Living off the land…

love garden tomatoes, blackberry ice cream, cold cucumber soup, maybe a glass of Riesling.

You know, summer food.

But I’m getting in the mood for morning frost and clothes made of wool and root vegetables at dinner.

So I asked Tim Cocheo, the chef/owner of Number 9 Restaurant in Millerton, NY, for a vegetable dish.   

Beets, he said.

Good. I love beets, and he gave me detailed instructions on his restaurant’s beet salad: how to cook the beets (must be roasted), how to plate the dish (diagram included), and how to put it all together. That’s the tricky, cheffy part. Ingredients include quenelles — you know, using two spoons to make perfect ovals, in this case of horseradish, puréed beets and crème fraîche — sherry vinegar and, because this is a farm-to-table restaurant, a flourish of micro greens from Moon in the Pond Farm in Sheffield.

Cocheo grew up admiring his great-grandmother’s food: middle-European, stick-to-the-ribs fare like pot roast with lots of vegetables and chicken paprikash and dumplings (his mother made this last dish, too, but it was never quite the same, he said). 

Number 9’s menu reflects some of this culinary heritage with wienerschnitzel first on the list of main courses and pork belly and bratwurst with mustard greens further down.

But when Cocheo quit college in his third year to attend culinary school, he turned to the French Culinary Institute in New York, which may account for the wild mushrooms and bordelaise sauce accompanying the New York strip steak and the dried cherries and black pepper gastrique with the foie gras.

The Sol Flower Farm Beet Salad, though, just looks like pure Hudson Valley to me.

Begin by placing beets, minus their greens, in a casserole with a little water. Season with salt and pepper, a splash of oil and cover tightly with perforated foil to let steam escape. Bake at 375 degrees until a knife slips into the beets easily.

When the beets are cool enough to handle, rub the skins off with a damp cloth, cut off the tops and bottoms and shape each beet into cylinder with a biscuit cutter. That way, all the slices will be the same size. Set the cut away beet leavings aside.

Marinate the slices for an hour in a vinaigrette of one part sherry vinegar, two parts extra virgin olive oil, finely chopped shallots, tarragon and chives.

Now purée the beet leavings and mix in freshly grated horseradish to taste and enough crème fraîche to bring it all together. You can make quenelles from this mixture or just neat spoonfulls on either side of the overlapping beet slices on the plate.

Now here’s another cheffy touch. Cocheo spoons a little of the vinaigrette over the beets , adds slivers of smoked trout, and, naturally, micro greens.

I just want to warn you, though, if you do not know already, grating fresh horseradish is not fun. I tried it once and it drove my dog out of the kitchen. So I used readymade. Yes, it adds a vinegar taste, which Cocheo dislikes. But I can live with it. Also, for fun, I used fresh goat cheese instead of crème fraîche. So I finessed the trout.

As for micro greens, a rabbit ate the radish sprouts my husband had planted in the backyard. Finely chopped chives worked fine.

Latest News

Region One elementary school bus routes

Bus routes are subject to change. Check www.region1schools.org for updates.


Keep ReadingShow less
Clyde Perham Weed
Clyde Perham Weed
Clyde Perham Weed

CORNWALL — Clyde Perham Weed, 74, passed away peacefully at his home in West Cornwall, Connecticut on Sunday, August 17.

Clyde was born in New Orleans, Louisiana to Jeanne and Herbert Weed. He was the grandson and namesake of Clyde E. Weed, Chairman of the board of Anaconda Copper.

Keep ReadingShow less
Backgammon series begins at Hotchkiss Library of Sharon
Backgammon lessons kicked off Wednesday, Aug. 13, at The Hotchkiss Library. Instructor Roger Lourie works with Pam Jarvis of Sharon, while his wife, Claude, assists at a second board with Janet Kaufman of Salisbury.
Leila Hawken

In light of rising local interest in the centuries-old game of Backgammon, Wednesday afternoon backgammon instruction and play sessions are being offered at The Hotchkiss Library of Sharon. The first such session was held on Wednesday, Aug. 13, attracting two enthusiastic participants, both of whom resolved to return for the weekly sessions.

Expert player and instructor Roger Lourie of Sharon, along with his equally expert wife, Claude, led the session, jumping right into the action of playing the game. Claude chose to pair with Janet Kaufman of Salisbury, a moderately experienced player looking to improve her skills, while Lourie teamed himself with Pam Jarvis of Sharon, who was new to the game.

Keep ReadingShow less
Dugazon opens in Sharon, blending Southern roots with global style

Pantry essentials at Dugazon

Jennifer Almquist

You are invited to celebrate the opening of Dugazon, a home and lifestyle shop located in a clapboard cottage at 19 West Main Street, the former site of The Edward in Sharon. The opening is Wednesday, Aug. 27 at 11 a.m.

After careers in the world of fashion, Salisbury residents Bobby Graham and his husband, Matt Marden, have curated a collection of beautiful items that reflect their sense of design, love of hospitality, and Graham’s deep Southern roots. Dugazon is his maternal family name.

Keep ReadingShow less