Trends are funny things.  How they start, how they fade, what’s in, what’s out, who says so, and the terrifyingly thin line between avant-garde and hopeless train wreck: it’s all fascinating to me.  Not that I participate much, because I can’t keep up.  But I like watching and learning.

And just as a broken clock is exactly right twice a day, if you stand still long enough, the trends will come and find you — usually when you’re not paying much attention.

I am a child of the 80s.  My formative years were spent in an American culture of wacky excess.  Big hair, puffy sleeves, and shoulder pads that would give a linebacker pause.  No lipstick was too bright, no belt was too wide — and earrings were the size of Christmas tree ornaments.  We wore fingerless gloves and parachute pants. At the same time.

I didn’t know the first thing about the food world then, but looking back, I see that largesse mentality of the 80s was not limited to fashion.  Complicated, pretentious dishes came on the scene, and the fussier, the better.  Artichoke leaves with melted butter, which no one knew how to eat.  Smoked salmon canapés.  Everything had sun dried tomatoes or capers in it.  Or both.  We discovered petit fours and tiramisu.

Remember that scene in The Breakfast Club, when Molly Ringwald pulls a bento box of sushi out of her brown bag for lunch?  I so wanted to be her.

All of that is mainstream today, but back then, those dishes and ingredients were well beyond the reach of ordinary folks. The newer and more exotic, the better.  If you’d never heard of it, it was fashionable.  Bonus points if it had to be flown in from some far flung locale.  Boring familiar food was for boring, working class commoners.

My, how different things are today.  Sustainability is in.  Trendy food folks have embraced the farm to table concept, and are hyper-aware of exactly where every ingredient is grown / raised / butchered / farmed.  Fine dining used to mean eating “high on the hog” (referring to the better cuts of meat above the belly), but these days snout to tail cooking, where the whole animal is used and nothing goes to waste, is the mark of a talented chef.  Cooks pay top dollar for greens and mushrooms foraged locally, or even better, they forage for themselves.  What they put on a plate, more than anything else, is a representation of a specific place and time — which is a very, very cool thing.

But guess what?  This is peasant food.  Growing up in a rural blue-collar community, I was surrounded by folks who killed what they could and ate what they killed.  (I didn’t learn to hunt until much later in life.) We cooked snout to tail because throwing anything out would be a sign of disrespect, and we were raised to believe that any animal that gives its life for our nourishment is deserving of our honor.  And we didn’t call it foraging, we called it free food.  A backyard garden wasn’t charming or glamorous, it was common sense.  And cheap.  Good and cheap: that was the goal.

It’s interesting to see these things come into vogue, and it’s a little odd for the things I grew up with – which seemed so gauche and common and altogether unsophisticated at the time – to suddenly be the “it” thing.  Not that I’m really part of the trend, mind you; I’m just that proverbial broken clock.  The world will soon and once again pass me by.  For the meantime, I’m thrilled to watch the talented chefs of this generation elevate these concepts to the level of high art, and hoping to learn a thing or two along the way.

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This time of year, I am slightly obsessed with foraging for dewberries.  A close cousin to blackberries, they can be used interchangeably, but they have a more delicate structure and a fuller, brighter flavor.  They aren’t available commercially for two reasons: 1) they fall apart during transport, and 2) being the little masochists that they are, they prefer a fairly harsh growing environment and don’t take well to cultivation.

To me, their relative scarcity is a good thing , because the excitement and effort required in getting them makes them taste all the better.

While I’m usually happy with a meager quart of berries to make cobbler with, my mother was the greediest dewberry picker around.  I have vivid memories of her outfitted in a broad-rimmed hat, long pants tucked into rubber boots, and gardening gloves – with a sawed off broomstick in one hand and a bucket in the other.  In fact, my dad so associated dewberry picking with my mother and with home, that when she sent him a photo of herself in all her foraging regalia while he was serving in Vietnam, that’s the one he posted by his bunk so that he’d see it every night.

She didn’t eat berries while we picked them, citing all the potential filth and disease from insects and critters.  The anticipation made the spoils all the sweeter, though.  We would return to the house, carefully wash a pint of the plumpest fruit, and eat them out of bowls with cream poured over.  Heaven.

 

Dewberry Gelato
Adapted from The Ciao Bella Book of Gelato & Sorbetto by F.W. Pearce and Danila Zecchin

Plain Base (see recipe below*)
3 cups fresh dewberries
1 tablespoon sugar
2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons limoncello

Make the Plain Base and chill as directed.

Combine the dewberries, sugar, and lemon juice in a food processor or blender and puree. Pour through a fine-mesh strainer into a bowl, pressing the solids to extract all the liquid. Discard the solids. Cover and refrigerate the puree until cold, about 1 hour.

Gently whisk the dewberry puree into the base, then add the limoncello and whisk to combine. Pour the mixture into the container of an ice cream machine and churn according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Transfer to an airtight container and freeze for at least 2 hours before serving.

 

* Plain Base
Makes enough for about 1 quart of gelato.
2 cups whole milk
1 cup heavy cream
4 large egg yolks
2/3 cup sugar

In a heavy-bottom saucepan, combine the milk and cream. Place over medium-low heat and cook, stirring occasionally so a skin doesn’t form, until tiny bubbles start to form around the edges and the mixture reaches a temperature of 170 degrees F.

Meanwhile, in a medium heat-proof bowl, whisk the egg yolks until smooth. Gradually whisk in the sugar until it is well incorporated and the mixture is thick and pale yellow. Temper the egg yolks by very slowly pouring in the hot milk mixture while whisking continuously. Return the custard to the saucepan and place over low heat. Cook, stirring frequently with a wooden spoon, until the custard is thick enough to coat the back of the spoon and it reaches a temperature of 185 degrees F. Do not bring to a boil.

Pour the mixture through a fine-mesh strainer into a clean bowl and let cool to room temperature, stirring every 5 minutes or so. To cool the custard quickly, make an ice bath by filling a large bowl with ice and water and placing the bowl with the custard in it; stir the custard until cooled. Once completely cooled, cover and refrigerate until very cold, at least 4 hours or overnight.