Ma Mère M’a Dit

We went to a soirée des courges (Hallowe’en) at a friend’s house on Saturday night. I notice that Hallowe’en in Switzerland is refreshingly absent from the stores. Maybe the commercialism was refreshingly absent because we still showed up to a friend’s house for pumpkin soup. Cheese, wine, de la viande sechée–and pumpkin soup. Mmmmmm.

Our friend told us that a restaurant just up the street from us in Lausanne was having a pasta party every Tuesday evening. We went to check it out.

I think it’s a relatively new restaurant in Lausanne. We’d actually been there before because we like the atmosphere and the name (Ma Mère M’a Dit: My Mother Told Me), The food is quite good too–certainly worth going out.

On Tuesdays, their fixed menu was salade mixte (mixed salad), pâtes au goût du jour (pasta of the day), and dessert for 29 CHF (Swiss francs). I was surprised at the salad. My mother would definitely have approved. When my parents were here this summer visiting the German part of Switzerland, they said all they had to eat was meat and cheese. “And do you know that they think just lettuce is a salad?”

This salad was more than just lettuce. Decorated with endives and tomatoes, textured with purple cabbage, and onions sliced so thin there was no where for the flavour to hide, it was surprisingly large.  American-serving large. What can I say about that?

When we finished the salad, the pasta arrived. We’d both ordered the farfalle au saumonn safrané.  It was simple. The best kind of simple: for purity of taste. Bow-tie pasta, chives, and chunks of real salamon (I think safrané is something to do with safron…) tossed in light olive oil.

I sprinkled on parmesan cheese. Ludo clucked. He says there is some unwritten Italian rule about putting cheese on a fish pasta. He didn’t know what though–put it on? or not? In the end, it is probably whatever you like. But I’ll ask my new friend Lara over at Just a Pinch of Salt.

As we were eating, a Spanish couple came into the restaurant. I noted their language before I tuned them into the background. At one point though, I overheard a word that caused me to remark: “There seems to be a word that is the same–not matter what language: Facebook!”

We finished with crème brulée–with vanilla from Madagasgar.

Good god! I think it was too much food. The servings were large enough to have shared everything.  I’ll have to remember my camera next time. We took picutures with Ludo’s phone, but with the atmosphere (low lights and everything), they didn’t turn out.

Oh well.  There’s always next time!

Decorated with endives and textured with purple cabbage,

Just a Pinch of Salt

A few weeks ago, I installed Tweet Deck on my computer. I search for fellow bloggers and social media fans and just interesting people in general. I have an ongoing search for Lausanne and Valais. One morning I see a tweet flutter by: “On to Lausanne by train today… http://bit.ly/aid14.”

I wonder who is arriving in Lausanne.  I follow the link to a blog. She is Lara Camozzo and has recently started a food / vacation blog over at JustAPinchOfSalt.com.

I reply to her tweet: @LaraBethC, what are you doing in Lausanne? I also left a comment on her blog. I don’t want to miss connecting with a fellow blogger and foodie.

Later in the day, I get an email reply:

Hi Jen,

Thanks for getting in touch! What a small world!
I’ve just wandered around the city today with my Mom who is visiting me for a short time. We only have 24 hrs in Lausanne, and haven’t planned much. After a late lunch, we’re not quite ready for dinner. What did you have in mind?

A few emails back and forth, we decide to meet for a drink. She tells me they are at Cafe de Milan down by the train station and I tell her I have short red hair and I’ll be wearing a very Canadian-looking green down vest.

Lara came to Italy in August for a cooking course. She’d made some big life decisions and is now working  her way to her life dream. She’d met her Mum in Paris (her mum had brought over her winter clothes) and they were travelling back to Italy.

We talked about travelling, and food, and wine, and of course blogging. She wants to write for Food and Wine Magazine.  We talked about old media and new media and the benefits of having your own website vs. a traditional column. And this conversation coupled with some probing questions from a few of my current readers sparked me to start blogging again. Thanks for push!

So now, I’d just like to introduce you to Lara Beth Camozzo. You can follow her blog over at JustAPinchOfSalt.com. Let her know what you think of her travels.

Les noix de pécans!

“Can I bring you something?,” he  asked on his way out the door.

“I can’t think of anything.”

“Are you sure?”

I stop and think a moment. I’d bought a butternut squash at the market on Saturday because I’d wanted to make butternut squash soup. I have a favourite recipe from my Looney Spoons cookbook. I remember that I like to decorate a serving with roasted walnuts or pecans and dried cranberries. I’d found some dried cranberries in the store when I’d been out shopping, but I’d forgotten about the nuts.

“Well, you could pick up some pecans maybe.”

He is quizzical. “Pecans? C’est quoi les pecans?”

I don’t know the word in French and he doesn’t know what they are in English. There is a bit of a kerfuffle as we both scramble to our computers to translate the word pecan.

We use babelfish and Google image and find exactly what I’m looking for: “Voila! Les noix de pécans!”

He shrugs. ”Ok. Les noix de pécans!”

He leaves and is gone awhile. I wonder if he’s got lost. Eventually, the door opens again and he enters with a wide grin, “Voila, les noix!” and plops a grocery bag on the table.

He has bought one of every type of nut in the store.