Monday, November 1, 2010

LOST Magazine - A Taste for Tonka

LOST Magazine - A Taste for Tonka

A Taste for Tonka

by Ramin Ganeshram

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Trinidad has three mountain ranges, offshoots of the Andes that race down the South American continent from Venezuela, from a Trinidad that was rent millennia ago. From a boat far into the sea, the perspective and sheer size of these ranges make them loom large, appearing as three single peaks, when in fact they are razor-backed ridges that segregate the north, central, and southern regions of the island from each other. This mirage led Columbus to name the island La Trinidad, or the Trinity.

The cool valleys in the crevices of these many peaks make ideal cocoa country: it's shady enough to protect Trinidad's prized trinatario cocoa, the world's finest cocoa, from the blistering equatorial sun. Here live the descendants of the cocoa paynols (a pidgin version of the word cocoa espagnoles), laborers who came from Venezuela in the 18th century to pick the prized cacao that today lies mostly foundering in the fields as Trinidad's fortunes now come from its rich oil and gas reserves.

Theirs are bygone ways. These paynols — the cocoa Spanianards still speak a smattering of old-world Spanish, their troubadour music is an entrenched part of local culture, and bush medicine is practiced here. Cocoa remains king, particularly in the cocoa tea they drink — a mixture of pure cacao beans and local spices, like cinnamon, nutmeg, bay leaf, and tonka bean.

Tonka bean grows in pods on an ancient hardwood tree valued for building and for smoking meats in the true Trinidadian boucanee (buccaneer) style. The seed is white and pulpy and must be allowed to dry, wizen and darken until it looks like an obscenely huge, hard, black raisin.

It is not so foreign, really. If you've ever bought a vanilla-scented candle or perfume, you know tonka bean. Sometimes it is called "vanillin," a name that cheapens it for it is not a mere copy of vanilla but a self-contained microcosm of heady scent redolent of pear, warm spices, rich soil and, yes, vanilla. Once it was used to flavor tobacco, before the FDA determined that it contains a toxic substance and banned it for food import.

Tonka bean contains coumarin, a blood thinner that, in large quantities, can be deadly. But used traditionally, in micrograins to flavor cocoa tea, or steeped in rum to provide a unique scent and taste to baked goods, it surely cannot harm. In all the years I traveled to the island with my Trinidadian father, I never heard of anyone dying from ingesting the small quantities of tonka used.

Still, now that it is a forbidden fruit, few people use tonka in Trinidad, and those who do certainly don't admit to it. Now Trinidadians use something called "mixed essence," an entirely artificial substance that can even be found in Caribbean grocery stores in the U.S. In the UK and France, however, Trinidad tonka bean is sold to any gourmand willing to pay roughly a dollar for the one-inch seed. Limit two per customer.

As a chef, culture writer, Trinidadian, and person obsessed with foods I can't have, I've gone to extreme lengths to secure this precious pod, traveling into the mountainous cocoa paynol enclaves to secure five or six, then mixing them into a bag of homemade granola replete with Brazil nuts, which are roughly the same size. The granola was a ruse to smuggle the tonka back home to the U.S., and it worked. But when I got them here and carefully fished them out from the mix, my courage failed me. For months, I worked on getting up the nerve to use them, but the warnings of sudden death kept floating through my head, and eventually they became so stale it was a lost cause.

Still, it plagued me that the commercial mixed essence that most West Indians associate with our baked goods was, in fact, a lie. Having eaten goodies made with real tonka, I know mixed essence is just a pitiful copy of the lost elixir that our grandparents used readily.

I realized I could do the purveyors of the culinary fakery that is "mixed essence" one better — by making my own. Using pure vanilla extract, warm tropical spices, and other pure essences, I could alchemize my own approximation of the tonka tisane.

It's been an experiment that has gone on for years.

Just when I think I've gotten it right, I go back to Trinidad and wrangle a taste of something secretly made with "the real thing" and I know my blend is just not there yet. It has become my white whale, my Rachmaninoff piano concerto, my Gordian knot. Perhaps, one day, I'll master it. Or, if I can ever get my hands on some again, I'll get up the nerve to toss them in rum and make the real thing myself.

For now, though, I keep trying, hoping my taste memory serves me well enough to realize when I've finally achieved a close approximation of the fleeting flavor. Below is my version — for now at least.


Faux Tonka Essence (Trinidadian Mixed Essence)

Makes 1 cup

1 cinnamon stick
¼ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
2 tablespoons dark rum
½ cup pure vanilla extract
¼ cup pear essence
¼ cup almond extract
2 drops orange blossom water

1. Using a mortar and pestle, crush the cinnamon stick into small pieces about 1/3-inch long. Place the cinnamon in a small, sealable container with the grated nutmeg and the rum. Set aside for at least one week and up to two. Check the mixture every couple of days to ensure the rum is not evaporating. If necessary, add a bit more rum and reseal to reduce air flow.

