National Post

From seed to stalk

WITH AN ASSORTMENT OF 80 DISHES, CHEF JEREMY FOX HAS A WAY WITH VEGETABLES

- Laura Brehaut

Chef Jeremy Fox opens his debut cookbook, On Vegetables, with a recipe that doesn’t contain a single one. Not an herb, not a leaf, not a petal in his sumptuous, béchamel- laden grilled cheese sandwich. “It’s something everybody loves, a grilled cheese,” Fox says. “Vegetarian food can be just as … awesome as anything else.”

The remainder of the more than 80 recipes is devoted to utilizing vegetables in their entirety: tops, greens, roots, scraps and shells. Fox is not a vegetarian; he cooks pig trotters regularly and enjoys the occasional steak. But he’s a firm believer that vegetables — from “seed-to-stalk” — warrant the same enthrallme­nt as meat.

Fox rose through the ranks at Michelin three- starred California restaurant Manresa, where he first delved into charcuteri­e. Learning how to make the most of an animal, “nose-to-tail,” laid the groundwork for his innovative approach to vegetables.

“A lot of my food philosophy was taken from Paul Bertolli (author of Cooking by Hand, 2003) without even meeting him, as well as David Kinch ( Manresa chef/owner). So, when I started cooking vegetables, that was just the way I knew and it really took on a life of its own,” Fox says.

After moving on from his chef de cuisine position at Manresa, Fox headed the kitchen at vegetarian restaurant Ubuntu in Napa Valley. The accolades rolled in following a fortuitous review in 2008: “Ubuntu is where virtue meets naughty sensuality,” then-New York Times food critic Frank Bruni wrote.

Among other honours, the restaurant earned a Michelin star. Fox was at a profession­al high point but his mental health and personal life were suffering; he was self-medicating with prescripti­on drugs.

“Anything I’ve l e arned, whether it’s through food or life, is from making mistakes,” Fox says. “If you don’t screw up, then you don’t really know how to fix things. You don’t realize how good something is if you haven’t had bad. That’s a running theme throughout food and life.”

He left Ubuntu and started his recovery, eventually moving to Los Angeles and becoming head chef at Rustic Canyon in Santa Monica (where he’s executive chef today). He moved away from the “gorgeous, complicate­d, hypernatur­al displays” he had specialize­d in, ditching the tweezers and 15- to 20-hour work days.

Instead, he started creating “food that looks like itself, but tastes like a better version of itself.” This reinventio­n coincided with writing On Vegetables (with Noah Galuten); a process that Fox describes as therapeuti­c.

“I’m not doing the same food I was ten years ago. I had a style back then and I grew to not really love that style. So, while this book started, I was still figuring out what my style was and what the aesthetic was, and what it was expressing,” he says.

“As I got more comfortabl­e at Rustic Canyon, my voice started to come through a bit more. It all coincided with this book being written. So, it was kind of like closure to a past life and then starting over with a new one.”

Adapted f r om On Vegetables: Modern Recipes for the Home Kitchen by Jeremy Fox (Phaidon, $59.95, April 2017)

POTATO TOSTONES, HORSEY GOAT & PERSIAN CRESS

1 lb (455 g) small fingerling potatoes, rinsed 3 bay leaves (preferably fresh) 2 tbsp (30 mL) extra-virgin olive oil Kosher salt 2 L (8 cups) grapeseed, canola ( rapeseed), or peanut ( groundnut) oil, for deep-frying (optional) 1 cup ( 240 ml) Horsey Goat (recipe follows) A handful of Persian cress, watercress, arugula ( rocket), or any spicy, tender green, washed and dried Horseradis­h root

1. Poach the potatoes with the bay leaves ( see note). Drain the potatoes and toss in the olive oil. Gently flatten each potato with the side of a chef ’s knife. You want the potatoes to maintain their structure, so don’t let them break up into multiple chunks. Each potato should make one, flattened piece.

2. If frying the potatoes ( Fox’s preferred method): In a heavy pot, heat the grapeseed oil until it registers 350° F ( 180° C) on a deep- frying thermomete­r. Fry the flattened potatoes until they are golden brown and crispy, 3 to 5 minutes. Transfer the potatoes to a wire rack or a plate lined with paper towels and season immediatel­y with salt. If roasting the potatoes: While the potatoes are poaching, preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C). Once cooked, drained, and flattened, season them to taste with salt and spread on a baking sheet. Roast until they are golden and crisp, 10 to 15 minutes.

3. To serve, divide the potato tostones across 4 plates ( or serve on a platter). Accompany with a nice dollop of the horsey goat. Garnish with the cress and freshly grate the horseradis­h, like falling snow, right over the top.

Note: Scrub the dirt off your potatoes and place them in a pot of cold, moderately salted water with the bay leaves. Bring the pot up to a gentle si mmer ( t he potatoes will break up if the water is at a rolling boil).

Depending on the size of your potatoes, cooking them could take anywhere from 15 to 45 minutes. When in doubt, insert a cake tester into the potato — it should meet no resistance and slide right through.

Serves: 4 HORSEY GOAT

❚ 16 oz ( 450 g) soft fresh goat cheese, at room temperatur­e ❚ 4 tbsp ( 60 mL) heavy ( whipping) cream ❚ 4 oz (120 g; approx. ½ cup/125 mL) prepared horseradis­h ❚ Kosher salt 1. Using a silicone spatula, gently fold together the goat cheese, cream, and horseradis­h until thoroughly combined. Season to taste with salt. Cover and refrigerat­e for up to 1 week.

Makes: about 1 cup ( 240 ml) POOR MAN’S LOX

❚ 6 orange or red tomatoes, cored and very thinly sliced ❚ Kosher salt ❚ 1 cup ( 240 mL) Horsey Goat (recipe above) ❚ 6 focaccia rolls, halved across (like a bagel) ❚ 2 or 3 shallots, sliced ❚ 2 tbsp (30 mL) drained capers ❚ 1 English cucumber, sliced ❚ Fresh dill, to garnish ❚ 2 tsp ( 10 mL) white sesame seeds, lightly toasted ❚ 2 tsp (10 mL) poppy seeds ❚ 1 tsp (5 mL) flaxseeds ❚ 1 tsp (5 mL) sunflower seeds ❚ Flaky sea salt 1. Sprinkle the tomatoes with kosher salt. They should be nice and salty, but not inedible.

2. Smear the Horsey Goat on half of each focaccia, and top with the salted tomatoes.

3. Add the shallots, capers, cucumber, and dill. Sprinkle with sesame, poppy, flax, and sunflower seeds and finish with flaky sea salt.

Serves: 6

 ?? PHOTOS: RICK POON ?? In addition to creative uses for vegetables, Chef Jeremy Fox opens up about his experience­s with anxiety and ADD in his debut cookbook.
PHOTOS: RICK POON In addition to creative uses for vegetables, Chef Jeremy Fox opens up about his experience­s with anxiety and ADD in his debut cookbook.
 ??  ?? Growing up in a Jewish household, lox and bagels were typical Sunday-morning fare for Fox. “But quite often we could not afford the steep price tag that real lox carried, so this assortment of toppings was the next best thing,” he writes.
Growing up in a Jewish household, lox and bagels were typical Sunday-morning fare for Fox. “But quite often we could not afford the steep price tag that real lox carried, so this assortment of toppings was the next best thing,” he writes.
 ??  ?? Fox saves the pods when making peas and pecorino.
Fox saves the pods when making peas and pecorino.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada