giveaway: ‘the smitten kitchen cookbook’ (and deb perelman's leek fritter recipe)
DEB PERELMAN, author of “The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook,” would make a good gardener—except there’s no room in her tiny New York City kitchen for another measuring cup, let alone flower pots. But she’s (self-admittedly) obsessive, and describes her mantra as “where there’s a will there’s a way,” and then there’s this: Her recipes read like love notes to suitors that include rhubarb (tenderly coaxed it into hamantaschen cookies); zucchini (formed into sensual ribbons, then tossed with almond pesto for a salad); and ‘Butternut’ squash (tucked into a comfy, ample gallette with carmelized onions). She loves the ingredients I love to grow, among many others, and I love this new book. Win it (and get a sample recipe now).
I first met Deb Perelman in my former life, when I worked for Martha Stewart. It was late 2007 or early 2008—a millennium ago in internet years—and we’d invited in a group of bloggers we admired to get better acquainted. Deb sat to my left (and beyond her was Heidi Swanson of 101Cookbooks.com, with the founders of Apartment Therapy and theKitchn.com across the table, and more). I think that gathering is what crystallized my intention to start a website: such an inspiring group.
But I digress. If you haven’t visited Smitten Kitchen, prepare to be entertained, educated, and called to action.
DEB PERELMAN is a self-taught home cook, and is funny in that self-deprecating way I love (often using the cross-out strikethrough key on her editing dashboard to good effect). On the blog, and in the new cookbook, Deb invites you into her kitchen, and family, teaching you (her Tips section online alone is worth a visit, let alone all her recipes) while tempting you. You always come away hungry…until you get out the ingredients yourself and make what’s cooking.
Like maybe Deb’s “desert island dish,” Roasted Tomatoes and Cipollini Onions with White Beans. Or Linguini with Cauliflower Pesto, or (if it’s breakfast time, perhaps) Baked Ranchero Eggs With Blistered Jack Cheese and Lime Crema, or Cinnamon Toast French Toast (smartly baked in a casserole, not one piece at a time in the fry-pan).
Or maybe, whatever time of day or night it is, you’ll make a latke.
“I maintain that if you are limiting your latke consumption to the eight nights of Hanukkah, you’re missing out,” she writes in the notes accompanying her Big Breakfast Latkes recipe. But some days, maybe a latke-avatar is more to the point.
Like, perhaps, a fritter?
“At some point in the last few years, fritters became my favorite things to cook,” Deb writes, “and by fritters I really just mean latkes but without potatoes. I’ve made them with everything from zucchini to apples, and I’m not even close to tiring of the format.”
One that caught my attention: her Leek Fritters with Garlic and Lemon. In another of those Smitten Kitchen veggie love notes, she says:
“I’m a little obsessed with leeks. First, they’re gorgeous. A cross section appears like the rings of a tree, with gradients from Shamrock Green to Unmellow Yellow (or so says my son’s box of crayons), and I want to wear it.”
The leek fritters can be made tiny, she advises, for a party snack, or full-sized (and even with a fried egg on top, as dinner). Deb says they freeze well, and are easily re-crisped in the oven, so plan to make plenty. The recipe follows.
leek fritters with garlic and lemon
yield: about ten 2½- inch fritters
- 2 pounds (905 grams) leeks (about 3 very large ones)
- ½ teaspoon table salt, plus more for pot
- 2 scallions, trimmed, halved lengthwise, and thinly sliced
- ¼ cup (30 grams) all- purpose fl our
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- Freshly ground black pepper
- Pinch of cayenne pepper (optional)
- 1 large egg
- Olive or vegetable oil, for frying
garlic lemon cream
- ½ cup (120 grams) sour cream
- 1 tablespoon freshly squeezed
- lemon juice
- Few gratings of fresh lemon zest
- Pinches of salt
- 1 small garlic clove, minced or crushed
prepare the batter Trim the leeks, leaving only the white and pale- green parts. Halve them lengthwise, and if they look gritty or dirty, plunge them into cold water and fan the layers about to remove any dirt and grit. On a cutting board, slice the leeks crosswise into ¼- inch strips. Bring a pot of salted water to a boil, and cook them for 3 to 4 minutes, until they are slightly softened but not limp. Drain, and wring them out in a dish towel or a piece of cheesecloth.
Transfer the wrung-out leeks to a large bowl, and stir in the scallions. In a small dish, whisk together the fl our, salt, baking powder, freshly ground black pepper, and cayenne pepper, if you’re using it. Stir the dry ingredients into the leek mixture, then stir in the egg until the mixture is evenly coated.
cook the fritters Preheat your oven to 250 degrees, and place a baking sheet covered in foil inside. Stack a few paper towels on a large plate. In a large, heavy skillet— cast iron is dreamy here— heat 2 tablespoons oil over medium heat until it shimmers. Drop small bunches of the leek mixture onto the skillet—only a few at a time, so they don’t become crowded— and lightly nudge them flatter with the back of your spatula. Cook the fritters until they are golden underneath, about 3 minutes. If you find this is happening too quickly, reduce the heat to medium- low; I find I have to jump the heat back and forth a lot to keep it even. Flip fritters, and cook for another 3 minutes on the other side.
Drain the fritters on paper towels, and transfer them to warm oven while you make the remaining fritters.