2. Strain the rum mixture into a sealable, dark-colored glass jar and add the remaining ingredients. Seal and shake gently.

3. Store in a cool, dry place. Use in baked goods in place of vanilla.


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AUTHOR BIO:

RAMIN GANESHRAM is a journalist and professional chef and the author of Sweet Hands: Island Cooking From Trinidad & Tobago (Hippocrene NY 2006; 2nd expanded edition 2010) andStir It Up (Scholastic 2010) and The Pass It Down Cookbook(Smiley books/Hay House 2010). In addition to contributing to a variety of food publications including Saveur, Gourmet, Bon Appetit, and epicurious.com, Ganeshram has written food/culture/travel articles for Islands (as contributing editor);National Geographic Traveler; Forbes Traveler; Forbes Four Seasons and many others. She is a contributor to theEncyclopedia of World Foods (Greenwood Press 2010) and has been a peer review for the Journal of Food, Culture and Society.

For two years she volunteered as a reporter, writer and editor for Molly O’Neill’s magnum One Big Table (Simon & Schuster, November 2010) exploring the foodways of real Americans through history and today.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Nouvelle Irish Trinidad: The Ice Cream Caper

Today my colleague and fellow Stuyvesant HS alum, noted food writer Melissa Clark of the New York Times posted a Facebook query about thickening ice cream sans eggs. To achieve this, normally, I use a traditional gelatin like Knox brand for the purpose. It's something I do when I don't want the yolk flavor to dominate a more delicate profile like that of coconut.

But today Melissa's query made me think.

In Trinidad--and Jamaica, Montesserat and Barbados for that matter--islands with a colonial history of Irish indentureship we have something called Sea Moss drink. It's made using carrageen, or Irish Moss. In Ireland, a milk pudding called Carrageen Pudding is made with the stuff. The seaweed is dried and tossed into the scalding milk and sugar that is the first step to making the dessert. The moss contains a gelatin akin to agar agar, and when the milk mixture is cooled it becomes firms.

When I met the inimitable Myrtle Allen of Ballymaloe House a few years ago, she served me this treat, made from carrageen that she had gathered from the County Cork shores near her home and then dried herself. Later it occurred to met hat Sea Moss Drink, like our Christmas Black Cake, were the last remnants of the Irish influence on Caribbean culture.

So, today I decided to mash the two recipes together and give Coconut Ice Cream a go, using Irish Sea Moss or Carrageen as the thickener.

It worked just fine.

Here's the recipe (and one for Sea Moss Drink) from my book Sweet Hands: Island Cooking from Trinidad & Tobago (Hippocrene Books 2010)

Thanks Melissa!


Coconut Ice Cream (Thickened with Carrageen)

4 ounces Irish Sea Moss (Carrageen) or 1 envelope unlfavored Knox gelatin

2 tablespoons whole milk
2 cups heavy cream
2 cups coconut milk
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup unsweetened shredded coconut
1/2 teaspoon mixed essence or vanilla extract
1 teaspoon coconut extract
Sweetened shredded coconut flakes, for garnish

  1. If using gelatin, Sprinkle the gelatin over the whole milk and set aside to dissolve.

  1. If using sea moss, place it with  the cream and coconut milk in a saucepan along with the sugar. Mix well and bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Reduce the heat to a simmer and continue to stir until the sugar is totally dissolved.

  1. Remove the pan from the heat and add the shredded coconut,, mixed essence and coconut essence. Add the gelatin mixture (if using Knox brand) and mix until totally dissolved.

  1. Allow the mixture to cool completely in the refrigerator, remove the carrageen stems, if using, then pour into an ice cream maker. Freeze, following the manufacturer’s directions.
  2. Pack ice cream into 2 quart containers and freeze overnight until solid. Serve garnished with coconut flakes, if desired.

Sea Moss Drink

4 10 ounce servings

To me, what’s most interesting about Sea Moss or Irish Moss drink is that it seems to be one of the few remaining connections to the Irish indentured laborers that were prevalent on Trinidad, Jamaica, Montserrat, and other English colonies in the Caribbean. On a trip to Ireland, I tasted Carrageen Pudding. made from milk, sugar, and thickened with dried Irish Sea moss.  From the first spoonful, I noticed the resemblance to Sea Moss drink that is version of the same pudding using evaporated versus fresh milk with a shake-like consistency. Both the pudding and the drink is something of an acquired taste and is thought to be a constitution fortifier in both lands.

