Sherbet Shines with an Unlikely Partner

Take sherbet to the next level by replacing the citrus with quality vinegar. It adds wonderful depth of flavor that shines through.

Cola Concord Grape Vinegar Sherbet Float

I am patiently waiting on summer fruit to get here after a late start. In the meantime, I continue to seek bright and refreshing ideas to keep cool. Sherbet filled the immediate void. It's a wonderful combination of everything that's great about ice cream and sorbet. Untapped potential worth investigating. Give it a shot and you'll understand.

Guidelines for hacking a sherbet base
  • Replace the lemon juice with a delicious vinegar of your choice
  • Replace the dairy with a mix of equal parts cola and sour cream
  • Start with half the amount of sugar
  • Adjust sugar and vinegar to taste after the base is mixed
If you don't have an ice cream machine, try the ChefSteps dry ice process. It's a good time.

As always, please share your ideas so we can all benefit.

Refreshing Reconstitution - Customize Your Dried Fruit

Dehydration of fruits is a tasty concept born of preservation. Due to the concentration in flavor and sugar, it's not pleasing to eat very many without a hunk of cheese, bar of chocolate or handful of nuts to compliment. Mixing them into a backdrop like bread, yogurt, salad or granola is driven by the transformations as you chew. Reconstituting and adding them to a sauce, braise or soup brings depth. I could go on. We all have methods that we know and love, but here's what else.

Ice Wine Vinegar Infused Golden Raisins

I recently discovered that using a rapid infusion technique with golden raisins and ice wine vinegar is delicious. The puffed up former grapes became rebalanced bursting bites that transformed the pasty center into a delightful jam. It became fruit again.

There's lots of potential with infinite combinations of dried fruit and flavored liquid. Maybe a Bloody Mary tomato or olive oil olives? I hope you'll give the process a shot and share what you dream up.


Equipment: 1 pint (1/2 liter) cream whipper, 2 CO2 chargers

Instructions: Add a 1/2 cup of golden raisins to the cream whipper canister. Pour in enough vinegar to cover the raisins. Pressurize the unit with two charges. Refrigerate overnight. When depressurizing, the vinegar will foam so make sure you set up a catch cup. Don't toss the sweetened vinegar. It makes for a great soda.

MOFAD Q&A

Museum of Food and Drink's Meet & Greet
Held on Friday July 19th from 4 to 6 PM ET


Opening


Hi all, welcome to @mofad’s Q&A on Twitter. We have the @mofad team under this handle and Dave Arnold as @cookingissues. #mofad


Q & A


Q2 @cookingissues When did you first have the idea to open a food museum and why do you think it’s important? #mofad


A2 I was at the Museum of Natural History and realized food need a museum on that scale. #mofad


A2 I also realized starting a museum like that is impossible. The solution: start with groups of individual exhibitions #mofad


A2. Make each exhibition as cool and thorough as any exhibition at a larger museum. That's the way to grow. #mofad



Q3. Everyone, what would be your dream exhibit at @mofad? #mofad


A3: Monster “fish tank” labyrinth immersion circulator demonstrating a whole array of low temp cooking techniques. #mofad


@ourcookquest MOFAD meets aquarium, awesome. #mofad


@mofad A3: An exhibit showing what happens scientifically when fermentation occurs. #MOFAD


@_Mark_S Another pet topic here at MOFAD HQ. #microbes #mofad


@mofad A3: Traveling pop-up 'food court', representing different immigrant influences in America. Everything $5 or less. #mofad


@matthewjennings Good idea. Maybe rotate the offerings depending on which region / city it's in. #mofad

Jean Dough ‏@ourcookquest
What would you make for this? RT @matthewjennings A3: Traveling pop-up 'food court'... #mofad


@mofad @matthewjennings A food truck roundup is one way to make such an idea a reality. Makes sense w/#mofad pop up to have mobile partners.


