Karen and Ben Barker will be the guest speakers for Culinary Historians of Piedmont North Carolina from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 17, at Flyleaf Books in Chapel Hill. A reception will precede the reading from 6:15 to 7:15 p.m. next door at Foster’s Market.

Jill Warren Lucas

There are many home bakers and professional chefs who aspire to be as creative Karen Barker. But now and then, the James Beard Award-winning pastry chef – who used to dazzle customers at the much-missed Magnolia Grill – finds herself in the position of a fan who just has to know how a certain treat was made.

“There is a great coffee place in the East Village of New York City that Ben and I really like called Abraco,” Barker says from the kitchen of the couple’s Chapel Hill home. “They make a sweet-savory black olive biscotti that is just delicious.”

Barker has made her share of biscotti; the twice-baked cookie can be made from a wide variety of ingredients (different flours and fats, with or without eggs) and endless flavor profiles. But there was something about this one that was especially memorable. 

“I’m not a big sugar person, so sweets don’t often excite me,” Barker says as she gathered ingredients on the heavy butcher block counter. “Once in Provence I saw someone make a dessert with black olive and tomatoes and herbs. But this was the first time I’d ever tasted a biscotti anything like that. I loved it.”

Barker was making a batch to bring to a meeting the next day of their dinner party club. Ben was prepping an appetizer of brined lamb tongue to be simmered with shallot in a red wine sauce. Karen was making the biscotti to provide a crunchy counterpoint to the final course, a dairy-free chocolate mousse served with a red Italian dessert wine.

“A savory cookie is not for everyone,” she concedes while giving the fragrant, purplish olives a quick mince and grinding a generous amount of black pepper into her mixer’s work bowl. “But dunk this into some wine, or scoop up some chocolate mousse … it’s just perfect.”

Barker says the recipe could be easily tweaked to substitute other ingredients: use lemon zest instead of orange, leave out the olives and add walnuts. “I wouldn’t try green olive, though,” she says, wrinkling her nose. “I just don’t think that would work.”

Barker leaves the end slices on the counter after she returns the cookies to the oven for their final toasting. “Baker’s privilege,” she says, nibbling a slice deemed not pretty enough to serve. She closes her eyes for a moment to let the flavors fill her mouth.

“I have to say, I find these pretty addictive,” she sighs. “I have a hard time just having one of them."



Karen Barker’s Olive Oil Biscotti with Rosemary and Orange

Makes 1 loaf (about 24 slices)

2/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
2 eggs
1½ cups all-purpose flour
2/3 cup semolina (fine grind)
2 tsp. baking powder
½ tsp. salt
1 tsbp. minced rosemary
zest of 1 orange
1/3 cup fine chopped black olives (such as kalamata)
a few grinds of black pepper

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Combine first three ingredients in the work bowl of mixer; combine well with paddle attachment.

Add remaining ingredients, mix again. Ensure that all ingredients are thoroughly blended but avoid overworking the dough, which will be sticky.

Transfer dough with floured hands to a rimmed baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Lightly press into the shape of a 12x3-inch log, adding pinches of flour if needed. Chill for at least 40 minutes but preferably about several hours.

Bake for 30 minutes or until loaf is lightly browned. Remove from oven. When cool enough to handle, use a serrated knife and cut half-inch slices on the diagonal; should yield about 24 pieces. Arrange flat on the baking pan - it's OK if they are crowded - and return to oven until toasted, about 5-7 minutes. Turn slices over and toast again, about 3-4 minutes, until golden and crisp on both sides.

Cool biscotti completely. Wrap in parchment paper or keep in airtight container.



 
 
Eastern Triangle Farm Tour 
9/17 Saturday  and 9/18 Sunday
1 pm to 5 pm both days  

Tickets: Advance purchase: $25 per carload or cycling group
Days of Tour; Buy at farms $30 per carload/cycling group or $10 per farm


Southern Foodways Alliance:   Stir The Pot 
September 18th and 19th , Sunday and Monday 
Host: Chef Ashley Christiansen of Poole's Diner
Guest Chef John Fleer

The sixth helping of STIR THE POT, a fundraiser for the Southern Foodways Alliance, will take place on Sunday, September 18, and Monday, September 19. 

Sunday night is a five-course dinner with wine pairings at Poole's Diner, prepared by Chef Ashley Christensen and Guest Chef John Fleer. $150 per person. 

Monday night is a potluck at Chef Ashley Christensen's home in Raleigh. Main dish to be prepared by Chef Christensen is Brunswick Stew. Please bring a $35 donation to the SFA (check or cash) and a side dish or dessert that celebrates your sense of place. Beer will be donated by Foothills Brewing in Winston-Salem, NC, with a surprise cocktail by Fox's Liquor Bar. Wine is donated by Eliza Kraft Olander. Reservations are required and limited for both events. Please call Poole's Diner to reserve: 919-832-4477

For more information please visit 
www.stirthepotluck.com 

Learn more about Chef Fleer
Learn more about the Southern Foodways Alliance


Chop NC September event:  
“Spirits of Just Men: Mountaineers, Liquor Bosses, and Lawmen in the Moonshine Capital of the World”  

Wednesday September 21
Author Charles B. Thompson, Jr. 
Talk, book-signing
9/21 Flyleaf Books Chapel Hill, NC  7 - 8:30 pm


Sandra Gutierrez’s Book Launch Party
Thursday September 22
6:00 p.m. The Umstead Hotel, Cary NC
It's Fiesta Time, Y'all! You're all invited to the launch party for Sandra's brand new book:
The New Southern-Latino Table
Recipes That Bring Together the Bold and Beloved Flavors of Latin America and the American South 

RSVP by September 16 to jherg@email.unc.edu or 919.962.0585 Open to the public so feel free to tell all your friends.Door prizes and Appetizers. Valet Parking available.


TerraVITA
Saturday September 24
The Sustainable Classroom  9:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.
Grand Tasting on the Green  1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
TerraVITA’s Grand Tasting on the Green will take place on The Green at Southern Village, an upscale, environmentally-conscious, mixed-use community in Chapel Hill, NC. Tickets for the Grand Tasting are all-inclusive (all alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages, as well as food samplings are included) and can be purchased for $65 each, or excluding alcohol $55.The Sustainable Classroom tickets can be purchased separately for $35; Combined Tasting & Classroom ticket, including both events, can be purchased for $90.
 
 
Stir the Pot is a fundraiser for the Southern Foodways Alliance hosted by Ashley Christensen of Poole's Diner in Raleigh 4-5 times a year. On Sunday night, August 14, there is a five-course dinner with a guest chef at Poole's. This month's guest chef is Ed Lee of 610 Magnolia in Louisville, Kentucky. That dinner is $150 a plate. On Monday night, Ashley will host a potluck dinner at her house in Raleigh (she lives near NC State). She and Chef Lee will cook a main dish, Fullsteam Brewery of Durham will be pouring the beer, and bartender Wesley Wolfe of Lantern restaurant in Chapel Hill is creating a special (as-yet-unrevealed) cocktail for the evening. Guests are asked to bring a $35 donation to the SFA (check or cash) and a side dish or dessert that celebrates their sense of place.

All of this information (and then some) is available at: http://www.stirthepotluck.com/. Reservations are required and limited for both events and can be made by calling Poole's at 919-832-4477.

Stir the Pot will happen again on September 18 and 19 with guest chef John Fleer, formerly of Blackberry Farm in Tennessee and now of Canyon Kitchen in Cashiers, NC.