Today
I want to share with you some wise advice and some specific instructions on the
correct preparation and use of garnishes for the dishes which come from your
kitchen.
The
source is a delightful book called Round
the table: notes on cookery and plain recipes, with a selection of bills of
fare for every month (Philadelphia, 1876,) written by Victor Chevally de
Rivaz. The author is withering in his condemnation of the ubiquitous sprig of
parsley applied to indiscriminately to English dishes, he but also disdains the
widespread use of complex but inedible sculptures of coloured flour and lard,
and for reasons he does not explain, he also scorns the use of flowers as a
garnish.
I suspect
you will not be sufficiently inspired by the ideas to cut your French beans into the shape of lozenges and manipulate
each piece accurately into position with a larding needle, but please do let
your inner artist out and learn the principles of choosing, cutting, carving and
placing your garnishes. May your croutons always be perfectly regular, your aspic
always brilliant, and your egg-white neatly shaped and trimmed.
GARNISHING.
The scientific
branch of cookery comprises the devising of dishes and sauces. The artistic
branch constitutes the art of garnishing, and this plays a most important part
in the outcome of the kitchen, as, by means of it, dishes please the eye before
they please the palate. First impressions go a great way, and when the one
sense is captivated by an agreeable and inviting appearance, the dish must be
bad indeed which fails to stand the more searching ordeal of taste. Besides, People
who suffer from jaded appetites have a better chance of eating their dinner,
when the dishes which are put before them are pleasant to the sight.
Art,
however, is not a thing to be taught. You may show a man how to mix colours,
but you cannot teach him how to use them. Neither will I pretend to teach the
British cook how to garnish dishes. I will only attempt to explain that that
which in cookery is meant by garnishing is not the traditional parsley of the
British cook: and I will describe what cooks, properly so called, mean by garnishing;
of what garnishes are made; and how the different materials are prepared for
the purpose.
The
combinations of these things are too infinite to allow of more than a very
general exposition. They wholly depend upon the talent, skill, and taste of the
operator. The one and great thing to avoid, as much as possible, is the using
for purposes of garnishing, things which are not eatable.
‘Garniture,’ which is rendered into
English by ‘garnish,’ may be defined as all that is added to the chief material
which constitutes the dish. Thus tomato sauce, in a dish of cutlets, or fried
potatoes round a steak are garnishes.
These
things fall naturally under two great heads. The hot garnishes, which accompany
every savoury dish, and the cold garnishes, which go with cold meats, salads,
mayonnaises, &c.
Vegetables
are the chief materials of hot garnishes. By judicious combinations they will
produce very pretty effects of colour. To instance only a few: turnips,
potatoes, Jerusalem artichokes, cauliflowers, celery, and vegetable marrows
will give whites; carrots, tomatoes, beetroot, supply the reds; truffles and
mushrooms the blacks; and then there are the endless shades of green given by
French beans, peas, Brussels sprouts, cucumbers, asparagus, &c. To be so
used, all such vegetables as will admit of it must be cut into uniform shapes
with what are called vegetable-cutters, the successful use of which requires
some practice. They may also be cut, with a knife, into the shape of a ‘quarter’
of an orange, or again, into little oblong slabs a quarter of an inch thick,
and one inch by three-quarters, with all the edges slightly chamfered. This way
is very good for carrots, when the middle part begins to harden, and is not fit
to eat. Some vegetables can be sliced, and pieces can then be stamped out of
them. French beans should be cut into lozenges, or they may be cut in the shape
of peas with a stamp. Cauliflowers should be picked out into little bunches the
size of a penny at the top. Vegetables are usually cut before cooking, and each
kind should be cooked separately. Great care is necessary to ensure that, when
sent up to table, they are all ‘cuits à
point’ and hot.
Here is a
simple example of purely vegetable garnish. Suppose that a piece of beef be
stewed according to art, and put in a dish on a tasteful and velvety gravy.
