Sunday, November 4, 2007

comfort food, the parisian way

croque madame with sauce mornay and spring onion garnish

my first experience of croque madame was as perfect a foodie experience as i can imagine. i was in paris with a miserable ex-girlfriend i was seeing at the time and having a suitably miserable time. not only was the company lousy, the weather was miserable too, drizzling the kind of rain that can't make its mind up what it plans to do with itself when it grows up. in the middle of the occasional cold, pathetic little shower, and with a grump of a person along for the ride, i stumbled upon a little piece of heaven. it was a tiny little bistro on a little side street i'll likely never find again, with a nondescript shop front and a dated and ever so slightly dingy interior. this unlikely setting laid the foundation for one of my favourite breakfast memories of all time - the incredibly warming, comforting, and distinctly french, croque madame.

this morning i made it as accurately as i could to my hazy memory of that breakfast a long time ago. the end result matched my memory almost to the t. except the company was a heck of a lot better.

croque madame is a croque monsieur (essentially a fried ham and cheese sandwich) with an egg on top. simple, but when a few little tweaks are made, such as the mornay sauce instead of slices of cheese and my use of prosciutto instead of black forest ham, the result can be superb.

mornay sauce is just a fancy name for a basic bechamel sauce with cheese added to it. gruyère is best, but having none in the house i settled for jarlsberg instead with great results, and cheddar would even suffice in a pinch (do yourself a favour and try it with gruyère at least once however).

the soundtrack for this sunday morning breakfast:

the national
boxer

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