Tuesday, December 26, 2006

how to make cornichons

I can't remember where I originally found these:

CORNICHONS

Recipe 1

Because their thin skins make them quite perishable, the very small cornichons (European gherkins) or American-type pickling cucumbers you will need for this recipe should be processed the same day they are harvested, whether you have grown them yourself or are lucky enough to have found them in a produce market or farmers' market. Recipes for this classic French pickle vary a lot, so don't feel you must follow this one religiously. Common additions are garlic, cloves, and thyme, and I have sometimes added mustard, coriander, allspice, or even cinnamon. The French often use red wine vinegar, which makes for a delicious if less pretty pickle. You can even make "Cornichons a l'Orientale", a pungent, clean-tasting pickle with ginger, hot pepper, garlic, and rice vinegar, to create. Traditionally, these cornichons accompany pâté or sliced on a sandwich of roasted pork with Dijon mayonnaise on a croissant.

About 1-¼ lbs cornichons (1-½ to 2" long)
[or American-type pickling cucumbers (1 to 1-½ ")]
3 tablespoons pickling salt
4 shallots, peeled
1 whole bay leaf
2 sprigs tarragon
10 whole black peppercorns
2 small dried chile peppers
about 2 cups white wine vinegar

Makes 1 Quart

1. Wash the cucumbers gently, rub off the tiny spines if you're using cornichon, and remove the blossom ends. In a bowl, mix the cucumbers with the salt. Let the cucumbers stand 24 hours.
2. Drain the cucumbers. Rinse them in cold water, and pat each one dry with a clean towel. Pack the cucumbers into a sterile 1-quart jar, interspersing among them the shallots, bay leaf, tarragon, peppercorns, and chile peppers, and leaving at least 1 inch headspace. Fill the jar to the brim with vinegar. Cover the jar tightly with a non-reactive cap, preferably one that is all plastic. Store the jar in a cool, dry, dark place.

3. The cornichons will be ready to eat in 1 month, and will keep well, unopened, for about 1 year.

CORNICHONS

Recipe 2

4 to 5 quarts (6 pounds) tiny fresh picked cucumbers (less than 1 inch),
OR small cucumbers up to 3-½ inches long, sliced into ⅓-inch rounds
1 ½ cups coarse (kosher) salt OR 1-¼ cups pickling salt
¼ cup white wine vinegar or distilled white vinegar
18 to 24 sprigs fresh tarragon
6 large shallots, peeled and sliced thin
1 tablespoon mustard seed
1 tablespoon black peppercorns
1 teaspoon whole allspice, optional
¼ teaspoon whole cloves, optional
2 quarts white wine vinegar, more if needed

Wash cucumbers in cold water and remove any blossoms. Do not scrub as this tends to brush these small ones. Rinse and drain.

Mix with salt in stainless steel bowl or ceramic bowl. Cover the bowl with a cloth and let stand at room temperature for 24 hours. Stir to keep the brine which forms well mixed.

Next day, drain cucumbers and rinse them in 3 quarts of cold water and ¼ cup white wine vinegar or distilled white vinegar. Let stand 15 minutes. Drain and carefully wipe each cucumber dry with a soft cloth.

Scald and drain two half-gallon or 2 liter jars or crock(s).

Divide all ingredients equally among container(s) by placing one layer of tarragon in the bottom on the jar, followed by a layer of cucumbers or cucumber slices. This should be followed by 1/3 or 1/2 of the spices, depending on how many layers you intend to have. Repeat until all are added (but no higher than 2/3 of the jar).

Pour in enough white wine or distilled vinegar to cover the cucumbers and seasonings by an inch or better yet, by 2 inches.

Cover the containers with airtight lids or two layers of plastic wrap, help in place with rubber bands. The idea here is to keep the brine from rusting the metal jar lid.

Leave the pickles in a cool, dark spot for a month, after which they will be ready to use.

Once the pickling is complete, you may want to pack the cornichons in smaller jars as gifts, or for easier storage. Be sure they are covered with the vinegar and the jar lids are treated the same.

