Corn shoots & Anise Hyssop from Lockwood’s Digital TastingLast night, Chef Phillip Foss at
Lockwood in the Palmer House staged a Digital Tasting that used live video feeds from
Farmer Lee Jones at the Chef’s Garden in collaboration with
Veggie U to enhance the dining experience and support the "local narrative," which I’m going to write more about sometime soon. Because spring is coming any day now, I was particularly interested in the fresh vegetable items that Veggie U brought along, including these corn shoots.
These maize sprouts are grown from kernels of corn that germinate in the dark, so little chlorophyll is produced (they are a lot more yellow than this pic portrays). They have a lot of life in them, and they were very sweet; as Ronnie_suburban noted, “they’re so intense, they almost taste artificially sweetened,” but he meant that in a good way. They were also quite suprisingly fibrous for such little things (each shoot was about 6 inches long). I liked them a lot and plan to grow some in my basement darkroom (which we put in a few months before the Digital Revolution made chemical processing of film obsolete). The natural world is full of thrilling stuff I've never tasted before, and last night I had several occasions to practice the Italian custom of making a wish every time I try a new food (alas, I still cannot fly).
Part of the meal involved cutting herbs into the dishes. The herbs were displayed on a cool spiral “planter,” and here I am cutting anise hyssop onto one of my favorite plates of the night: Butter Poached Black Cod and Brandade. The "plug" of cod was surrealistically tender and flavorful.
The anise hyssop had a delicious vegetal licorice taste, sweet and spicy, intriguing and delicious. Debra Nickoloff, Executive Director of Veggie U, gave us four little containers of the anise hyssop and this afternoon I transplanted them into clay pots to sit on a sunny shelf for a few weeks until it’s safe to plant them outdoors. I'm germinating a group of more traditional hyssop in the basement, and I'm intrigued by this herb, which has been used for centuries (I find it in a lot of medieval receipes), and which I intend to use in soups and salads.
"Don't you ever underestimate the power of a female." Bootsy Collins