WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2019 The Boston Globe G5
Serves4
Last month, Popeyes and Chick-
fil-A were duking it out over who
makes the best chicken sandwich.
Other fast-food giants took notice
while Twitter went crazy, food writ-
ers tried to keep up, and just about
every restaurant that ever slapped a
piece of chicken between two halves
of a bun tried their own versions.
Popeyes’s newest menu addition is
based on a breaded and fried chick-
en cutlet set on a brioche bun with
pickle slices and regular or spicy
mayonnaise. It turns out to be fairly
simple to make at home. Instead of
breading and frying the chicken,
brine the breasts before seasoning
them with paprika, dry mustard,
black pepper, and cayenne. Then,
saute them quickly in a skillet. Few-
er calories, just as good. Layer a bri-
oche bun with Sriracha-mayo, pick-
les, shredded lettuce, and the
breast. This sandwich might not
have quite the same cache as your
favorite fast-food joint, but when
the local franchise slaps a note on
the door apologizing for its inability
to keep up with demand, you’ll
know what to do.
1 cup water
1 tablespoon salt
1 clove garlic, crushed
4 skinless, boneless chicken
breasts (1½ pounds total)
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
1 pinch cayenne pepper
¼ cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons chili-garlic sauce
such as Sriracha
1 tablespoon white miso
1 tablespoon canola oil
2 tablespoons butter
4 brioche buns, halved
horizontally
12 pickle chips
1½cups shredded iceberg lettuce
1.In a large bowl, combine water,
salt, and garlic. Stir well to dissolve
the salt. Add the chicken breasts,
and make sure they are fully sub-
merged. Refrigerator for 1 hour.
2.In a bowl, stir together the papri-
Chicken sandwich with spicy mayonnaise
Serves4asamaincourse,6asan
appetizer
The hot summer this year pro-
duced very sweet corn. Turn it into
a chowder with chunks of golden
potatoes, with poblanos and hot
sauce for a slight heat. It’ll bring a
warm finish to cooler evenings. A
bit of cream stirred in at the end of
simmering enriches the broth.
Thicken the chowder with beurre
manie (also called kneaded butter;
think of it as a floured neighbor of
the roux). For beurre manie, use a
fork on a plate to mash 3 table-
spoons of room temperature but-
ter with 3 tablespoons of flour un-
til they form a smooth paste. The
paste will give body to the chow-
der, without adding lumpiness,
and avoid giving it a floury taste.
While comfort is always in season,
this corn and potato chowder — as
a main course or appetizer — will
keep you firmly planted in sum-
mer nostalgia.
4 ears fresh corn, shucked
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 onion, coarsely chopped
Salt and pepper, to taste
2 stalks of celery, coarsely
chopped
1 large poblano chile, cored,
seeded and chopped
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 bay leaf
2 medium Yukon Gold or Yellow
Finn potatoes (1 pound total),
cut into ¾-inch dice
4 cups chicken stock
1 cup water
1 tablespoon liquid hot sauce,
or more to taste
½ cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons butter, at room
temperature
3 tablespoons flour
Juice of 1 lemon
2 tablespoons freshly snipped
chives (for garnish)
1.Set an ear of corn on a cutting
board and working from the thick
to the narrow end, cut off 2 rows
of kernels. Turn and cut off 2 or 3
more rows, and continue until all
the corn is off the cob. Repeat with
all the ears. Transfer the corn to a
bowl.
2.In a soup pot over medium-high
heat, heat the olive oil. Add the on-
ion with a generous pinch of salt
and cook, stirring occasionally, for 3
minutes. Add the celery and contin-
ue cooking, stirring occasionally, for
3 minutes more. Add the poblano
and cook for 2 minutes.
3.Add the garlic and bay leaf and
cook, stirring, for 2 minutes.
4.Add the corn, potatoes, chicken
stock, water, and hot sauce. Bring to
a boil, lower the heat, and simmer
uncovered, stirring occasionally, for
8 to 10 minutes, or until the pota-
toes are almost tender.
Spicy corn
and potato chowder
5.Stir in the cream and let the mix-
ture simmer for 3 minutes, or until
the liquid reduces slightly.
6.Meanwhile, on a plate with a
fork, mash the butter and flour to-
gether to make a paste.
7.Turn the heat down to medium
so the chowder is barely bubbling.
Remove the bay leaf. With a rubber
spatula, scrape the butter-flour
paste into the chowder, stirring un-
til it is fully incorporated. Simmer
for 2 minutes more, stirring often;
the chowder will thicken.
8.Add the lemon juice. Taste the
chowder for seasoning and add
more salt or hot sauce, if you like.
Ladle into bowls and garnish with
chives.Lauren Allen
SHERYL JULIAN FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
SEASONAL RECIPES
WHAT TO COOK THIS WEEK
ka, mustard, black pepper, and cay-
enne pepper.
3.In another bowl, stir together the
mayonnaise, chili-garlic sauce, and
miso; refrigerate.
4.Remove the chicken breasts from
the brine and pat them dry with pa-
per towels. Sprinkle both sides with
spice mixture.
5.In a skillet over medium-high
heat, heat the oil. Add the chicken
and cook 5 minutes on a side, or un-
til a meat thermometer inserted in-
to the thickest part of the breast
registers 165 degrees.
6.In another skillet over medium
heat, melt 1 tablespoon butter.
Place 4 bottom halves of brioche,
cut sides down, in the skillet. Toast
for 1 to 2 minutes or until well
browned and warmed through. Re-
peat with the remaining 1 table-
spoon butter and the brioche tops.
7.Spoon the spicy mayonnaise onto
the 4 bottom buns. Add 3 pickle
chips to each and a sprinkling of
shredded lettuce. Top each with 1
chicken breast. Close the sandwich-
es with the top buns.
