Our local food year starts, appropriately enough, with the
first upwellings of sap from the maples.
Cold and clear, only barely sweet, maple sap straight from the tree
carries the flavor of a small miracle.
Through it we tap in—literally and figuratively—to a perennial process
that encapsulates what it means to live and eat seasonally like nothing
else. In the fall the trees sent all
their resources down into their roots, to safeguard them through the long
dormant season. As days grow longer to
the equinox’s tipping point, and the thaw-freeze cycle starts and continues,
the trees call up that liquid food—it’s used to make leaves that enable to
trees to utilize the sun’s energy, to make more leaves, to make seeds that make
more trees, all of it cyclical, like the seasons, endless rise and fall and rise
again.
We intercept the sap as it travels—simple enough, drill a
little hole, stick in a tap, or spile, hang a bucket or a bag, collect sap, and
when you have a quantity cook it down until most of the water is gone, all the
sweetness remains. Homemade maple syrup
has qualities of terroir (the French term most often applied to wine), I
believe; especially when the syrup is infused with traces of smoke from a fire
stoked with wood from the same hillside where the maple trees grow. All maple syrup is good; maple syrup from
your own trees is both good and meaningful, and deeply satisfying.
I’ve been pretty slackardly in keeping up Trout Caviar for
the last couple of years. This year I’m
going to make an effort to get back on top of it and document a year in local
food from where we sit, at Bide-A-While just down the road from Bide-A-Wee in
northern Dunn County, township of Wilson just southeast of Ridgeland,
Wisconsin. Starting now. I tapped three maple trees today; the sap had not yet started to run. But conditions over the next week and more look perfect--highs near 50, lows in the 20s. It will be flowing very soon.
___________________________________________________________________________________
Mary made tartlets today, very local in nature, and appropriate to the early spring theme. She wanted to test the recipe for the Maple Madness Cook-Off that's part of the Hungry Turtle Weekend program of classes and cooking demos happening in Amery next weekend, March 13-14. The tarts use maple syrup, dried apples from our trees, Wisconsin hickory nuts, dried cranberries.
The original
recipe was for something called Ecclefechan tarts—it came along with a knitting
pattern Mary bought a while back, Ecclefechan being a town in Scotland. We’ve changed it up enough to make it our
own. We made these for a dinner/class at the Palate kitchen store in Stockholm, WI last spring, and came up with a fancy little accompaniment, the chevre maple cream, as below. The tartness of the chevre works nicely against the sweetness of the tarts, but regular whipped cream would be great, too. Or just eat them plain, with a cup o' tea.
Hickory
Nut & Maple Tart(let)s with Dried Fruit
Makes 8 four-inch tarts or 24 tartlets
Pastry:
200 grams (1 ½
cups) all-purpose flour
120 grams (1
stick; or 4 ounces) unsalted butter
1 tablespoon
granulated sugar
1 tablespoon
brown sugar
1/8 teaspoon
salt
1 egg yolk
Water if needed (Mary has found that water is usually needed, up to 1/4 cup; start adding 1 tablespoon at a time)
Cut the butter
into ½-inch pieces and rub it into the flour until the mixture looks like
breadcrumbs. Stir in the sugars and the salt, mixing well. Stir in the egg yolk
and mix well. If the mixture is crumbly, add cold water a tablespoon at a time until
you can form a dough that holds together. Knead very briefly, just so all the
ingredients are well combined. Wrap in plastic and refrigerate for at least 30
minutes.
Filling:
50 grams (1/4
cup) granulated sugar
50 grams (3
tablespoons) maple syrup
100 grams (7
tablespoons; or a stick minus 1 tablespoon) butter
1 egg
50 grams (1/2
cup) ground almonds
50 grams (1/2
cup) coarsely chopped hickory nuts (or substitute walnuts, pecans, or almonds)
30 grams (1/2
cup, packed) dried apples, chopped
60 grams (generous
½ cup) dried cranberries
1/8 teaspoon
salt
Combine the
sugar, salt, syrup, and butter in a small saucepan, and place on low heat until
the butter melts. Add the fruits and nuts and let this mixture cool for several
minutes, then mix in the egg.
Roll the pastry
out into a layer about 1/6-inch thick. Cut rounds appropriate to the pans
you're using--mini tart pans, muffin tins, etc. Fit the pastry rounds into the
pans, fill 1/2 full.
Bake at 375
until the pastry is golden brown and the filling brown and nicely puffed up.
Depending on the the size of the tarts, this will take 25 to 30 minutes. Check
after 15 minutes, then every 5 minutes until they're done. Serve with chevre maple cream, plain whipped
cream, a slice of sharp aged gouda
or cheddar, or just a cup of tea.
Chevre
Maple Cream
2 oz fresh chèvre, at room temperature
2 tablespoons maple syrup
1/2 cup unsweetened whipped cream
Combine the chèvre and syrup, and mixing with a fork until well blended. Fold in the whipped cream. Refrigerate until ready to use.
2 tablespoons maple syrup
1/2 cup unsweetened whipped cream
Combine the chèvre and syrup, and mixing with a fork until well blended. Fold in the whipped cream. Refrigerate until ready to use.
Chef- I certainly hope one or two of those tasty treats makes it over to South Street soon! Also, I love reading your stuff Brett, great job.
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