A3: Next pop up exhibit: an oversized chile roaster with serious BTUs. Could tumble roast all sorts of goodness! #mofad


@ourcookquest We'd have people sneezing for miles around! #mofad


@mofad A3: I'd love to see flavor/texture/temperature preferences in major food cultures and how they are acheived. #MOFAD #crunch 


MuseumOfFoodAndDrink ‏@mofad
@_Mark_S We're fascinated by this, too. (Why do Americans hate natto and tororo?) #mofad



Q4 @cookingissues will the @mofad focus on American cuisine? Or more general culinary trends? #mofad


A4 Excellent question. Sometimes we will focus on American topics, but we are interested in the whole world. #mofad


A4 NY is a great place for MOFAD because New York, more than any other US city, represents what happens when the world comes together #mofad



Q5: Everyone, what do you think was the tastiest time in history? #mofad


A5 Throughout history and cultures, people like things that taste good. #mofad


@mofad A5: Now. #mofad


Right now with all the serious creativity, sharing & tech! RT @mofad Q5: Everyone,what do you think was the tastiest time in history? #mofad


@mofad A5: Hmm.. probably Medieval Times. #MOFAD


Nice. Going old school there. RT @IronWhisk @mofad A5: Hmm.. probably Medieval Times. #MOFAD


@mofad Isn't the best time right now? Seriously. What don't we have now that there was
before? #mofad


@PrfctLitlBites Well, we can't eat Steller's Sea Cow anymore. That was so delicious we drove it extinct. #mofad


RT A5 @entreedallas: @PrfctLitlBites @mofad @CookingIssues I hate it when things delicious themselves into extinction. #mofad


@PrfctLitlBites What about Thai cuisine pre-chiles? #mofad


A5 Hannah says: the height of imperial China, only if I were a Qin emperor #mofad


@cookingissues A5 The whole how much should we manipulate food argument. Some things are best left alone. #mofad


A5 Emma says: Japan (more specifically Nagasaki) at the height of Portuguese and Dutch trading #mofad



Q6 How about the reasons to keep backing the kickstarter even though we've made our goals? #mofad


A6 Picture @mofad, now picture a guy with his pants pockets turned inside-out #mofad


A6 We've got just enough to fund the puffer, thanks to all of you, but need help moving forward with other programs #mofad


A6 The kickstarter goals were the bare minimum needed to exhibit the gun. We are by no means flush. #mofad


A6 More backing means we grow faster, can go more places, and it sends a message to NYC govt that we have broad support. #mofad


@mofad A6: Exceeding fundraising goals means ed programming & outreach/education opportunities. #mofad


A6: you guys taking the puffing gun on the road? What would it take to hit the west coast? Sure @evankleiman would like to know. #mofad


@ourcookquest It would take the enough backers and enough resources. We would love to do it. #mofad




@matthewjennings So true! We can't grow without cash. (Sad truth) #mofad



Q7 Have you tried puffing anything unusual? Would meat products like dried shrimp, bottarga & pork skin work? #mofad


A7 We haven't puffed a lot in the gun...yet. Just a couple of test puffs. #mofad


A7 pork skin (any skin) would clearly work. I have wondered about dried shrimp and scallops --and casein gels. #mofad


A7 in principle, anything that can get soft with heat,  without blowing apart, and set on cooling, can be puffed. #mofad


@CookingIssues A7 except for PDiddy. ;) #mofad


@ourcookquest While I can't puff Sean Puffy Combs, I bet I can puff dehydrated cock's combs #mofad


@CookingIssues A7 do you have a dream cereal puffing dough flavor combo? Sweet and savory please. #mofad


@ourcookquest We will definitely be doing some savory work. #mofad


@CookingIssues voting for fish sauced cream of mushroom puff #mofad


@cookingissues A7: is the puffing gun difficult to break? How well does it clean if you put something crazy in it? #mofad


@ourcookquest You clean the gun by tumbling bolts inside of it. No joke. #mofad


@cookingissues very cool. It's all about being industrial. What about residual smells? Sanitation easy? #mofad


@ourcookquest That's what the early cereal gurus wanted -bland, easy to digest pre-cooked starch. Puffs with no milk no sugar no salt #mofad



Q8 Any plans on looking backward to key moments in food/drink history as well as pushing forward? #mofad


A8 Absolutely. One example is looking at how spices drove the Age of Exploration. #mofad


A8 The history of food is vitally important to our mission. We use food as a lens to view history, culture, and science. #mofad