CORNICHONS

Recipe 3

2 lb cornichon cucumbers
1 cup coarse sea salt
several sprigs fresh tarragon and thyme
1 whole bay leaf
4-6 cloves garlic, peeled but left whole
a small handful whole peppercorns
1-2 small hot red peppers
2-3 quarts white vinegar,
enough to cover pickles completely in jars
½ inch slice lemon, one for each jar

Wash cornichons, rubbing briskly a few at a time to remove the furry edges. Put in a large colander and sprinkle liberally with salt. Let sit overnight in the sink or over a bowl to collect the liquid.

Drain & dry the cornichons with a clean dry towel. (Rubbing is preferable to rinsing as some salt remains.)

Place cornichons in any sized clean jars with tight-sealing lids. Place herbs around the pickles, adding slivers of peeled garlic cloves, several peppercorns, and a hot pepper, if desired, per jar.

Fill the jars to the top with cold vinegar straight from the bottle.

Lay a lemon slice on top and close the lid tightly. Shake once or twice and put on the back of a shelf or in the corner of a counter for a week or so. Taste the pickles as often as you like. They change in crunch and piquancy as they absorb the brine. They will be done in about a month or two.

Joe

Friday, December 22, 2006

: "truth is great and will prevail if left to herself, that she is the proper and sufficient antagonist to error and has nothing to fear from the conflict, unless by human interposition disarmed of her natural weapons, free argument and debate, errors ceasing to be dangerous when it is permitted freely to contradict them."

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

In Twist on Tuition Game, Popularity Rises With Price - New York Times

In Twist on Tuition Game, Popularity Rises With Price - New York Times: "December 12, 2006
In Twist on Tuition Game, Popularity Rises With Price
By JONATHAN D. GLATER and ALAN FINDER

COLLEGEVILLE, Pa. — John Strassburger, the president of Ursinus College, a small liberal arts institution here in the eastern Pennsylvania countryside, vividly remembers the day that the chairman of the board of trustees told him the college was losing applicants because of its tuition.

It was too low.

So early in 2000 the board voted to raise tuition and fees 17.6 percent, to $23,460 (and to include a laptop for every incoming student to help soften the blow). Then it waited to see what would happen.

Ursinus received nearly 200 more applications than the year before. Within four years the size of the freshman class had risen 35 percent, to 454 students. Applicants had apparently concluded that if the college cost more, it must be better.

“It’s bizarre and it’s embarrassing, but it’s probably true,” Dr. Strassburger said.

Ursinus also did something more: it raised student aid by nearly 20 percent, to just under $12.9 million, meaning that a majority of its students paid less than half price."

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Study Detects Recent Instance of Human Evolution - New York Times

Study Detects Recent Instance of Human Evolution - New York Times: "“There is a lot of genetic variation between groups in Africa, reflecting the different environments in which they live, from deserts to tropics, and their exposure to very different selective forces,” she said.

People in different regions of the world have evolved independently since dispersing from the ancestral human population in northeast Africa 50,000 years ago, a process that has led to the emergence of different races. But much of this differentiation at the level of DNA may have led to the same physical result.

As Dr. Tishkoff has found in the case of lactose tolerance, evolution may use the different mutations available to it in each population to reach the same goal when each is subjected to the same selective pressure. “I think it’s reasonable to assume this will be a more general paradigm,” Dr. Pritchard said."

Friday, December 01, 2006

Tom Friedman's Flexible Deadlines

Tom Friedman's Flexible Deadlines: "Tom Friedman's Flexible Deadlines
Iraq's 'decisive' six months have lasted two and a half years

5/16/06

New York Times foreign affairs columnist Tom Friedman is considered by many of his media colleagues to be one of the wisest observers of international affairs. 'You have a global brain, my friend,' MSNBC host Chris Matthews once told Friedman (4/21/05). 'You're amazing. You amaze me every time you write a book.'"