Last week I was out with my boys picking wild elderberries to make jelly and sauces for my desserts and I must say....I love autumn in Sweden. Growing up in California, we never really had the four seasons. The brilliant colors of red , orange & yellow never cease to amaze me. I often dream of menus to correspond the colors of my courses with the colors of the season. Or sometimes I have my courses run through the seasons. Start with spring, something fresh & crunchy, perhaps with flowers, perhaps baby zucchini with a large yellow blossom. Then go to summer, do something with berries. I do a three color veggie mousse, say carrots, peas & celery root in layers in a bread mold. Then when you slice it in a triangle it has nice colors of orange, green & white centered on a plate with some baby greens, a raspberry vinaigrette and some fresh raspberries...now that would fit my concept for a theme of summer colors. Autumn could be pink slices of roe deer filet, eggplant tart or roasted pumpkin and of course dessert would have to be white like winter with no fruit. Finding good fresh fruit in the winter in Sweden reminds me of my French girlfriends in Paris...unreliable and usually only available on weekends.
I've been quite busy lately. Not long ago I did a very nice menu for Peter Uhlemann and a group of executives from Handelsbanken at Three Lily Buds. We started with a Millefeuille of Smoked Trout served with a sweet red onion crème fraîche and a black sesame sauce. That was very popular! After we cleansed the palette with a mango sorbet we went to the main course with medallions of veal, gratin potatoes, a celery-pea mousse (white & green stand out on the plate), cranberry chutney, baby greens with truffle oil & grand venuer sauce. Dessert was a medley of of rich dark chocolate. Most people have never tasted food of the caliber I do. It's often a eye-opening experience.
The next week I did sweet petit-fours for 30 for the American Womens Club annual meeting in Malmö. I did a nice assortment............
Crème Brulée Tart, Auteuil, Napoleons with Candied Fennel, Gateau Basque, Caribe au Chocolat.

Here's my crème brûlée tart, except for with petit fours I cut it in small squares, about two bites. I usually set it on a spiced shortbread and if it's plated, serve it with a fruit coulis.


The last night I did my gourmet version of Mexican food. Growing up in California, I always loved Mexican food. But living in Sweden, good Mexican food is impossible to get...so I have to make my own. I roasted some long thin Hungarian chiles and stuffed them with gouda cheese¨. Then I separate egg white & yolks, beat the whites and fold in the yolks and fry the chilies in this....a perfect Chilé Relleno!...For Chimichangas, I slow cook veak till it falls apart and blend it with my homemade chipotle sauce & cheese and use that to fill a flour tortilla and fry that. Those I serve with crème fraîche and salsa fresca. Main course was Chile Colorado, pork slow cooked with red chilies & tomatoes until it's tender and the sauce is thick & rich. Combine that with Spanish Rice and Cuban style black beans with cumin, garlic and ice cold Coronas and I'm thinking I'm back in Ensenada with salt on the back of my thumb and I keep dropping my lime!