Here's the classic French escargot, plump vineyard snails drowning in herbed garlic butter. Old recipes are pretty slow and labor intensive, starting with purging the snails by feeding them cornmeal or something similar, then boiling and cleaning them before finally replacing them in their shells and broiling them with "snail butter".
I did not pick plump snails from my neighborhood vineyard! I bought the snails cleaned and precooked in a can, and I bought the snail shells on Amazon.
You see them here served in snail shells on a snail dish. I bought the dishes on Amazon for pretty small money, and special snail tongs for picking up the hot snail shells without spilling the yummy butter.
If you have the snail dishes, then you can do without the shells and the tongs and simply serve them in the wells of the dish with the melted snail butter in the wells, but this is a more eyecatching way to serve them. Please see the notes below.
This recipe is for 18 snails, because that what comes in a small can. The snail dishes that I found hold seven, but on the other hand not all of my diners was ready for a full dish of these garlicky mollusks.
We have new neighbors, a fine friendly couple named Mike & Maryann. We invited them over for a Provencal Feast on Sunday, December 17th, 2023. I selected Provencal food because it's different from what we usually see in Plymouth, it's popular with many people, and it was a chance to bring a splash of sunny southern France into our gray December day.
We normally start with an Aperitif in the Living Room, but the Christmas tree made that room too crowded so everything was in the dining room. For the aperitif, we opened with Absinthe cocktails and chilled Lillet Blanc, and:
Here's a beautiful and substantial salad suitable as a main course for a light lunch or on a picnic. It is full of the sunny Mediterranean flavors of southern France: olives, tuna, anchovies, tuna, tomatoes. I made this one in December for a special feast, so I used sun-dried tomatoes instead of "fresh" ones, and it was great.
This exquisite anchovy-based spread is wonderful on crudites or on toasted baguette rounds. It's the kind of recipe that leaves your guests wondering what all the flavors are. This recipe is said to come from the occultist, folklorist, and "celebrated gastronome" Count Austin de Croze (1866-1937), by way of Martha's Vineyard restaurateur, cookbook author, and cycling enthusiast Sarah Leah Chase's Pedaling Through Provence.
Here's a tasty salty-sweet spread from Provence that is easy to make in quantity. Use good olives, not the woody canned variety. If you cannot get the figs, 1/3 cup of fig jam is an acceptable substitute. Serve this on crackers or on toasted baguette rounds, or with crudites.