouth-watering anticipation:

Dixie Biscuits with Fig Jam:
Cousin Beauty's Sweet Potato Pie:

Mississippi Delta Jelly Cake:

Rusty, proud chef and host:

Thursday, November 19, 2009

"Dinner and a Movie"?

Last Saturday, Rusty and I attended a showing of What's Cooking? that was sponsored by the Sundance Outdoor Adventure Society. Our host cooked a delicious turkey, a wonderful butternut squash soup, and a yummy oyster stuffing. We brought a salad and cherry pie, our version of what was served in the movie itself. We talked about the movie and the meals/food depicted during dinnertime, and we added running "food" commentary as the guests asked us questions during the film itself. It was great fun to meet new friends too. Thanks to Sundance for the invite.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Babette's Feast

Finally, we accomplished the dinner from Babette's Feast.

Potage à la Tortue (Turtle Soup)

Blinis Demidoff au Caviar (Buckwheat Cakes with Caviar)

Cailles en Sarcophage avec Sauce Périgourdine (Quails in Pastry Puff Shell with Foie Gras and Truffle Sauce)


La Salade (Salad Course)

Les Fromages (Assorted Cheeses)

Happy diners:

Les Fruits (Assorted Fresh Fruit)

Savarin au Rhum (Rum Cake)

Monday, November 2, 2009

No Reservations

Therapist: Kids like fishsticks….
Kate: I can’t believe I’m actually paying for these suggestions.


Mostly Martha was remade in English as No Reservations, which starred Catherine Zeta-Jones as Kate and Aaron Eckhart as Nick, the two chefs with different approaches to both cooking and life. No Reservations draws heavily on Mostly Martha, essentially translating the plot to New York City; indeed, Carol Fuchs’ English screenplay draws very heavily on the original German screenplay by Sandra Nettelbeck. Directed by Scott Hicks, No Reservations has earned a total worldwide box office of more than $92 million, thanks in large part to Zeta-Jones’ audience appeal.

According to Hollywood lore, Zeta-Jones worked as a waitress at New York City’s Fiamma Osteria in preparation for her role as Kate. Many customers remarked that she resembled Catherine Zeta-Jones, to which she responded, “I hear that all the time.”

The movie also features Patricia Clarkson as Paula, Jenny Wade as Leah, Bob Balaban as the Therapist, Brian F. O’Byrne as Sean, and Lilly Rabe as Bernadette.

Although the film did not win critical acclaim when released in 2007, Abigail Breslin was nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Performance in a Feature Film by a Leading Young Actress for her portrayal of Zoe. Ironically, this remake features a quite telling line, spoken by the therapist: “It’s the recipes that you create yourself that are the best.”



Mostly Martha (Bella Martha)


Mostly Martha is filled with wonderful advice for everyone who takes the creation of a meal seriously, whether he or she is a professional chef or a home cook. Because the film features two cooks with vastly different personalities and styles, the viewer benefits from their disparate perspectives.

Martha, the main character, is quite precise in her cooking: she runs her kitchen with a Teutonic efficiency and knows that any dish that she serves is cooked to perfection. When Frida, the Lido’s owner, hires another chef to help out, Martha responds with great anxiety: “Two chefs in one kitchen is like two people driving a car. It’s impossible.” Impossible, perhaps, if one chef wishes to maintain complete control and prevent any change. Even Mario seems to agree when he tells Frida, “It’s your restaurant, but her kitchen. Without her, it’s just a pile of metal.” The difference in their styles becomes evident when Frida decides to add gnocchi to the menu. Martha complains, “Gnocchi! Of all things!” to which Mario responds, “They have to be prepared with great care, that’s all. With gnocchi you have to take your time. They tend to get tough and inedible if you don’t do your best.” She asserts, “I always do my best,” and he counters, “With cooking, yes, you do.” Her final “Exactly!” ends the debate in her favor, in her mind.

