When The Guardian gave a
column to a vegetarian-friendly chef a few years
back, I was excited. Was the zeitgeist shifting and vegetarian food becoming
mainstream? I didn’t mind if he was an omnivore (after all, I’m a pescetarian
but a huge promoter of vegan food), anything that makes a plant-based diet sexy
is good enough for me.
Melbourne foodbloggers adopted Yotam Ottolenghi with gusto.
I wanted to love him but the more I scoured his recipes, the less accessible I
found them. Being dairy-free rendered 70% of his dishes inaccessible without a
lot of adaptation. (And I hate to admit it, I carry a bit of a grudge that the
aforementioned column segued from vegetarian to meat-centric a while later).
When Cindy suggested the next cookalong be Ottolenghi
themed, I thought it was time to tackle my difficult relationship with his
work. Once more I requested
Plenty from the local library and poured
over the padded tome. It was difficult. So many of his ingredients didn't lend
themselves to our seasonal availability. But I figured with
celeriac in season, I’d give his Celeriac and Lentil
Salad with Hazelnuts and Mint a go.
While I could source all of the ingredients at Vic Market,
the simple salad rung up a hefty toll – puy lentils (or the equivalent) $11 a
pop, bunches of thyme and mint, celeriac (two small organic left little change
from a tenner), red wine vinegar, hazelnuts…I drew the line at hazelnut oil and
substituted with some macadamia I had at home.
The recipe is not officially online but has been reproduced
by others in the blogosphere. This
version’s authentic, though the blogged recipe is not metricized. From memory the Australian edition of
Plenty called for about 600gm of
celeriac).
In a (hazel) nut shell the recipe is simple but rendered unnecessarily fussy. Toast the hazelnuts (60gm) in their shells, cook the puy
lentils until al dente, boil the celeriac and mix together in a dressing made
with olive oil, hazelnut (or in this case macadamia) oil, “high quality” red
wine vinegar, salt, pepper and lashings of fresh mint. The recipe called for
cooking the lentils with thyme and bay leaves, which didn’t really add any
extra flavour.
Overall the salad was healthy but lacking in zing. An entire
bunch of mint didn’t particularly enliven the dish (perhaps in summer the
essential oils in the herb would pack more punch but then celeriac would be
difficult to find) and the dressing needed more acidity. Some roughly chopped
parsley instead of mint, an extra slug of vinegar and a heavier hand with the
salt may have made it a little tastier.
The entire meal, however, was a raging success. Last year
five of us got together to make an
vegan, Indonesian-themed shared lunch. It was lovely
to chop, cook, chat and eat with a bunch of healthy-food minded
people. This time
Cindy and Michael hosted and
Kristy and
Toby came along to fire up the wok. Who’d have thought you
could get five food bloggers in the same kitchen and cook without ego or (too
much) chaos?
We feasted on Ottolenghi-inspired gluten-free, vegan food.
Michael quietly whipped up a borlotti and green bean masterpiece, Cindy made a
bejewelled
roasted cauliflower salad and Kristy fried up
black pepper tofu in a tasty sauce, while Toby veganised this
polenta cake using egg replacer and olive oil.
But wait there’s more.
Cindy
roasted rhubarb and whipped coconut cream* flecked with
lemon zest (oh my what a heart stopping vegan treat!), which went perfectly with
Toby’s polenta cake. It was one of the best vegan desserts I’ve eaten in a long
time.
So am I an Ottolenghi convert yet? If I was Joyce of
Hot Or Not fame,
based on the lentil salad alone, for me
Plenty is a definite “not”. But I loved
everyone else’s dishes, the camaraderie of the kitchen, Michael’s thoughtful
Flying Nun heavy play list and those wonderful desserts.
* Serendipitously Jess Cox posted this simple recipe for
whipped coconut cream this morning. A simpler
version but just as rich. My gallbladder would like to warn you that delicious
as it is, limit it to a very small serve. Labels: celeriac, cookalong, cooking with friends, dairy-free, gluten-free, hazelnuts, mint, Ottolenghi, photos, Plenty, puy lentils, salad, vegan, vegan desserts, vegetarian, vic market