By Lisa
Barton Rouse, the late and much-loved chef at Princeton’s Terrace Club taught me, and many of my friends how to eat well, how to eat in good company, and that food means more than sustenance. In Barton’s kitchen and dining room, food was a way to forge community, celebrate difference, and find exuberance in life. In very many ways, the idea for this blog and this book is due entirely to him.l
One of the greatest meals he ever cooked was on Valentine’s Day, for which he conjured a red & black feast and we decorated the club with scorched valentines, severed hearts, and pretty dismaying cupids. The menu, in his honor, is below, along with a variation on his classic red & black squid ink pasta, which, alongside the whole pig he roasted once a year, might just have been one of the more exotic foods he introduced us too. If I can find the pasta, we just might have this feast in his honor on Saturday.
From Barton’s cookbook, “Eating Ivy”:
Topics about Food and Recipes » Archive » Food=Love, Not your Ordinary Valentine’s Day Menu
February 12, 2009 @ 1:39 pm
[…] Florida Keys on the Cheap placed an interesting blog post on Food=Love, Not your Ordinary Valentineâ […]
Ted Nadeau
February 12, 2009 @ 2:37 pm
Lisa – Thanks for keeping Barton & Barton’s food so alive! – Ted
lisa
February 12, 2009 @ 9:28 pm
It’s not so hard when the food was so good. I saw a post recently @ We Are Never Full w/squid ink pasta, and that immediately reminded me of this one.
pig » Blog Archive » Learning To Eat » Archivio » Food=Love, Not your Ordinary …
February 13, 2009 @ 8:18 am
[…] miss anthrope wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptThe menu, in his honor, is below, along with a variation on his classic red & black squid ink pasta, which, alongside the whole pig he roasted once a year, might just have been one of the more exotic foods he introduced … […]
John
February 13, 2009 @ 10:22 am
You should be able to get those Japanese squid rings at 99 Ranch or or the Nijiya Supermarket in Japan Town Centre, right?
lisa
February 13, 2009 @ 10:26 am
!!!! I don’t know but what a *great* idea….We (okay, I) was thinking about heading up that way this weekend anyway so this is reason #3 (right after the Totoro Art exhibit & the need for more Japanese erasers…Thank you!
John
February 13, 2009 @ 5:21 pm
You’re welcome. We had a sushi-making party last May when my wife got tenure, and that’s where we got all of our fixings, at Nijiya.
Learning To Eat » Archivio » Family Romance
February 16, 2009 @ 6:13 pm
[…] Kory & I took one bite of the pancakes and decided we needed to have some Valentine’s mimosas, but neither of us wanted to go outside to pick oranges and squeeze juice. So we poured the prosecco straight and topped it with a few muddled raspberries. Honestly, I can’t remember the last time I had anything even resembling a mimosa in the morning. I suspect it was before we were married, which would be nearly a decade ago. But this may well be a tradition to revive. We all lingered, then the kids played, and Kory and I lingered some more, and then with the house in order, we went the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco to see the Coraline show, which was truly amazing, then out for sushi, and a trip to the Japantown mall, all of which was so fun that I forgot completely that I was supposed to go to the markets to look for the giant fried squid. […]