A8 Another: prohibition and how that changed beverage culture in the US #mofad


A8 The temperance movement that pre-dated prohibition is actually tied into the same cultural wave that spawned breakfast cereal #mofad


@cookingissues always thought it would be wonderful to see a cookbook library archiving how home food preparation developed & fads 2 #mofad



Q9 Is overall goal to provide an experience to get folks interested in general, or to really delve into each exhibit? #mofad


A9 Both. #mofad


A9 I don't want anyone to say a bigger museum could do a better job on the subjects we tackle. We must delve in. #mofad


A9: Been to many museums that are general and they turn me off. #mofad


A9 At the same time any exhibit we do has to address larger issues in the history, economics, science, and culture of food in general #mofad



Q10 Why is the puffing gun your first exhibit? #mofad


A10 The puffing gun sits at a great intersection of science, culture, and history. #mofad


A10 It's a lot of what @mofad wants to do wrapped in a shiny, 3200-lb package. #mofad


@mofad can you elaborate on your A10? #mofad


A10 Besides the fact that we just love the Puffing Gun so damned much, it really is a good self-contained starting point for us. #mofad


A10 Plus, the puffing gun is only a preview of a much larger exhibit to come on cereal #mofad


@ourcookquest @mofad Q10 would make a great essay. <--why I asked abt a print companion for #mofad



Q11: What do you want us to try puffing in the puffing gun? #mofad


@matthewjennings @PrfctLitlBites @_Mark_S what do you guys want to put in the puffing gun? #MOFAD


@ourcookquest @matthewjennings @PrfctLitlBites I want to make rice cakes with puffed pork skin, dried shrimp and black rice. #mofad




@_Mark_S Sounds amazing. Puffed black rice is apparently pretty easy to make at home. #mofad


RT @aaronhoskins @_Mark_S @matthewjennings @PrfctLitlBites Pretty sure the talented @brooke_mosley did a Rice Krispie treat like that #MOFAD


@CookingIssues Bringing the rice cake out of the shadows. Maybe puff some peppercorns? #MOFAD


@CookingIssues can you puff ground grains like cornmeal to make micro puffs? #mofad


@ourcookquest I'd think so. #mofad


@ourcookquest Most likely. The guy who discovered puffing (Alexander Anderson) did this with cornstarch #mofad


@CookingIssues would be interesting to find out the optimal sized puff for best texture experience. #mofad


A11: @harold_mcgee wants to try puffing green coffee beans. No guarantee it would be delicious. #mofad


A11: azuki beans, chewy ginger candy, cardamom and nitrogen shattered bubble gum. #mofad


A11: @ourcookquest All at once? Could be good as a topping for anmitsu. #mofad


A11: Piper at @bookeranddax wants to try puffing hot dogs. #NotGoodWithMilk #mofad


Made me think corn dogs! RT @mofad A11: Piper at @bookeranddax wants to try puffing hot dogs. #NotGoodWithMilk #mofad


In my twenties I made a cereal for myself with sugared pork rinds and bean shaped marshmallows. Piggles and Beanies. #GoodWithMilk #mofad


A11: @cookingissues What about tofu skin? #mofad


@mofad A11: Seaweed, BBQ, Gin & tonics...sorry they are on my mind today. #MOFAD


A11: @matthewjennings Seaweed definitely puffable, at least according to a Japanese co. that makes mini puffing guns. #mofad


Which ones? @_Mark_S @matthewjennings @mofad A:11 I'm also interested in pork skin, but also grains in general. #MOFAD


A11: @cookingissues Will you be developing a custom puff ingredient that you can use in a drink? #mofad


@ourcookquest I can't puff stuff for my business in the museum's gun #mofad




Needs a tshirt. RT @CookingIssues: @ourcookquest I can't puff stuff for my business in the museum's gun #mofad


I want to puff grass (any old Stan Freberg fans out there?) #mofad


@mofad @PrfctLitlBites Legumes? Could we do: alfalfa, clover, peas, beans, lentils, soybeans, peanuts? #puffthemagicPUFFINGGUN #mofad


@ourcookquest @_Mark_S @matthewjennings @mofad Been playing with freekeh & bulgur a lot lately. Love to see it puffed #mofad


