All About Apples

September 14, 2004

   
 


Home | Restaurants by City | Food Photography | Archive | Philosophy |


 

Search this page

2006

January
February
March
 

2005

January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

 

2004

January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

 

2003

January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

 

2002

August
September
October
November
December

 

2001

December

Tuesday, September 14, 2004, 10:37 PM

| | Permalink


For the next few posts we're going to take a tour of the dishes featured in our new digital cookbook - All About Apples. Writing about food is like dancing about architecture. Words can't really describe how something tastes. But that didn't stop us from trying. Before each recipe we try to describe how the dish should end up.

Dungeness Crab wrapped in Red Delicious Apples. When you serve a meal with eight courses, first impressions count. When you’re done eating the first course, your mind should be racing with the possibilities of what might show up in the next seven dishes. Making a strong impression requires restraint on the part of the chef. Too large a quantity, or flavors that are too strong, could narrow your palate and make the rest of the meal drudgery. Lampreia’s Dungeness Crab wrapped in Red Delicious Apples strikes the perfect fragile balance. Think crab cannelloni. The flavor of the crab filling is soft and detailed and almost sweet. And in that context the paper-thin apple wrapper is almost salty. But after a moment the apple is slightly sour and a different kind of sweet than the crab. The apple wrapper is super thin and wrapped tight tight tight. The crab meat has flaked into small pieces and it ends up as a creamy center with the homemade mayo. It would be wrong to call the large pieces of crab on the side “garnishes”. They’re too generous for that. The slight amount of extra virgin olive oil drizzled across the dish gives a warm base flavor for all the other ingredients. The olive oil and the apple literally and figuratively wrap the crab in flavor. Tasting these subtle flavors is like going to the country and seeing stars you couldn’t see in the city with all the city streetlights competing for your eyes’ attention. Your mouth and your imagination are now attentive and alert. Your palate is clear and ready for what’s next.


 

Our Sponsors

 

 

 


Your Ad Here


 

Free Travel Guides

Current guides to favorite
destinations around the
world. Hotels, Gourmet
Food, Shopping, Sights,
Travel tips and more.
USA, Europe, Asia,
Africa, Middle East.

www.hottraveltips.com

 


 

Online Loans –  Conversion Strategies –  College Courses –  Surprise Birthdays –  Online Trading - Calendar and Event Schedules - Food Events and Calendars - Wine Events and Calendars - Digital Photography Resources - Jewish Gifts and Judaica - Howard Stern Podcast ponytailed blogger Jonathan Schwartz


Blog Roll

 

101 Cookbooks | à la carte | The Food Section | Amateur Gourmet | Candy Blog | The Cheese Diaries | Cooking with Amy | Iron Chef | Obsession with Food | Orangette | Phat Duck | I Heart Bacon

 

 

 

 

 


Home | Restaurants by City | Food Photography | Archive | Philosophy |

 

 

Hit Counter

Comments, questions, or feedback: info / at / tastingmenu / dot / com
All pages Copyright (c) 2001-2006 tastingmenu.com

Last modified 09/15/04.