Travellady MagazineTM


This Girl & That Girl

How are you gonna keep them coming to the restaurant
after they’ve read the book?

By Patricia Kutza

I was making  a beeline for the computer section of my favorite book store when I got sidetracked in the cookbooks area.  Here publishers duel for your attention with scrumptiously compelling book jackets that scream ‘stop whatever you are doing and pick me up!’  Dutifully, I obliged and spent the next twenty minutes languishing in visions of myself serving the perfect Crème Brulee , Coq a Vin or lemon tartlets   to my adoring guests.

Cookbooks have come a long way from the ‘nothing but the facts’ genre found on my mother’s bookshelf.  I wonder if I would have been quite as harsh on myself (at age fourteen ) for screwing up Coquilles St. Jacque (why I didn’t think adding the requisite scallops was important I’ll never know), if I was less focused on the strictly ‘how-to’ of it.  Contemporary cookbooks, with their eclectic mix of recipes and essays, give you a sense of history or place, a perk to savor even if you don’t manage to follow the recipe instructions.

That’s why I felt confident that, instead of buying a wireless technology book, buying Sondra Bernstein’s The Girl & The Fig cookbook , while not going to give me a better understanding of the ‘wi-fi’ market, would be well worth the diversion. 

I spent the better part of an afternoon cruising its pleasingly laid out pages.  Its book cover contains the sole color photo in the book.  At first I thought this was a strange departure from the norm.  But as I immersed my imagination into the intriguing blends of herbs and sauces, the salad and side dish options and the dessert ideas, I realized that, unlike some cookbooks that really need fantastic photos to carry a threadbare concept, these recipes can stand very well on their own, thank you.

I was particularly drawn to the fig-based recipes.  Never a big fig-fancier, I still have a fascination for this fruit since the first time I saw a fig tree in full-blown production.  Its thick, distinctive leaves and prodigious fruit give fresh meaning to the word ‘abundance.’

Sondra offers  a host of fig treats such as fig syrup, fig compote, fig-based vinaigrette and a prosciutto-wrapped fig dish that I have already promised to make for a fig-loving friend.  The Girl & the Fig’s signature dish, Grilled Fig Salad with Fig and Port Vinaigrette, was the one, however, that got this girl to put down the book and forage for its ingredients at my local market.

Her recipe calls for ‘toasted’ pecans and ‘crisply’ sautéed pancetta.  So used to multi-tasking, I picked a particularly inopportune time to get distracted by C-SPAN, only to get a wake-up call from my broiler.  My pecans were past toasted and my pancetta…well, suffice it say, it was well into rigor mortis. 

Unlike those book lovers who would never want to see their favorite text committed to the silver screen, I was all too happy, in the light of my culinary disaster,  to visit the site of this book’s inspiration.  I booked a reservation at one of the three The Girl & the Fig restaurants not far away from me in the heart of the Sonoma Valley.  Where some entrepreneurs have trouble keeping one restaurant afloat, Bernstein manages to keep three of them thriving.  I chose her downtown Sonoma location.

And I chose one of those impossibly beautiful Spring nights when the commingling smells of earthy vineyard with star jasmine intoxicate the senses.  Yes, of course, I want to dine outside; I told the maitre’d.  Bring me a slice of the cookbook, I implored him straightaway.

He got my drift immediately and returned with both the tart and the sweet versions of the Girl & the Fig martini.  I prefer the tart version.    It’s an intriguing mix of flavors that isn’t overpowered by the vodka component.

Next I sampled what is aptly named, “The Works.”:  an array of cheese, seasonal fruit, aged sausage and olives.  For cheese-lovers like myself, there may be no more heavenly offering, particularly if you like to sample what the world has to offer.  They offer cheese such as the Point Reyes Farmstead Original Blue from nearby Point Reyes alongside a goat’s milk cheese, Tradition Du Berry, from La Vernelle, France.  Vermont Shepherd, made with sheep’s milk, hails from Putney, Vermont.

And then I was ready for the piece de resistance where I had met my Waterloo, the Grilled Fig Salad with Fig and Port Vinaigrette.  If I had pulled away earlier from the TV screen, I think I could have made a decent go of this salad.  It’s not rocket science in either the making or the presentation, just a great combination of sympathetic ingredients tossed to perfection.

I was torn about which entrée to pick.  The Liberty Duck Confit was calling me, in part because of Bernstein’s cookbook commentary that if she had her druthers, this entrée would be her Last Meal. Instead I chose the Seafood Stew, a challenge of sorts since my family is filled with great “Stew” chefs.  I look for ample portions, fresh ingredients and seasoning that doesn’t muffle the seafood flavors.  This dish didn’t disappoint

What would a great wine country dinner be like without wine?  I wasn’t about to find out. 

Instead I ordered one of their Rhone styled flights, a trio of Viognier wines.  Easy to please, I like to sample different varietals so I don’t take umbrage to Bernstein’s Rhone-only wine menu that, undoubtedly, gives Chardonnay and Cabernet-lovers some consternation.

I left the restaurant eager to try more of the Girl and the Fig recipes. With their new line of fig products, it’s possible to jump-start many dishes. Bernstein now markets fig-based vinegar, sauce, jam, chutney and syrup.  I’m determined to get that Grilled Fig Salad down pat, and as a reward for this feat, will treat myself to their Fig and Port Vinaigrette, nicely bottled and ready to pour over my perfectly toasted pecans and crisply sautéed pancetta.

Images courtesy of The Girl and the Fig.

Contact information:

The Girl & The Fig Cookbook
Publisher:  Simon & Schuster
$30.00 U.S., $45 Canada

Can be purchased at: www.amazon.com OR www.thegirlandthefig.com/

The Girl and the Fig products can also be purchased at their website (Link above)

OR at their three restaurant locations:
110 West Spain Street, Sonoma CA, 707.938.3634
222 Weller Street, Petaluma, CA,     707.769.0123
13690 Arnold Dr, Glen Ellen, CA    707.938.2130

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