I like to let the fritters hang out in the oven for at least 10 minutes after the last one is cooked— they stay crisp, and this ensures that they’re cooked through, even if they finished quickly on the stove.
to serve Whisk together the garlic lemon cream ingredients until smooth. Dollop on each fritter before serving. These fritters are also delicious with a poached or fried egg on top. Trust me.
do ahead Fritters keep well, either chilled in the fridge for the better part of a week, or frozen in a well-sealed package for months. When you’re ready to use them, simply spread them out on a tray in a 325-degree oven and heat until they’re hot and crisp again.
more from smitten kitchen
how to win the cookbook
I’VE BOUGHT TWO EXTRA copies of “The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook: Recipes and Wisdom from an Obsessive Home Cook,” to share with you. All you have to do to enter to win is comment below, answering the question:
Do you have a “favorite thing to cook” the way Deb Perelman refers to those latke-lookalikes called fritters? For me, I guess it would be soup, or frittatas. Every ingredient here finds its way into one of those concoctions.
Feeling shy? No worry; just say “count me in,” and I will. But if you feel like sharing, all the better. Two winners will be chosen at random when entries close at midnight Friday, December 7. Good luck to all.
(Recipe and photograph excerpted from THE SMITTEN KITCHEN COOKBOOK by Deb Perelman. Copyright © 2012 by Deb Perelman. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Deb Perelman photo by Elizabeth Bick.)
(Disclaimer: Books purchased from any Amazon links in this story yield a small commission that I use to buy books for more giveaways.)
I love, love to cook soup ion cool, damp days. And here where I live in New York Stat, that means eight months out of the year! Always looking for new recipes, too!
My favorite thing to cook is roasted vegetables. Vegetables of the season, a flavorful oil, fresh herbs/spices and you’re good to go! It’s rarely the same dish as the last time I made it, but so far always delicious.
I am still a fledgling cook who burns herself making soup, but I’m absolutely in love with Deb’s recipes and I can’t wait to make them ALL! I would be thrilled to win one of these cookbooks!
It isn’t something that I have made in a long time, but these leek fritters reminded me of them. They are chickpea balls with similar ingredients and they are absolutely delicious! After many trips to Greece (where I first had them) I had to make them myself and they are absolutely delicious. Thanks for the giveaway, would love a copy of the Smitten Kitchen Cookbook!
mmalavec(at)med(dot)umich(dot)edu
That’s a REALLY hard question! I love to cook and feed my boys. I guess it would have to be chili. I live in Texas so I think I might break some sort of law if I said something else. One of my favorite recipes for “6-pack chili” starts with: “drink a beer and read the directions”.
For me, it is soup as well – from October through May. In the summer, it’s grilled vegetables, which go into or on top of everything else that I cook.
chocolate chip cookies are my go-to
Hi, ok, I love to make crepes. There is a rhythm to ladling and turning the batter as the crepes cook and then the wonderful possibility of what to put in them….savory and sweet. We often make a dinner of crepes with ham/cheese a green salad and then follow up with lemon sugar or banana nutella ones for dessert.
Love smitten kitchen and have this book on my list this year. I also love your website- divided my hellebores because of you and have been checking in ever since!
LA
Braised beef of any kind is my winter favorite. Love the rich smells in the house.
Count me in. I love cooking just about everything. Soups are probably my favorite as well. I love Mushroom Barley the best!
My favorites are casseroles… I like having it all in one bowl… And lots of leftovers!
For me it would be roasted veg. What ever is in season can be tossed in flavoured oils and roasted then used in all manner of ways – over pasta, as a side, in sandwiches, currey, soups anything. There is always a batch in my fridge ready to be made into something.
Eggs. You can do just about anything with them, they’re fairly inexpensive (even when you buy the best), they’re usually pretty quick, and they go well with almost anything. We have eggs for dinner at least once a week around here.
I love roasting things – mostly I use my weber grill, but when it’s too cold outside (Colorado) I occasionally wimp out and use the oven. Nonetheless, whether its a roast, pork, butternut squash, whatever, roasting makes me feel like I am COOKING, not just warming something up…
Lately, my favorite thing to cook has been sourdough bread. It seems like magic!
Please count me in. I love, love Deb’s “Granola Crusted Nut” recipe as featured on her blog. Oh yum. Can’t wait to try the leek fritters.
This is an almost impossible question! There are so many things I love to cook. My favorite (and super-quick) recipe that uses something from my teeny, tiny garden is arugula/garlic/tomato sauce over pasta. Yum….
Muffins!
I love to make leek and potato soup on a cold winter’s day. Yummy.
It’s so hard to choose but I adore making anything with potato dumplings! I’m “famous” in my family for them. Chicken and dumplings, Italian sausage and tiny dumplings with marinara sauce (divine), etc! The favorite would be dumplings with pork and sauerkraut. I kick it up a bit by adding tomatoes, onions, a little bacon, and a bit of white and brown sugar. Not a meal to cook often (due to calories and fat) but for special occasions!! I would love this cookbook!
roast chicken
I love to bake and make soup/stew. Soups are so easy and there are always plenty of leftovers!
Count me in.
I love to cook up a pot of perogies with onion and red peppers and of course, BACON ! They continue to “call my name” until they are all gone (even for breakfast), so I never make too many or make them too often. :)
Pie any kind of pie!
Roasted root vegetables. Or chocolate chip cookies.