2 ounces dried sea moss (available in Caribbean markets)
Juice of 1/2 lime
4 cups evaporated milk
1/2 cup sugar
2 teaspoons Angostura Bitters

1. Place the sea moss in a bowl with the lime juice and 1/2 cup of water. Allow to soak overnight.

2. Drain, place in a saucepan with 2 cups of water, and bring to a boil. Lower the heat and simmer until the sea moss looks like a wad of jelly. Remove the pan from the heat and cool.

3. Place the sea moss mixture in a blender with the evaporated milk and sugar. Puree for 1 minute, or until smooth. Add the bitters and serve over crushed ice.




Thursday, June 10, 2010

Props to a Great Caribbean Chef

Puerto Rico, being part of the United States, is often forgotten as a member of the Caribbean. I'm fortunate enough to be friends with--and sampled the amazing dishes of--a wonderful Puerto Rican chef, who I also count as a Caribbean sister: Chef Daisy Martinez

Daisy is a truly amazing person. One who is not only talented in the kitchen but truly kind of heart--I know this first hand from her generous emcee'ing services for the Food4Haiti fundraiser I put together after the earthquake early this year.

Since I'm a believer in "what comes around", I've started a petition to the committee of the New York Puerto Rican Day Parade to consider Daisy--a native daughter of NYC of Puerto Rican descent--as a candidate for Grand Marshall in 2011.

You can sign the petition here: ChefDaisy4GrandMarsh

Or join the facebook page here: Chef Daisy Martinez for PR Parade 2011 Grand Marshall

Please consider joining and signing...One Love!

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

A Special Toast!

Memorial Day Weekend is the unofficial beginning of the celebratory feel of summer. If you are looking for a good libation that is juicy, fruity, sweet, sparkly--in short, everything that summer really is, check out this recipe for Rum Punch.

And while your sipping, please raise a toast to Kamla Persad-Bissessar the first Female Prime Minister of Trinidad & Tobago! Here's to you Madame Prime Minister!!  

Trinidad Rum Punch

20 (4-ounce) servings

Rum punch is a standard party libation, and in 2004, Angostura, the bottlers of the famous bitters and a major rum manufacturer, began bottling various versions for mass distribution. Convenient though this may be, a rum punch recipe is a family tradition and I doubt many folks will abandon theirs. Here is mine.

1 small mango, peeled and chopped, or 1 cup frozen ripe mango, thawed
1 cup sliced fresh or frozen strawberries
1 cup fresh or canned pineapple chunks
1 (4-ounce) can mandarin orange slices with juice
1/4 cup maraschino cherries
1/2 teaspoon coconut extract
1/4 teaspoon mixed essence
2 teaspoons Angostura bitters
1/2 pint dark rum (such as Old Oak or Myer’s), chilled
2 cups tropical fruit juice (such as Welch’s Tropical Passion Juice from concentrate)
1/2 pint coconut rum, chilled
1 liter ginger ale, chilled
2 cups sparkling white wine (such as Freixenet), chilled
1 navel orange, unpeeled and sliced into 1/4-inch rounds
1 star fruit, sliced horizontally (1/4 inch thick)

1. In a large punch bowl, combine the mango, strawberries, pineapple chunks, mandarin orange slices with their juice, and maraschino cherries. Add the coconut extract, mixed essence, Angostura bitters, and rum. Place the bowl in the refrigerator or set over crushed ice, and allow the fruit to macerate for at least 1 hour and up to overnight.

2. Stir the tropical fruit juice into the fruit mixture. Gently pour in the ginger ale and sparkling wine so as not to lose too much carbonation. Float the orange slices and star fruit slices on top. Serve over crushed ice. 

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Cocoa Short Ribs

Braised short ribs are a classic French preparation and I've seen many a continental and Asian twist on the form. Working on my new book--a culinary mystery with recipes--I came up with this version as part of a five course meal served at a posh fictional dinner party in Port of Spain. Precious Trinidad cocoa, among the finest and most sought after in the world, make up the rich flavor that is the backbone of the dish. I suggest serving it with "stiff polenta" or Coo Coo as we call it: cornmeal with okra.  Enjoy.


