Monday 5 November 2012

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

The Silver Palate was born of the women’s movement. The co-authors, Sheila Lukins and Julee Rosso, a caterer and an advertising executive respectively, realized that they couldn’t have it all and dinner too. (“There were school schedules, business appointments, political activities, art projects, sculpting classes ... weekends in the country or at the beach. ... It was much too much,” they later wrote.) If they couldn’t be wonder women, they figured, who could? So just days after the blackout of ’77, they filled the niche with a nook: the Silver Palate, an 11-by-14-foot shop on New York’s Columbus Avenue stocked with tarragon chicken salad, ratatouille, salmon mousse and brownies made from scratch. “The city was primed,” Lukins said recently over lunch in Manhattan. Indeed, that same year the gastro-temple Dean & DeLuca also opened.The Silver Palate has an over-the-top French toast recipe. By using croissants instead of regular bread, and cream instead of milk, it is enough to harden anyone's arteries. This is a slightly healthier version of French toast, still using the Triple Sec and orange zest that gives the Silver Palate recipe its punch.If there’s such a thing as boomer cuisine, it can be found in the pages of “The Silver Palate Cookbook.” With its chirpy tone and “Moosewood”-in-the-city illustrations, the book, published in time for Mother’s Day in 1982, gave millions of home cooks who hadn’t mastered the art of French cooking the courage to try sophisticated dishes like escabeche, wild mushroom soup and that new thing called pesto. 

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes

Silver Palate Recipes


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