Friday, February 18, 2011

In the Kitchen With: Molly Hatch Spaetzles























I fell in love with Molly Hatch‘s work the first time I saw it on Design*Sponge. I was mesmerized by the blue and white of the images I saw, and as I reviewed her work, I was also captivated by the floral motifs. I can’t think of a better combination than good food on nice serving pieces, so asking Molly for a few of her favorite recipes for In the Kitchen With was a natural. This week she shares her recipe for spaetzle, a fresh dumpling made with eggs, milk and flour. Though spaetzle are usually tossed with butter and herbs and eaten alongside a meat dish as you would rice or potatoes, Molly and I played around together with sauce ideas to use the spaetzle more like pasta and came up with spaetzle with butternut squash, shallots and cranberries. We hope you like it! — Kristina
About Molly: As the daughter of a painter and a dairy farmer, Molly’s childhood was divided between physical labor, play and creating her own art. Her interest in utilitarian ceramics is grounded in her family’s history of using their hands to make objects for use and contemplation. She pursued a formal art school education, earning a BFA from the Museum School in Boston and an MFA in 2008 from the University of Colorado. Her latest work explores the relationship between high and low, an intersection of current tattoo and graffiti culture and historic patterning and design. Molly works from her home studio in Northampton, Massachusetts, where she lives with her husband and daughter. She also teaches as an adjunct professor in ceramics at Holyoke Community College in Holyoke.
She has been collaborating on an exciting commercial design project incorporating some of these ideas that will be released later this year.

CLICK HERE for the full recipe after the jump!


Spaetzle
Serves 4
Ingredients
  • 1 1/2 cups flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 fresh farm eggs (good eggs = good spaetzle!)
  • 1/2 cup whole milk
  • butter or olive oil to keep spaetzle from sticking
Instructions
1. Mix dry ingredients and wet ingredients separately, then mix them together to a “sticky mustard” consistency — a bit thicker than pancake batter.
2. Let sit for about one hour at room temperature.
3. Drop a small amount into salted boiling water. You know they are done when they float to the surface. Skim out of the water with a slotted spoon. Keep warm in an oven in a covered casserole dish with butter or olive oil to keep the pieces from sticking together.
Note from Molly
There are many ways to “drop” the spaetzle into the water for cooking. Claudia (the nanny who I received this recipe from) would shape a sort of log out of a portion of the bowl of dough about 5″ long and 1–2″ wide on a small cutting board. She lovingly cut small amounts of the batter into the salt water. The pieces were about 1″ long and about 1/4″ thick. If you cut them evenly, they will cook evenly!

Note from Kristina
For these photos, I made the dough a little stiffer to ensure that I could make the spaetzle into more regular sizes. Whether your batter is more or less stiff, dipping your knife in the boiling water between each cut helps move each portion off the cutting board and keeps it from sticking to your knife if you are using one. No matter what you do, the spaetzle will always be quite “rustic” looking because they are dropped into boiling water. They will always taste good, despite their irregular appearance!

Butternut Squash, Shallot and Cranberry Sauce
Serves 4
  • 3 tbsp olive oil, plus more for the baking tray
  • 1.5 pounds butternut squash, skin on
  • 10–12 shallots, papery outer skin removed, cut into quarters
  • 1 handful dried cranberries
  • 1/4 tsp red pepper flakes (more if you like it really spicy)
  • 1/2 cup vegetable broth
  • Parmesan if you wish
Instructions
1. Preheat oven to 400ºF/200ºC. Line a baking tray with aluminum foil or parchment paper, and lightly oil the paper/foil. Slice the butternut squash into slices about 1″ thick. Place on the tray. Sprinkle each slice with salt and a little olive oil. Bake in the oven until the slices are well browned and easily pierced with a fork.
2. While the squash bakes, add three tablespoons of olive oil and the shallots to a large frying pan. Cook on medium-low heat until the shallots start to change color. Reduce heat to low and continue to cook until they turn golden. Add the cranberries and red pepper flakes and continue to cook on low heat until the cranberries soften, about another 10 minutes. Increase the heat to medium and add 1/4 cup vegetable broth, stirring until it thickens. Remove from heat and cover.
3. Once the squash is baked, remove it from the oven, remove the skin and cut into cubes. Add to the pan with the remaining 1/4 cup vegetable broth and stir on medium heat until the squash is evenly coated.
4. Mix the squash/shallot/cranberry mixture with the spaetzle, making sure to coat the spaetzle well. Serve with a sprinkle of Parmesan if you wish. You might also try adding bacon in with the shallots!
Photography by Kristina Gill: rough linen napkin by Axlings (available through Karin Eriksson); cutting board by Andrea Brugi; salt dish (steel) by mud australia; knife from merci; small oak board by Andrea Brugi; navy blue bowl by Christiane Perrochon; crimson striped towel by Zara Home; platter by Molly Hatch (available through Lola Home); crimson napkin by Fog Linen; all other props eBay/fleamarket finds.


Why Molly Chose This Recipe
As a little girl, we never had a special occasion without fresh spaetzle. As a family, we were introduced to spaetzle by our Swiss nanny, Claudia, and we loved them so much that they became a favorite. Spaetzle-making was reserved for special meals mostly due to the labor-intensive process of cutting each little piece of batter by hand. Many years later, my mother was gifted a “spaetzle maker” which is essentially a mandolin for making spaetzle. Something about the convenience of this process just killed the yumminess of the hand-cut spaetzle Claudia and my mother made by hand. As I write this, I find myself wondering if Claudia had a spaetzle maker at home in Switzerland and was just making do with what we had in our American kitchen . . . hmmm . . . to be answered by Swiss D*S readers . . .

1 comment:

Modern Country Lady said...

Hey there Molly, Just saw this on Design Sponge- love your recipe and looooove Spaetzle- the ultimate comfort food.
Just checked out your work and love it ! I am your latest follower.Would not mind a follow back, you seem to be a woman after my own heart :-))