A11: @PrfctLitlBites Great suggestions. Farro's been getting a lot of love, and freekeh's feeling left out. #mofad


@ourcookquest Herbal things. Can I puff a sage leaf? Pesto bits. #mofad


Can the puffing gun fit up the Yale College TD Bell Tower, and if so will you puff some delicacies over Harvard-Yale weekend? #MOFAD


@RaviDGoel Not in the bell tower, but we could do it on the quad! #mofad


@ourcookquest @CookingIssues @RaviDGoel I want a full auto-puffing gun. #mofad


@kitchenmage These days, commercial puffing guns are fully automated. Ours... not so much. #mofad


That's what interns are for. ;) RT @mofad @kitchenmage These days, commercial puffing guns are fully automated. Ours... not so much. #mofad


@CookingIssues More science to investigate. My geek-cook mind is racing. So many flat things need puffing! #mofad




Puffed malt. That is all. #mofad @mofad @ourcookquest


@amytmaster Perfect. Maybe we can double-puff malted milk balls. #mofad


Don't forget ground green coffee! RT @mofad @amytmaster Perfect. Maybe we can double-puff malted milk balls. #mofad @cookingissues



Q12: Will there be opportunities for traveling exhibits to visit other parts of the country? From @SustainFood4T #mofad


A12 If we can get the money and the interest we would love to visit other parts of the country with our exhibits #mofad



Q13 Going back in history is there any food that U don't know how they made it? (ie food equiv of the Pyramids) from @rubydeubry #mofad


@mofad @rubydeubry #mofad Roman liquamen. No-one knows just how they made it No-one is gonna experiment, either, as the base is rotting fish


@CatzInCowbridge Sally Grainger has been studying and making that stuff. I have tasted some of it. Pretty damned good. #mofad


A13: @CatzInCowbridge Fish sauces could be their own mini exhibit. Japanese ishiri is probably pretty close. #mofad


@mofad @CatzInCowbridge @cookingissues been working on a fish sauce cured bacon! #mofad


#mofad I believe trumpets may have to be involved (in the Proclamation) as well ;)


@ourcookquest It is. Sally Grainger's guts-only 3 year old mackerel Garum is a dead ringer for aged Japanese squid-guts Ishiri #Love #mofad



Q14 Why does sticking your hand in a bag of lentils feel so good? Curious about the feelings touching food inspires. @Erin_Fairbanks #mofad


A14 Peter likes the way the interior of fava bean pods feel. So soft. #mofad


A14: Like how some types of kale are sticky when you tear it. Also quite delicious. #mofad


Q14 Smashing your fingers through buckets of rice or dry beans like iron-fist kung-fu trainees doesn't feel great. But I am weak. #mofad



Q15: Will there be a restaurant in the museum? With puffed stuff?? from @amytmaster #mofad


@amytmaster Most certainly. The whole idea is to tie the restaurant into the exhibitions, to make a holistic experience. #mofad


A15. Once the museum has a space with 3 full-sized exhibits, we will probably have at least a cafe. #mofad


A15 And DEFINITELY no wraps. @cookingissues hates wraps. #mofad


@mofad Chicken club? What planet you from? I eat Turkey Clubs and they is awesome. #mofad


@mofad All good people hate wraps. #mofad


Aren't egg rolls just fried wraps? RT @mofad A15 And DEFINITELY no wraps. @cookingissues hates wraps. #mofad


@ourcookquest Fried wraps are great #Chimichanga #mofad


Fried wraps + lettuce even better #KoreanSsam #winning #mofad


Can @cookingissues suggest a coating so it stays crispy? RT @mofad Fried wraps + lettuce even better #KoreanSsam #winning #mofad


What if you made the wrap interesting using a different grain & nixtamalization? RT @CookingIssues @mofad All good people hate wraps. #mofad



Q16 Where do you think the food industry is heading? We're organic but food is still processed. From @thesugarchef #mofad


A16 Sometimes I am hopeful, sometimes baleful about the prospects of the food industry. One of the reasons to start the museum #mofad


A16: I have the fear that organic will not end up being as beneficial as local with the commercialization. #mofad



