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About I See You Everywhere Julia Glass's Guest Author Blog Julia Glass's Scalloped Oysters with Bacon
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FEATURED AUTHOR RECIPE
In I See You Everywhere, the story of two very different adult sisters, the eldest, Louisa Jardine, prides herself on her culinary skills (though she’s an artist and writer, not a professional foodie). Yet she also admits that her “favorite strategy for holding panic at bay” is to immerse herself in feeding others. At a crucial point in the book, when she is struggling simultaneously with her health and her prospects for becoming a mother, she makes an elaborate meal for her boyfriend that culminates in a painful quarrel . . . and, ironically, a flawless soufflé, which emerges from the oven “lofty as a delusion.” Harking back nearly 20 years, to a time when I became obsessed with mastering, even inventing, soufflés, I summoned up for this scene one of the most unusual desserts I’ve ever made, the Spiced Tea Soufflé from a wonderful 1970s cooking classic called The Making of a Cook, by Madeleine Kamman. Its bold assortment of ingredients includes crystallized ginger, orange rind, cloves, macadamia nuts, and, for its bergamot perfume, Earl Grey tea. Taking the liberties of fiction, I made Louisa’s confection an “oolong-ginger” soufflé, simply because I love the exotic echoes in the word oolong; “Earl Grey” didn’t strike the right note. In real life, however, I’d stick with the original version. It’s divine. Julia Glass photo credit: Peter Ross Spiced Tea Soufflé Adapted from The Making of a Cook (Weathervane, 1971) by Madeline Kamman 1 heaping teaspoon (1 teabag) Earl Grey tea
Yield: 6 servings
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