Having all your vegetables ready cooked at hand, you proceed to place four
little heaps of cauliflowers at equal distances from each other; then you flank
each with carrot cut in slabs on one side, and French beans cut into lozenges
on the other; and lastly you fill in the remaining spaces, i.e., between the
beans and the carrots, with potatoes cut to the shape and size of Spanish
olives, and fried a very light colour in butter. I should here observe that,
once cooked, these things should not be touched with the hand, but put into
position by means of a larding needle and a teaspoon, or some other instrument.
I may also state, for the benefit of those who look to economy before all
things, that all this cutting and stamping out of vegetables need not cause the
slightest waste. The trimmings of carrots, turnips, &c., should go into the
stock pot, those of potatoes make mashed potatoes, and purées can be made with most if not all, of the remnants. In fact,
a purée composed of a combination of
vegetables is no bad thing, either as a soup or as a garnish for cutlets,
&c. For purposes of garnishing, potatoes are also mashed, and then shaped
into various forms, and they are likewise made into croquets, and fried a
golden colour, in which latter case eggs and spices should enter into their
composition.
Bread
sippets — which are used to garnish many dishes — should be invariably fried in
butter. They ought to be cut out of stale bread, and should be of the same thickness
and of uniform shape, which, with the help of paste cutters, can be varied ad infinitum.
Forcemeat,
quenelles, tongue, eggs (hard boiled), olives, &c., are used in garnishing.
Parsley should only be used in a fried form: a hot dish garnished with raw
sprigs of parsley is ridiculous. The only cold things which may enter into the
garnishes of hot dishes are lemons with some fish, and water cresses or garden
cress with some kinds of game and poultry.
In the
matter of the garnishing of cold dishes there is a wider scope for artistic
feeling. Cold meats should always be ornamented with aspic jelly, and, instead
of parsley, with the curled garden cress, which, while it resembles parsley
closely, has the advantage of being eatable when raw. But it is in salads,
mayonnaises, and the like that the artistic feeling of a cook can come out. I
will describe the materials she has at hand for ornamentation. First is the
aspic, which when well made should rival the finest topaz in brilliancy, and
can be so shaded as to approach the deeper tint of the ruby. Then come the
white and yolk of hard-boiled eggs, which are both used finely minced, but the
former can yield any number of fanciful devices, which are thus arrived at.
Several whites of egg are put into a tin previously slightly buttered, and then
are made to set in a bain-marie; when turned out they will give you a slab of
hard-boiled white of egg out of which you may cut and stamp what you like.
Beetroot will furnish similar devices in red, and so will tongue; olives
(stoned), truffles, capers, anchovies, gherkins, lobster coral, &c., will
give other colours and shapes. It will readily be seen that many very pretty
combinations of many colours can be made with these things. A fair average
taste and some patience are the chief requisites.
Flowers
(cut out of raw turnips), crayfish, which are not to be eaten, designs wrought
in flour and lard coloured in various ways, and such like matters which
appertain to what is called grand cookery, belong to the category of shams, and
cannot meet with the approval of any true artist.
As the
recipe for the day, I give you some instructions for an item which would
probably make the author of the above book blanch in horror; but here it is
anyway:-
Auntie Nellie's Hyacinths
2 ozs. minced ham.
1 dessertspoonful thick
horse-radish sauce.
Waffles 1 inch in diameter and 1
¼ inches in depth.
Small green gherkins.
Equal quantities green peas and
white bread-crumbs.
Whipped cream, to which has been
added a little cream cheese.
Mix together the ham and sauce
and fill the cases with the mixture. Cut gherkins lengthwise in four quarters,
then each quarter in two almost to the end. Now stick two of these well into
the centre of each case, having the uncut ends downwards, and with a small
rose-pipe, force some cream in centre of pieces, bringing it a little higher
than the gherkin and thus making an imitation of a hyacinth. Having mixed the
crumbs and peas and passed them through a sieve, place round the hyacinth in
imitation of moss.
Serve cold, garnished with
parsley.
Sufficient for 8 savouries.
Artistic Savouries (London,
1922?) by E. Sheridan.
I love living in the Internet age -- this book is available at archive.org.
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