While Martha prefers not to eat before starting her evening shift in the kitchen, Mario believes that eating is as essential as breathing. As he advises the staff, “Only a well-fed cook is a good cook. First you must saturate your taste buds and only then season to taste. If you’re satisfied on a full stomach, then you’re a really good cook.” Thus, he converts the staff’s pre-dinner menu meeting and snack into a relaxed and friendly family-style repast. While Martha’s staff always worked the dinner rush in near-silence, Mario plays music in the kitchen—and sings along!For his part, Mario knows that a kitchen cannot have two head chefs and allows Martha to maintain her position by publicly stating whether he should stay or leave. Despite her great reluctance, Martha eventually admits that having Mario around adds a certain “flavor” that she would not have been able to provide. He, after all, is the only one who can get Lina to eat anything, and she realizes that not only is the staff less uptight, even happier in their work, but that his joy of cooking can help her savor the foods and the experiences that had ceased to feed her soul.

Perhaps the message is not that “too many cooks spoil the broth” but that each cook can unlock different tastes that, together, create a delicious culinary masterpiece.

Like some food films, Mostly Martha likes to provide viewers with a certain degree of cooking instruction. For example, this is how chef Martha would prepare a certain special dish: “I love to serve them [pigeons] roasted. It gives them a more robust taste. A wonderful side dish would be ravioli with boletus, truffles, and wild mushrooms or chanterelles depending on the season. But you need a good pigeon. It must be meaty or it’ll dry out. You could also cook them in a pig’s bladder, in Madeira, cognac, and port. It keeps the pigeon well protected and juicy. Serve it with tagliatelle with spring onions, truffles and glazed shallots in a delicate thyme sauce. Truffles are perfect for any pigeon dish because the delicate pigeon flavor…. A wonderful starter would be a crayfish and mussels….” Although Lina tosses the truffles in the trash because of the smell, informed cooks and diners know what a special flavor just a tiny slice of truffle can add to a dish. In recreating the recipes from Mostly Martha, we took much of Martha’s fine cooking advice.

Released 2002
Written and directed by Sandra Nettelbeck
Starring Martina Gedeck as Martha Klein, Maxime Foerste as Lina Klein, Sergio Castellitto as Mario, August Zirner as Martha’s therapist, Sibylle Canonica as Frida, Katja Studt as Lea, Antonio Wannek as Carlos, Idil Üner as Bernadette, Oliver Broumis as Jan, and Ulrich Thomsen as Sam Thalberg


Awards: 2002 Créteil International Women’s Film Festival Grand Prix (Nettelbeck); 2002 European Film Award for Best Actor (Castellitto); 2002 German Film Award in Gold for Outstanding Individual Achievement: Actress (Gedeck); 2003 German Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress (Gedeck); 2002 Lecce Festival of European Cinema Special Jury Award and Students Jury Award; 2002 Mons International Festival of Love Films Awards for Best Actor (Castellitto), Best Actress (Gedeck), Best Screenplay, and Grand Prize; 2003 Muscat Film Festival Best Actor (Castellitto) and Silver Dagger (Nettelbeck); 2002 Nantucket Film Festival Screenwriting Award for Best Feature Screenplay

Martha: Not quite.
Therapist: Not quite?
Martha: Something’s wrong.
Therapist: But I made it just the way you said. I followed the recipe precisely, step by step. Exactly the way you wrote it down.
Martha: Did you prebake the crust for 15 minutes?
Therapist: Exactly 15 minutes at precisely 210 degrees Celsius.
Martha: Are you sure your oven heats up to 210 degrees when it’s set at 210?
Therapist: The thing is brand new.
Martha: Perhaps you kneaded the dough too long?
Therapist: Not a second longer than necessary!
Martha: Then it must be the sugar.
Therapist: The sugar?
Martha: Did you get the Belgian Vergeoise, like I told you?
Therapist: Are you telling me, you can taste what kind of sugar I’ve used?
Martha: Of course not. But I can taste which kind you didn’t use!
Therapist: I give up.