Q17 What other demonstrations do you have planned after Boom? from @amytmaster #mofad


A17 We have a lot planned. One is called Food Forum - take controversial food issues and bring experts together to debate #mofad



Q18, take 2: What will be in the museum? Will any of the exhibits be edible? from @HeritageRadioNetwork #mofad


A18 At MOFAD you will see, smell touch and taste real, live food. Another reason for brick and mortar. You can't eat the internet. #mofad


Examples please. RT @CookingIssues A18 At MOFAD you will see, smell touch and taste real, live food... #mofad



Q19 @cookingissues what are your sons' ideas for exhibits? from @ourcookquest #mofad


A19 Booker only wants to think about Russ and Daughters salmon and fish roe, Dax just wants to blow stuff up. #mofad



Q20 Is it feasible you think to puff larger hunks of stuff: fist-sized rather than pellet-sized? from @PopSciEats #mofad


@PopSciEats You have to heat through to the core of the product before the outside scorches. I don't know the upper size limit. Yet. #mofad



Q21 Will the museum have more of a domestic or international bent? from @amytmaster #mofad


@amytmaster Both. To the extent that the history of US food is the history of its immigrants, I don't always have to choose. #mofad


How much money would it take to make all of your @mofad dreams come true? #mofad @ourcookquest


@amytmaster We will roll out in a number of iterations. Puffing gun:150k, Full sized exhibit+gallery 2-3mil, 3 exhibit space 23 mil. #mofad


@amytmaster By the time I'm dead I want the museum in a huge space --100's of millions of dollars (as long as we are talking dreams) #mofad



Q1 What is your favorite breakfast cereal? #mofad


A1 Frosted Shredded Mini Wheats and Life #mofad


@mofad A1: Golden Grahams. #mofad


A1 rice krispies! @mofad Q1 What is your favorite breakfast cereal? #mofad


A1 Cocoa rice krispies to yield crazy sweet chocolate cereal milk! #mofad


A1: Honey Nut Cheerios #mofad


A1: Honey Graham Os! #mofad


@mofad A1 Cocoa Puffs #mofad


@matthewjennings Good one! Do they even make those anymore? #mofad


@IronWhisk A classic. (Though not made in a puffing gun.) #mofad


@mofad A1: Steel cut oats #MOFAD


A1 Sweet cereal was forbidden fruit for Peter as a child so he has a weak spot for Cinnamon Toast Crunch #mofad


@_Mark_S Delicious. Not RTE (ready-to-eat), but we'll let it slide. #mofad


@mofad A1: fave puffed cereal would have to be cap'n crunch! #mofad


@nanasmamee One of our faves. According to our cereal personality test, Cap'n Crunch lovers live on the wild side. #mofad


@mofad good to know! 😜#mofad


I wonder if cocoa nibs can be puffed to make a cocoa puff analog #mofad


Puffed ground coffee for micro bursting caffeine delivery. #mofad


@ourcookquest ground coffee is already partially puffed --coffee puffs as it is roasted. Bet we could puff green beans and post roast #mofad


@CookingIssues what about coffee beans then? #MOFAD





Closing


That wraps MOFAD's first Twitter Q&A. Thanks everyone. <24hrs left on our Kickstarter, help us break $100K http://boom.mofad.org  #mofad


If we hit $100K, Dave @cookingissues does lemonade cleanse, Peter does Special K diet, Emma does Cowboy Diet. Bring the pain! #mofad


Enjoy the weekend everybody! #mofad


@mofad Can't wait to see this become a reality. Huge thx to @CookingIssues for all the ways you've influenced me & the culinary world #mofad


@mofad @CookingIssues thanks for taking the time to let us know what #MOFAD is all about. The potential of this museum is simply amazing.


Thanks to everyone who participated in the #mofad chat!

Museum of Food and Drink's Meet & Greet Tweetup

BOOM! The Puffing Gun

Update: Thanks to the MOFAD team, Dave Arnold and our food community, the tweetup was a huge success. Check out the MOFAD Q&A page to see everything that was shared for you to learn all about this amazing museum. Enjoy!