Karoline Boehm Goodnick
KAROLINE BOEHM GOODNICK FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE
By Michael Floreak
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
It’s hard to remember a time before so-
cial media made instant celebrities of the
latest bistro, cocktail bar, or fast-casual res-
taurant, and the heavily tattooed young
chef behind them. Or when culinary inno-
vations originated in New York and San
Francisco, rather than Portland, Ore.; Pitts-
burgh; or Nashville. James Beard award-
winning writer Kevin Alexander remem-
bers. Alexander traces the seismic shift that
occurred in the American food scene be-
tween 2006 and 2018 in his new book,
“Burn the Ice: The American Culinary Rev-
olution and its End.”
Alexander looks at rapid changes of the
time by telling the stories of the people who
were part of it, from Gabriel Rucker’s Le Pi-
geon in Portland to Andre Prince Jeffries
whose family recipe for Nashville hot chick-
en inspired a national craze. Alexander,
who grew up in the Boston area and served
as the Boston editor for Thrillist in 2008,
spoke about the book from his home in
Northern California.
Q.Why did you choose to begin the story in
2006?
A.That was the year that social media really
started to take off, which gave
restaurants and bars this
megaphone to kind of guerrilla
market on their own. Television
in America dramatically
changed and improved with the
launch of “Top Chef” that year
and the second season of Antho-
ny Bourdain’s “No Reservations.”
That was right around the time
of the launch of all the food blogs.
Eater gave us 24/7 chefs as celeb-
rities and cultural coverage, and
Serious Eats was sort of the ama-
teur food nerd paradise.
Q.How did Portland in 2006 become the
model for so much of what came after?
A.The hottest restaurant group, Ripe, had
just imploded, so there was a lot of talent
wandering around. You saw folks scraping
around to do these creative small projects,
like Andy Ricker’s Pok Pok and Gabriel
Rucker’s Le Pigeon. I think when expecta-
tions are low and everyone thinks you’re
going to fail anyway, you can end up doing
really creative things, and I think that’s
what Portland captured. But it was that
aesthetic, sort of the bold, challenging dish-
es, the sautéed lamb’s brain with mustard
crème fraîche, and foie gras profiteroles
and all of that sort of stuff.
Q.How did things spread to every corner of
country?
A.I call it the New York food mafia, but the
big food magazines and food publications
that at that time really dictated what people
focused on. And they started to put their
sights on Portland, and those independent,
chef-driven restaurants with
that sort of aesthetic, the Edi-
son bulbs and the reclaimed
wood and the farm-to-table
food and the craft cocktails.
Those places really started to
blossom. Portland had no culi-
nary reputation. These other
cities like Austin, Texas, and
Nashville could see Portland
do it, and that kind of created
this template.
Q.Pretty quickly a lot of
young chefs and other cities followed.
A.They’re seeing people like Gabriel Ruck-
er, who’s 26 years old and getting named
like Food & Wine’s best new chef and get-
ting James Beard awards. And they’re like,
why do I have to wait staging and as a sous-
chef in these San Francisco and New York
restaurants? Why don’t I just go back to my
hometown, open my own place for cheap,
and do these things and get a name for my-
self? You kind of saw that mind-meld
spread all across the country. You could set
up shop anywhere where there were cheap
rents and enough young people and clien-
tele to attract. That was sort of this cool, ex-
citing, really wild-west time in a lot of these
second-, third-, fourth-tier cities.
Q.How has this food revolution changed
urban areas?
A.Beforehand you would say the best res-
taurants are going to be in the best neigh-
borhoods, because they were going to
spend the most money. What switched was
that these people, in order to be as creative
as possible with the food, needed the
cheapestrents.Andsothattheywouldgo
to places that you wouldn’t necessarily
think of as food destinations. So there’s al-
ways this line between revitalization and
gentrification. That was why I was really
fascinated by Freret Street (in New Or-
leans). In 2008 after Katrina, everyone
said, you’re crazy to go and buy this build-
ing to the guys from [cocktail bar] Cure.
And then by 2011 it was, wow, look at all of
these other places that have been built up
around. And in 2018, there are about 24
restaurants and you’ve got chains like The
Halal Guys and Blaze Pizza and you’ve got
the condos coming in.
Q.You say that some of the same factors
that drove the growth of this revolution are
driving its end. How so?
A.We haven’t had a recession in 11 straight
years. But what that means from a restau-
rant perspective is that landlords can raise
rents for 11 straight years. You think about
the rising food costs. You think about the
market saturation — there are 100,000
more restaurants in America today than
there were 10 years ago. Now that social
media spreads ideas very quickly, you can’t
keep your idea to yourself. If you have a
good restaurant idea, it’s going to be docu-
mented on social media within the first few
weeks of you opening. You don’t have a
chance to work out the kinks anymore, be-
cause everyone is documenting exactly
what you’re doing.
Q.As we move to whatever comes next,
how have things changed for the better?
A.There’s the overall idea of food as a part
of our culture. I think there’s a lot more
consciousness to the way we think about
where our food comes from, the way we
think about the quality of the food and the
diversity of food. I think that people are
much more open to eating non-Western
European foods. I’m excited about the level
of knowledge about food and the expansion
of curiosity and interest in foods from other
places. That’s not going to go away.
Interview was condensed and edited.
Michael Floreak can be reached at
[email protected]. Kevin
Alexander will talk about “Burn the Ice” on
Wednesday, Sept. 25, at 7 p.m. at Wellesley
Books, 82 Central St., Wellesley, 781-431-
1160.
Q&A
KEVIN ALEXANDER
LIZ DALY
‘Youcouldsetupshop
anywherewherethere
werecheaprentsand
enoughyoungpeopleand
clienteletoattract.’
Mapping
our culinary
revolution
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