Friday, March 11, 2011

French Fridays with Dorie: Beggar's Linguine, and its Inspirational French Confection

This week's French Fridays with Dorie recipe, from Around My French Table: More Than 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours, comes from La Ferrandaise, a bistro near the Luxembourg Garden in Paris. The dish is called Beggar's Linguine, or Linguine Mendiant.

Mendiant translates as beggar, but the word is actually used more often to describe a French confection composed of chocolate disks topped with nuts and dried fruits, and sometimes accented with candied orange zest. 
  
Apparently, the chef at La Ferrandaise's, with his "very creative culinary mind," was inspired to create a savory version of mendiants, sans chocolate. He tossed pasta with browned butter, chopped almonds, pistachios, raisins, dried figs, grated Parmesan, and a pinch of orange zest. 


Dorie loved this pasta when she was served it for the first time...it hit the spot when she was cold, jet-lagged and hungry. It must be tough, flying back and forth between New York and Paris, but a plate of pasta, at a cozy, rustic bistro, makes it all better.

I loved this pasta when I prepared it for the first time because I didn't have to spend too much time in the kitchen after a day of lawyering, and because I love just about anything involving pasta. The bit of sweetness from the dried fruit is nicely balanced by the nutty butter, salty Parmesan, zest and parsley.

I whipped this up a few weeks ago, before the March recipe schedule was even announced, with ingredients already on hand. I used Marcona almonds, after falling in love with them in this salad.


I should have been content, dedicating this post to Beggar's Linguine. It's not like I have too much time on my hands, and can just mosey into the kitchen at every whim. But there are exceptions, especially when chocolate cravings are involved.  And in this case, I needed to experience the inspirational French confection behind Beggar's Linguine.


If you can temper chocolate, toast a few nuts, and cut up dried fruit, you can create these decadent chocolate disks in no time at all. I started small, with about 4 ounces of bittersweet chocolate. For toppings, I used variations of Marcona almonds and pistachios, dried cherries, apricots, and pears, and a few pieces of crystallized ginger.  Here's a recipe, but I used David Lebovitz' method for tempering chocolate, here.


Although not a traditional mendiant, I couldn't resist drizzling a few of the disks with Bourbon Caramel Sauce, left over from our beignet weekend, and a sprinkle of Fleur de sel.


Now I'm content. I have a new pasta recipe, and a new chocolate dessert, both of which can be quickly and easily prepared.

Mendiant is a traditional French confection composed of a chocolate disk studded with nuts and dried fruits representing the four mendicant or monastic orders of the Dominicans, Augustinians, Franciscans and Carmelites. Each of the nuts and dried fruits used refer to the color of monastic robes with tradition dictating raisins for the Dominicans, hazelnut for the Augustins, dried fig for Franciscans and almond for Carmelite. Usually found during Christmas, recipes for this confection have veered away from the traditional combination of nuts and fruits to other combinations incorporating seeds, fruit peels and other items (Wikipedia).

French Fridays with Dorie is an online cooking group dedicated to Dorie Greenspan‘s newest book, Around My French Table. As members of the group, we have purchased the cookbook and cook along as much as we can. There is a new recipe each week, and we post about that recipe on Friday. We are asked to refrain from posting the actual recipes on our blog. Dorie always tells a personal story behind each recipe, which makes it that much more intriguing. Dorie has posted the recipe for Beggar's Linguine, on her own blog, here.


 




15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your mendiants are beeeeyoootiful! Your pasta looks delicious too!

Lindsey said...

Loved it! And love your Newf!

Anonymous said...

I'm impressed you made the chocolate confection that inspired the pasta dish! Kudos to you! I know how tiring lawyering can be because I'm one as well!

Candy said...

Completely impressed with both your pasta and the candy!

I love marcona almonds too.

Tammy said...

Your photos are so pleasing to look at and make the food look so good! Beautiful chocolates, too!!

Tia said...

wow, that is gorgeous. both the pasta and the chocolate! wway to go!

Adriana said...

You have a textbook 'scrolldown yum' post. Pasta... that looks great! Mediants... oh wow, those look amazing! Bourbon caramel + salt on chocolate... kill me now, please! Glad to hear you had fun with these.

Cher Rockwell said...

Oh, you had me at the caramel & chocolate... Pretty cool!

kitchenarian said...

I love your pasta AND your candy! What a great job - both look delicious. Love your pictures and your post.

chefpandita said...

Great idea! Those mendiants look delicious.

Unknown said...

Wouldn't it be fun to 'have' to jet back and forth between Paris and NYC? Instead here I sit in the middle of the country watching for signs of spring. Now I want to try mendiants....and beignet weekends.

Betsy said...

I did not love this pasta dish, but I think I would love your mendiants. I'll those to my "to try" list. Thanks for the inspiration.

Steph said...

Can I come live with you? Your mendiants look so absolutely lovely. I would like three right now!

bunkycooks said...

Can we prepare both the pasta and the dessert when we come and visit? I could not make a choice between the two!!

Lana said...

I skipped this week's recipe because I knew that my family would not have enjoyed it (I would be the only one who appreciated it:)
I am so glad that so many people liked it! I'll just have to wait for a day when I am by myself:)
Those confections look really lovely and I can imagine that they taste divine.
Lovely photos!