I thought I would report in on my "Provencal dinner," which was last night... and I think a great success!
We had 15 people ihncluding the 3 of us. Seven of our friends had visited us in Provence, and five were there to share in the experience. I had two tables set up, using my Provencal table linens. One table I had set with my
Terre e Provence pottery, which was our "big" purchase from our trip. The other table I actually had set with some of my vintage Fiestaware. Many of the colors are amazingly provencal.
We started with aperitifs and little snacks (tapenades, almonds, small cheese crackers). The kir royales were giant hits (one friend drank three!) and everyone also liked the Lillet, which was recommended to me on ST. We also had pastis (Pernod), but no takers!
I decided to forgo serving an entree separately, as I didn't think everyone was up for the three hour dinner... plus I didn't have enough plates! So I served entree and my main course at the same time, buffet style.
I used my new birthday-gift French cookbook by the author Joanne Harris (
My French Kitchen and it's a wonderful cookbook!) for my salad course-- a white bean and tomato salad.
I made a beef daube (a two-day process!) from Patricia Wells'
At Home in Provence cookbook.
I created my own recipe for Provencal chicken, as I realized the day before our dinner that one of our guests didn't eat beef. I modified a recipe for tarragon chicken, cut up the chicken in chunks, used herbes de Provence instead of just tarragon, added two kinds of mushrooms, and then reheated in a casserole in the oven. Everyone loved this.
I made a potato gratin using
this EASY recipe from the French Food and Cook website . This was my favorite dish. I love this website.
I also sauteed a couple kinds of mushrooms as a second side dish. I should have made more, as this was very popular!
We managed to find some reasonably-priced wine here in Knoxville from the area where we lived in Provence.
I also had a cheese course-- five kinds of French cheeses. Not near the selection of course as we found in France. This was a new experience for our friends who hadn't visited France. If (when!) I do something like this again, I will consider ordering from
www.fromage.com.
I wimped out on dessert... had grand plans to make a tart as Chris suggested, but ran out of time and energy. Instead I let Kelly be a dessert chef and she made wonderful ice cream desserts with raspberry chocolate ice cream, raspberry melba sauce, fresh rasperries, and whipped cream.
I'm going to fix CarpeDiem's potato ragout another time... it sounds great!
We do have leftovers and are having our French tutor (who worked with us before our trip) over for dinner tomorrow! But I actually had some of my potatoes today for "brunch"!
Thanks Chris and Nicole (CarpeDiem) for your advice!
Kathy