Or, why I like The Joy Of Cooking so much.
I know, it looks like strange bedfellows, but keep reading . . .
If you’ve never had crème fraîche, I recommend trying it. It’s kind of like sour cream, but a little less sour and much more subtly flavored. And expensive, at least here. It’s a cultured food, so we figured that if some of the cultures are still active, we might be able to get more crème fraîche by adding some of what we had to some plain cream. Good quality organic heavy cream is about 1/4 the price per ounce of crème fraîche, at least in Flagstaff, AZ.
And in fact, if you look up crème fraîche in the KNOW YOUR INGREDIENTS section at the back of The Joy of Cooking (I love that part of the book), they suggest as a substitute: adding one tablespoon of buttermilk to one cup of heavy cream, warming it to 110° F on the stove, and then pouring in into a jar, letting it set loosely covered “until the cream has thickened and has a pleasant mildly sour flavor,” anywhere from 6 hours to 3 days.
We tried the same thing, using one tablespoon of store-bought crème fraîche to one cup of cream. And, almost three days later, tada! It’s funny because it looks like nothing is happening for quite a while, the cream still very liquid, and then finally a few more solid clumps appear, and the then bam! it’s done. Once it gets as thick and mildly sour as you would like, store it in the fridge to keep it from becoming overly acidic.
These directions say to leave it in a warm place while the cultures are working. Our house is short on warm places in the winter, so the first time I tried it, I left the little jar near the stove, figuring that whenever I heated something up it would get a little warmth. That was the time it took almost the whole three days, but definitely worked. The next time, I actually forgot to heat it at the beginning, I just added 1 tablespoon of the first batch to one cup of fresh cream and stirred it around. I thought it might benefit from a warmer place, so I put it in the middle of the burners on the stove as I was cooking dinner, checking from time to time to make sure the jar was getting warm, but not hot, and to rotate it around a bit. That time the whole jar had become thick crème fraîche by the next morning!
Ok, so once you have some crème fraîche, kohlrabi is probably not the first thing you are inspired to put it on. Dolloped in soup or on waffles might sound more luscious, and both are wonderful. But, if you’ve never had kohlrabi, I definitely recommend it. It’s one of those winter vegetables that looks knobbly and scary on the outside, but on the inside has a lovely subtle flavor, in this case a little cabbage, a little nutty, and quite good.
I tried one recipe for kohlrabi salad earlier this winter, but I thought the amount of lemon juice in the dressing overwhelmed the soft flavors. If you look up almost any specific vegetable in Joy, it will tell you not only whether it is good raw or cooked, and how to cook it, and whether to peel it first, but it also gives a list of flavors that compliment that veggie particularly well. That features was a huge help when we joined our local CSA – even though I had never heard of most of the greens we got, they were almost all listed, and I could figure out at least whether they were for cooking or salad, and what they were likely to taste like.
Under kohlrabi it says, among other things, that it goes well with cream, parsley, and dill. As do carrots, and so . . .
Recipe Sketch: Kohlrabi and Carrot Salad with Crème Fraîche
This makes enough for 2 or 3 servings, feel free to make more!
Peel, taking off the woody outside layer (chew on a bit if you are not sure), 2 small kohlrabi
Scrub one medium carrot (I pretty much never peel carrots)
Grate the kohlrabi and carrot on the largest teeth of your grater (a trick I only recently figured out is to leave the carrot top as a handle, start grating from the skinny end, and stop when you get almost to the top).
Put these in a bowl, add 2 – 3 tablespoons of crème fraîche, and mix with your fingers, it should be slightly creamy all over.
Sprinkle on about a tablespoon each of chopped fresh dill and fresh parsley. (Remember how I keep herbs in a jar in the fridge? Dill keeps practically indefinitely that way.)
Mix together, taste, and add a pinch of salt if desired. If you are not serving it right away, you may find that the veggies have absorbed some the liquid and the salad is a little dry, if so you can add a little more crème fraîche or regular cream before serving.
I love all harmonious delicate flavors in this salad. And, as you might guess, some crème fraîche mixed with the cream for carrot and raisin salad is pretty great as well.
If you can’t find any crème fraîche to start from where you live, you may be able to get the cultures from a source like New England Cheesemaking Supply.
I did a little research on using the same process to make perpetual yogurt, which I’m embarrassed to say I’ve never tried, but it’s now next on my list of kitchen projects. From what I’ve read so far it seems only slightly more complicated, heating the milk, I presume to kill of any unwanted bacteria, then adding the yogurt or culture once it’s cooled back to warm.
What about you – have you made your own crème fraîche or yogurt, or other cultured food? Any tips or thoughts?
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You made your own creme fraiche?! That’s pretty cool. And I have wondered for ages what kohlrabi are called in English. How funny that it’s the same as the German name.
I’ve never made any dairy products from scratch (except butter from overbeating cream). But Germany is definitely dairy heaven, you can get everything at the supermarket. Cream, sour cream, schmandt (which is like creme fraiche but with less fat content), creme fraiche, creme double (which, I recently found out, is the same as English clotted cream)… also, yoghurt, quark, ricotta and mascarpone… 😀
Ha, easy translation of that I guess! I wonder what they are called other places?
I have made butter that way too, both on purpose and by accident. 🙂 My mom spent a semester or two in Germany when she was in college, and I’m pretty sure she lived on bread and various kinds of dairy . . . she still talks about quark, which I actually saw at our gourmet market the other day for the first time. It probably costs something ridiculous here though, and now you’ve got me wondering what else I could make!
This sounds delicious!!!!! Can’t wait to try myself. Thanks for the idea.
Yay! You’re welcome!
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