Sassafrass, the office cat, looks at a computer keyboard and
thinks: “I could pee there.” I looked past the waiter at my wife’s Pompano en
Papillote, and thought: “I could cook that.”
At least I do now.
I have had fish prepared en papillote here and there over
the years, and it’s pretty neat - meal in a bag, French name, and all that; but
when all was said and done, however nice
the broth and herbs, it was to my Southern fried mind just steamed fish and
vegetables.
Then the Pontchartrain Hotel reopened, and the Caribbean
Room was back in business. My wife and I dined there one night, and she ordered
the Pompano en Papillote. The waiter really made a big deal about it, but I got
the duck, secure in my choice, and maybe a little sorry for my wife.
Then they brought out the Pompano. An inflated, oven-browned
bag, radiating heat and the subtlest fragrance. Very cleverly - masterly, even
- our waiter broke out the scissors and snipped the bag, fashioning a workable entrance
which opened like French doors of crackling parchment. The steam rose and a
marvelous aroma kicked in, and for the moment I forgot my duck. You could see
the Pompano, gleaming between the leaves. The waiter stepped in with a china gravy
boat, and, muttering ‘crab meuniere,’ poured a stream of rich, creamy crab-filled
something right through the French doors - and I thought to myself it’s not just steamed fish anymore.
The duck was plenty good, but I resolved that next time I
dined there, it would be the Pompano.
It had been a specialty of the Caribbean Room many years
ago, in another lifetime. I came along too late for that, but people are still
talking about those glory days, about the marvelous Caribbean Room and its renowned
chef, Louis Evans. I’d even picked up a copy of the cookbook that was published
just after his death.
And now I have picked it up again. Chef Louis’ Pompano en Papillote is in there. This
son of a Mississippi sharecropper was no stranger to a fancy dish with a fancy
French name - French cuisine was his stock and trade, and he was a master. Some
(many) of the most famous people of
his time - presidents, great artists, legendary entertainers - would dine at
his table. It was his style to put the seafood sauce in with the fish before
closing the bag. That might have its virtues, but I liked the drama of the
china gravy boat.
Chef Louis prescribed what looks to have been a custard with
crab and shrimp. And there were no vegetables to accompany the fish in the bag.
(I believe there were vegetables in my wife’s, but I have to take her word for
it, because she refused to share.)
Not so sure about the cookbook, either. Sometimes I suspect
that fundamental instructions (which to wiser hands might be implied) are
simply omitted - things like “reduce by half,” perhaps. And the listed
ingredients don’t always square with the instructions. When six egg yolks are
involved, a guy wants to be sure about the measurements.
But I can cut and slice, and I can make a sauce (or at least
some of them). And I was pretty good with a pair of scissors
back in Vacation Bible School, before, you know, they kicked me out.
back in Vacation Bible School, before, you know, they kicked me out.
And that turned out to be the hardest part.
The Picayune can take you only so far, and then one must resort to the internet. There were more than a few dead ends before I found the right place. Federal Express botched the first attempt, and was going to let me bear the cost (which they could have done legally, for I was stupid enough to waive signature receipt); but the worthy fish monger would not see a customer disappointed - they actually said that - and saved the day. I recommend these people wholeheartedly https://www.citarella.com/.
The Picayune can take you only so far, and then one must resort to the internet. There were more than a few dead ends before I found the right place. Federal Express botched the first attempt, and was going to let me bear the cost (which they could have done legally, for I was stupid enough to waive signature receipt); but the worthy fish monger would not see a customer disappointed - they actually said that - and saved the day. I recommend these people wholeheartedly https://www.citarella.com/.
Prepare the
vegetables. You will want between half a cup and a cup of assorted
vegetables for each filet.
Take five or six interesting vegetables. Like a few rainbow
carrots, a red onion, fennel bulb, some pearl onions, some grape tomatoes and
green peas - frozen are fine.
Cut the carrot, as much as you will need, into thin strips,
2 to 3 inches long, and no more than a quarter inch thick, because they won’t
have long to cook. Same thing with the red onion. Cut thin fan shaped slices
from the fennel bulb. Peel your pearl onions - which will involve boiling them
for three minutes, snatching them from the water to cool, then removing their
jackets. Throw in some grape tomatoes and peas. Anything you want. You decide
how much.
Do not mix them up; keep them in separate bowls.
Load the parchments.
Onto the center of each sheet of parchment, next to the
crease, apportion like amounts from each bowl of vegetables, making a pile of half
a cup, or a little more.
Lay a filet, its edge alongside the parchment crease, over each
pile. If it seems too long for your sheet of parchment, cut it in two and stack
the halves. Season with salt and pepper, Cajun seasoning, anything you like.
Place pats of butter and lemon slices on top. Strategically position fennel
fronds, sprigs of thyme and dill. Drizzle over all some olive oil, and a little
white wine - not too much, maybe a teaspoon or two for each packet.
Sealing the
parchment.
Fold the other half of the parchment sheet over the fish,
and get the edges as lined up as you can. Videos aplenty are on the internet.
There’s more than one way to do it. You can practice with the rotogravure. (It’s
not every day you can use that word.) The usual method is kind of ad hoc, just
a matter of taking a corner on the crease side, bending it inboard till its upper
edge is against the mound in the middle, and then smoothing it down - really hard.
Then move further down, a little at a time, adjusting the angle a bit
each time so as to make the edge follow the outline of the mound, making a
series of folds. When you finish you might have a half moon shape like mine -
or if the filet isn’t very long, it might be more like a circle.
Or better yet (though I have as yet to stoop so low) - use a
stapler.
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.
Make the sauce.
1/4 C minced shallots
2 sticks butter
3 T flour
1/2 C white wine
1 C fish or chicken broth
1 C heavy cream
1/2 t salt
1/2 t cayenne
1 C picked crab
3/4 lb peeled shrimp
In a 2-quart saucepan, melt a stick of butter. Add the
minced shallots, 3 T’s of flour, and start whisking. Cook for at least a
minute, maybe two. Then reduce heat to low and slowly add 1/2 C white wine
(sweet or dry, whatever you like), give it another minute; then slowly add 1 C
broth and the remaining stick of butter, whisking all the while. When all the
butter is melted, slowly add (still whisking) the cream, the salt and cayenne.
When the thickness suits you, fold in the crab, cook until it is thoroughly
heated through; add the shrimp, and when they are nicely poached, you’re done.
Put the packets on a baking sheet.
Bake the parchments
Put the baking sheet with your parchment packets in the preheated
oven. Set the timer for 20 minutes.
The packets will be inflated and browned.
Serving the packets.
Plate the packets. Then with scissors cut a short, wide “H” (with the middle bar of that “H” running lengthwise) in every packet, fashioning those French doors I was talking about.
Or, in the real world, you can stand idly by with your
useless scissors as your guests ignore your instructions and simply open the
packets with their fingers.
In any event, your assistant should be standing by to pour
about half a cup of sauce into each packet as it is opened.
A New Orleans Spaghetti Bordelaise is a good accompaniment, for
it really knows what to do with a Cajun cream sauce. You could in fact dump the
contents of your packet on a mound of spaghetti and drench it in sauce. And don't forget the crusty French bread.
Which wine to pair with Pampano en Papillote is an easy choice, because, as a friend reminds me, and as Edward G. Robinson unforgettably explains (click below for dramatic illustration) -
Champagne and Pompano - they really go together.
Which wine to pair with Pampano en Papillote is an easy choice, because, as a friend reminds me, and as Edward G. Robinson unforgettably explains (click below for dramatic illustration) -
Champagne and Pompano - they really go together.