Please join us on Friday, July 19th from 4 to 6 PM ET for the #mofad Q&A tweetup. We are holding this event to give you an opportunity to chat with Dave Arnold of Cooking Issues and the MOFAD team about the Museum of Food and Drink and its first pop up exhibit: BOOM! The Puffing Gun and the Rise of Breakfast Cereal.

What do you want to know about the museum or the puffing gun? Do you have any other questions you’d like to ask the MOFAD crew? Tweet your questions using #mofad anytime before and during the chat. We’ll select some to post during the tweetup. Please do your best to limit the characters to 125 to allow us flexibility for adding question prefixes.

We organized this tweetup because MOFAD is going to change the way we learn about food and they won't succeed without our community support. They only have until 9 PM on Saturday, July 20  to fund the effort on Kickstarter. Please take the time to check out the explosive video at boom.mofad.org and consider a contribution. Each and every dollar amount, no matter how big or small, counts.

Please feel free to post @mofad to find out more about their effort.

Official abbreviated link to the Kickstarter: boom.mofad.org


Here are some brief instructions for those of you new to Twitter # chats.

Option 1: If you only plan on quickly checking out the chat & posting a few tweets.
·         Use the Twitter search function during the time of the chat and search for: #mofad. This will display all of the tweets with #mofad.
·         If you want to post a tweet to the chat, add #mofad to any part of your post.

Option 2: If you plan on chatting for an extended period
·         Log onto: http://twubs.com/
·         Type in: mofad

A Place for Meeting...

Mache from the Rooftop Garden

I’ve been meaning to write this post for a long time. I’m hoping what I learned from Chef Steve Johnson of Rendezvous will be just as informative to you regardless of the time and place you read this.
It was a cold day with snow on the ground and I was thankful when the kitchen staff let me in. Shortly after I warmed up, Chef shows up and asks me if I’d like a cappuccino. Who could refuse?

We ended up at the bar and struck up a conversation about his citrus trees growing in the restaurant. He discussed the difficulties with the bugs that were a constant battle. He was only able to yield one grapefruit that was zested for use at the bar. He segued into how he had this amazing Meyer lemon jam from a friend's tree. "It was one of the best things I tasted that year." At that moment, I knew this was going to be a fun conversation.

Chef Johnson was flattered that he was being interviewed on the heels of Chef Jose Andres and Harold McGee. I expressed to him that my interest in people of the food world was not based on popularity but what I could learn and share with others.
He began to talk about how On Food and Cooking influenced him. He bought the book shortly after it came out and it was his bedside bible. “I took the book to the beach with me on summer vacation … while my friends were reading paperback detective novels. Once I started reading the book I couldn’t put it down. Twenty years ago, I was completely fascinated by what was inside that book.”
“This is it. It’s exactly what I’m looking for. I understood better the science of cooking and the why behind the how. You take those two building blocks and it completely advances your knowledge. For me, that book is one of the top five influences on my career.”

