Then I use the garlic oil to create a sauce vierge, a slightly acidic raw sauce to which I add freshly chopped parsley. In this version, I confit the garlic on the stove in olive oil, until it is soft and sweet. Persillade is a French culinary expression that means that something is done with garlic and parsley-a common crust for lamb or filling for baked shellfish. I sweeten them up with a drizzle of port syrup, and serve them with a persillade sauce vierge. They are marinated with herbs and port and then grilled until they are pink inside, and crusty and charred on the outside. These are lamb lollipops, Frenched chops cut from the bone, which create perfect grilled finger food for these hot summer months. Grilled Lamb Lollipops with Port Syrup and “Persillade” Sauce Vierge Perhaps, to them, it seems like the biggest city in the world. I often see out-of-towners who come to visit New York staring up at the great buildings, and turning around at the grand avenues. And one time, when Polly was sick with strep throat and I had to journey alone, Rita insisted I take two lollipops-medicinally of course. I would buy my lollipop, and Polly would buy some chewing gum, and then off we would set, armed against the world. I unwrapped it and smiled, sucking happily away as I stared out the window at the thronging streets.įrom then on, every morning for years, our journey commenced with a visit to Rita. Back on the bus in the afternoon, I reached into my bag and fished around amongst pen caps and broken pencil shards until I unearthed my lollipop. But in the afternoon, the teacher did read from Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach, and we had roast chicken for lunch, so the day wasn’t a total loss. All the other girls did know each other, and I didn’t get any gummy bears for finishing my subtraction mad minute in time. I met Polly, and we took the bus, arriving at the old brick schoolhouse. I tucked my sweet pop away in the bowels of my school bag and sighed, thinking of all the hours that would pass until I could reward myself for surviving my first day at a new school. She plucked a purple pop from the box, and leaned across the counter with it. She motioned to a box of Charms Sweet Pops, another 1980s relic of a lollipop that I still love and still insist on finding to give away every Halloween. She was dressed in a flowing skirt that fell from her waist to just below her knees, and a high-necked silk blouse, secured with a silk scarf. I looked up bleary-eyed, and saw a tall, dark lady with crimson lipstick framing a perfect white smile that glowed against her complexion, and cheekbones high as a cat’s. As I scrambled to collect enough coins to pay the bill, I heard her ask, “What’s your favorite flavor?” I went into the drug store to buy a pack of tissues. I was shaking in my penny loafers-and was trying hard not to let anyone see me cry. I had never been on a school bus before, and, come to think of it, never would be again. Our school bus stop was just in front of the Love pharmacy on the corner, and I was waiting for Polly because she was the only girl I knew in what would be a sea of girls who all knew each other. I met Rita on my first day of my new school. And in the great crowd of people in which Polly and I always staged our grand adventures, it was nice to know that one face would light up in a smile whenever it saw us. At the end of my block, just at the avenue, I knew that if I turned the corner I would end up at the Love drugstore, a relic of 1980s New York pharmacies. Not knowing what was around most corners, I was comforted to know what was around one specific corner. Unless, of course, you’re me, and you’re a creature of habit. And on the way to eight hours in a schoolhouse, a little adventure can be much welcome. But we wouldn’t have had it any other way because when you walk in New York City, you never know who or what you’ll see next around the corner. This is not the old, “I used to walk two miles to school every day uphill in the snow” sob story in the arcane lore of parent-child relations (even though that’s exactly what I did!), but I think I am old enough now to decry that my best friend and neighbor Polly and I used to hike to school in our kilts and knee socks in the blistering cold until the veins in our legs ran bluer than the ink that leaked through our schoolbags. The thing I love most about my city is the inimitable ability one has to walk absolutely anywhere. When I was a little girl, I lived on a shady, old-fashioned, leaf-lined side street in the great city of New York. Ĭlick HERE for the column on Serious Eats and the recipe! But it’s more of a personal blog post than a column, so I though I’d put it up here. This is a draft I wrote of this week’s French in a Flash over on Serious Eats.
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