Searching for recipe, book unknown - Recipes & Cooking Advice - Eat Your Books

Forum

Welcome Guest! You can not login or register.

Notification

Icon
Error

Searching for recipe, book unknown   Go to last post Go to last unread
#1 Posted : Tuesday, December 2, 2014 5:09:47 PM(UTC)
Hi!

Over the holiday my MIL was looking through our collection of (100+) cookbooks. She wrote down a few ideas and has now asked me for a book title. Unfortunately, I believe the recipe she is inquiring about is one of my unindexed books :-(. Online searches have been unsuccessful.

While its a long shot, I thought I would see if anyone has heard of this recipe before, on the off chance they recognize it? Or could provide a suggested author or style/region so I can narrow down my search at home.

I've been raving about EYB to her, and I hate the idea that the first request she has is unanswerable!

Looking for "Seared tenderloin of beef with tomato and anchovy sauce"

I really appreciate any suggestions!
#2 Posted : Tuesday, December 2, 2014 8:52:50 PM(UTC)

As an EYB evangelist, I share the desire to come up with the goods for your mother-in-law.


Something that struck me in looking at your Bookshelf is that a high proportion of the unindexed titles are specialized in ways that enable them to be ruled out as candidates for a seared tenderloin with tomato and anchovy sauce recipe (vegetarian, salads, drinks, burgers, cheese, seafood, Asian, etc.)


Of the 56 unindexed books, only 8 to a dozen seem real possibilities.  In descending order of likelihood, they are:


   United States of America: World Cuisine - Jean-Georges Vongerichten


   Mansion on Turtle Creek - Dean Fearing


   This Is Delicious! What Is it?


   Best of De Gustibus - Marion Burros


   Four Season Cookbook


   The Mangia Cookbook


   World Cusine Morocco


   Food & Wine Mag. Quick from Scratch One-Dish


Less likely, but possible:


   Fresh & Light


   Jim Fobel Diet Feasts


   Creative Cooking without Wheat, Milk, & Eggs


 


So EYB's "armchair analysis" lets you *greatly* reduce the search! 


[My money's on one of the first three, but maybe that's just because they're what I'd be most drawn to if I were poking around your shelf.]


Let us know if it does turn out to be one of the books above!

#3 Posted : Wednesday, December 3, 2014 3:56:54 AM(UTC)

I like the way you think, Ellabee! My money would be on the third book - anchovy being an all-time classic for "This is delicious, what is it?" type questions!

#4 Posted : Wednesday, December 3, 2014 12:31:44 PM(UTC)

anchovy and tomato sounds very Italian to me.  No recipe with that title on Mansion on Turtle Creek. 

#5 Posted : Wednesday, December 3, 2014 12:35:26 PM(UTC)

Southern Italian? 

#6 Posted : Wednesday, December 3, 2014 5:47:15 PM(UTC)

Thanks, Rinshin, for eliminating one of the candidates! The fewer books frachel has to pull down, the more credit to EYB. <g>


Tomato-anchovy sauce could also be Spanish -- or Basque. With seared beef tenderloin, though, it seems less tied to a cuisine and more a chef-ly way to add savory depth.  Which is what made the Vongerichten book one of the likelier suspects (to me).


A fun mystery; hope others with one of the probable books can help winnow the list.


 

#7 Posted : Thursday, December 4, 2014 12:20:53 AM(UTC)

Meanwhile, frachel, in the interest of keeping you from doing any more book-lifting than you have to, just wanted to check that EYB search powers have been fully used, so we're sure the recipe's not among your indexed books. 


Forgive me, then, for asking, if you've already done this and it seems obvious: Did you search only on the full recipe title? Or did you also search on (e.g.) anchovy tomato and browse through the results a bit?


I can imagine a situation where the cookbook lists the dish as your mother-in-law wrote it down, say as part of a menu -- but there are actually separate recipes for the beef and the sauce.

#8 Posted : Friday, December 5, 2014 2:25:00 AM(UTC)
frachel, another suggestion. The recipe you are looking for sounded familiar to me as I was looking at beef tenderloin recipes recently. I'd made a note that I could adapt the following recipe by using a whole beef tenderloin vs a filet:

Seared filet mignon with tomato-anchovy sauce from The Union Square Cafe Cookbook: 160 Favorite Recipes from New York's Acclaimed Restaurant by Danny Meyer and Michael Romano

Since you also have this book on your shelf, I wondered whether your m-i-l might have had the same idea I did...
#9 Posted : Friday, December 5, 2014 8:20:29 AM(UTC)

Brilliant Breadcrumbs!  We have a group of recipe detectives here.  Now we wait with bated breath to hear from frachel whether that is the correct recipe.  It certainly sounds like it.

You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.