The Questions


What inspired you to move to France in ’76 and become a chef?
He discovered an interest in language early on and found he had a knack for it. He took a French class in the eighth grade and it blossomed from there. Eventually, he targeted a college with an abroad program that put him in Montpellier his junior year.
“It was that point in time that I came into contact with all these flavors. [There were] … approaches to food and ways to think about food that I never encountered before. It was an awakening for me for sure.”
He was fully immersed in the culture, which in France meant food. Chef also came to understand that he preferred to work on his feet. When he returned to the U.S., he got a job washing dishes in a restaurant. His parents were not pleased.
He worked his way through the ranks and chose jobs with skills of interest. “Little by little I fashioned myself a culinary education designed around trying to recreate in a professional setting my experiences as a young person in France.”
How did food impact you as a child?
“I was born in a rural small town in Central Ohio in ’56. …in that part of the world, people ate differently than they do now. My mother’s father had an enormous vegetable garden and we ate out of it a lot. He was very generous. When he went to visit neighbors, he would bring a basket of vegetables as a gift and he was a very popular man in our town… “
“I enjoyed spending time in the garden. I thought it was a wonderful place. I was impressed at an early age by the way he gave food that he grew himself as gifts to other people and made them happy. A very early lesson in how food can be a vehicle to give pleasure to other people. In the heart of every cook, there’s that sentiment or motivation.”
What are you working on? What’s new?
“My approach is I’m a tinkerer. I’m not a big concept guy. I like to go to work, put on my apron and fiddle around. That’s how I go about my business.”
“My ingredients mostly come from local and seasonal sources. There are no big wow discoveries.”
He frequents the farmers' markets, finds what looks interesting and works his magic. He also goes through seed catalogs, tries out what strikes his fancy and utilizes what works.
“I’ve fallen in love with Maras, a pepper from Eastern Turkey. I spend a lot of my time week in and week out trying to find out new ways to use this ingredient. It has a smoky kind of quality to it much like ancho peppers, but they’re not smoked. I get rough cut milled that still has oils in the flesh. It has a moderate heat to it. I use it to make chicken soup and sautéed squid. I’ll use it for anything.”
What’s the oldest piece of equipment in the Rendezvous kitchen that’s irreplaceable?
“Two 24” double handled cast iron skillets. We use them multiple times every single day.”
His crew was cooking some pears when I arrived. Just prior, pork shoulder for the cassoulet. Later on they plan to saute mushrooms.
“They’re indispensable. One piece of equipment beyond a chef’s knife and a pair of tongs would be a cast iron skillet. Hands down. I have friends who moved into a cottage and I gave them a cast iron skillet for Christmas. It’s the most obvious first gift.”
What profession would you pursue if you were not a chef?
“Late in life I came to appreciate the marine environment. I am fascinated by the natural world. I don’t want to say marine sciences because it sounds too lofty… I might have been a deck hand or a marine biologist.”

The Winter Bounty

In the middle of the interview, I got a tour of the Rendezvous rooftop garden. We managed our way up a metal ladder and a set of cinder blocks posing as stairs with snow crunching under our feet. I was pleasantly surprised by what I saw.
Like any garden, there are tools, compost and an owl.


The flat rooftop has full sun exposure. I was fascinated by his irrigation system that was simply condensed water from the restaurant’s air conditioning units.

“By using these vegetable crates from deliveries, lining them with cardboard and setting them in the puddles…  Roots pick up water as they need it. We run these units from Memorial to Labor Day. When the sun is the hottest throughout the middle of the summer, I have an abundant supply of water. April, May, Sept and October…  natural rain supplements. It takes care of itself.”


“November through April, I compost with earthworms. When it was a warm day, I gathered earthworms from the bottom of the crates and put them into the compost pile.”


He showed me wintered over mint, chives, sage, thyme, lavender and horseradish. Crates were strategically placed to take advantage of the limited sun of the season. 


"This is mache. It’s a lettuce. It’s extremely hearty. It’s not uncommon to see it growing in the snow. It’s a slightly bitter green. Also referred to as corn lettuce.”


He fashioned a greenhouse so the rosemary bushes would survive the winter. Their size over the years made it difficult to transport them seasonally up and down the ladder. It was built with windows from a local restoration salvage house. It was strategically set over a vent from the restaurant that heats it throughout the winter. The biggest plants were celebrating their fifth anniversary. The melting snow and occasional rain was enough to keep the plants watered throughout the winter. 
“So we use this rosemary to flavor the roasted chicken broth. Also use it to flavor the pizza dough that we use for grilled pizzas and flatbread for bar snacks. We make this pizza dough in large batches two or three days a week.“
“[The garden] ...got bigger last year and it will probably get bigger next year. Herbs work best because they are most tolerant of conditions. I grow some cherry tomatoes up here for fun so I can snack while I’m up here.”

The Takeaway

I learned a lot about Chef Johnson that day. The food he serves is a glimpse into how he was raised and his adventurous pallet rooted in his Southern France experience. A tinkerer who developed his own rooftop irrigation system and greenhouse with resources that would otherwise be wasted. A gardener who grows his own ingredients influenced by his grandfather’s generous spirit. A Francophile in touch with flavors of the Mediterranean sewn into the cuisine he serves. Chef Johnson has made Rendezvous a restaurant of its namesake. A wonderful place to meet up and get some downright solid food made by someone who truly cares about making people happy. I must get back there and see what's new.

The Where

Rendezvous in Central Square
502 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139
(617) 576-1900