Trinidad Cocoa Short Ribs
 Makes 6 to 8 servings

2 tablespoons canola oil
6 pounds bone-in short ribs
1 1/2 cups finely chopped onions
1/4 cup finely chopped shallots
1/4 cup finely chopped celery
1/4 cup finely chopped peeled carrots
3 garlic cloves, minced
1 cups dry red wine
1 cup good quality dark rum, such as Trinidad Royal oak
1 tablespoon Angostura Bitters
3 cups low-salt chicken broth
2 cups chopped drained canned diced tomatoes
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
1 very large fresh thyme sprig
2 leaves Mexican culantro (shado beni) chopped roughly
1 bay leaf
1 cinnamon stick
3 tablespoons shaved or grated bittersweet Triniatario chocolate such as AMadei Trinidad Dark bar
2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder (preferably Dutch-process)
1 teaspoon finely chopped fresh rosemary

1.     1. Heat heavy large pot over medium heat. Add canola oil. Sprinkle ribs with salt and pepper. Working in batches, brown ribs in pot over medium-high heat until brown on all sides, about 8 minutes per batch. Transfer to plate.
2.   2.   Add onions and next 4 ingredients to pot. Cover, reduce heat to medium, and cook until vegetables are soft, stirring occasionally, about 10 minutes. Add wine, rum and Angostura Bitters. Boil uncovered until liquid is reduced by half, scraping up browned bits, about 5 minutes.
3.     3. Add broth, tomatoes, parsley, thyme, culantro (shado beni), bay leaf, and cinnamon. Return ribs to pot, cover partially, and simmer 1 1/2 hours. Uncover and simmer until rib meat is tender, stirring occasionally, about 1 1/2 hours longer.
4.    4.  Transfer ribs to plate; discard bay leaf and cinnamon stick. Spoon fat from surface of sauce. Boil sauce until beginning to thicken, about 8 minutes. Reduce heat to medium.
5.   5.   Add chocolate, cocoa powder, and rosemary; stir until chocolate melts. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Return ribs to pot. Simmer to rewarm, about 5 minutes.

Coo Coo (Stiff Polenta with Okra)
4 servings

This thick cornmeal cake is a delicious if heavy side dish that is ideal for sopping up the juices of stewed meats.

1 cup coconut milk
12 okras, stemmed and sliced into 1/2-inch pieces, or 1 cup frozen, sliced okra
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 cup cornmeal

1.  Lightly grease a 2-quart bowl and set aside.
 2. Mix 1 cup of water and the coconut milk in a saucepan. Add the okra and bring to a boil. Lower the heat to a simmer and cook until soft, about 5 minutes.
3. Add the salt and black pepper, and mix well Add the cornmeal slowly, mixing constantly. Continue stirring vigorously while cooking over medium-low heat. Cook until the mixture holds a stiff peak, about 15 to 20 minutes.
4. Pour into the greased bowl and smooth the top. Allow to set for 1 to 2 minutes, then invert onto a plate. Slice and serve. 

Thursday, April 8, 2010

How To Make Rice

Rice is a huge staple in Trinidadian cuisine. This is because of the huge (nearly 50%) East Indian descent population that lives on the island. Growing up, we ate rice nearly every day. This was not only because of Trinidad heritage but because my mother was Iranian--another culture that could exist on rice alone.

Being of mixed rice stock, I've learned one thing. While others may eat rice prodigiously, Iranians are easily the master rice makers of the world. As a result, I use the Iranian rice-cooking method whenever I make this grain--even in classic Caribbean cuisine. The method can vary from complex to fairly simple. Chelo, a method that requires washing and presoaking the rice, then parboiling and steaming, takes time and patience but produces beautiful results. However, the short method, which still requires washing, but less cooking time is incredibly easy and virtually no fail for fluffy grains--as long as it is followed precisely.

Here is the simple method--called kateh in Farsi. The real key is to make sure the rice is washed well. Additionally, I use high quality basmati rice, and Lal Qilla brand is my favorite.


Plain Rice

1 1/2 cup basmati or other long grain white rice

2 teaspoon canola oil or ghee

1 1/2 teaspoon salt

 

1.     Place rice in a deep bowl and add enough cold water to cover by 1 or 2 inches. Swirl rice around with your hand until the water becomes cloudy and then gently pour off the water being careful not to pour out the rice. Repeat this process 2-3 times or until the rice washing water runs clear. Drain rice.

2.     Place rice in a 2 quart saucepan (preferably nonstick)  and add enough water to cover the rice by 1/2 inch from its surface.

3.     Add the canola oil or ghee and the salt. Mix well and place over a medium heat.

4.     When the rice begins to simmer, mix well one more time and watch carefully. When almost all the water is absorbed and “crab holes” begin to form in the rice, lower heat to low and place a doubled up paper towel or  clean dish towel over the top of the pot. Place the pot lid firmly over this, pressing down to make a tight seal.

5.     Cook rice, allowing it to steam, for 15-20 minutes more. Remove lid and fluff.