Growing up we had a Patrick Nagel print
hanging on a wall in the dining room. It's exactly the one you're thinking of. Or maybe not. A lot of them have that woman in
them. You know, the woman on the cover of Duran Duran's Rio. I never
much cared for it. Oh, I loved the album, just not the print hanging
on the wall in our dining room. My dad really liked that whole
style; that very 80s, minimalist, pastel thing. My dad really liked
the 80s, in general. And the 80s liked my dad. They made sense
together. He was newly single, very handsome, a great cook, liked to
travel, play tennis, hang glide and party. And, of course, he was
into the art.
Patrick Nagel was born in 1945. My dad was born in 1945. Patrick Nagel's work was greatly inspired by and directly descended from Art Deco. And Art Deco is, without a doubt, my dad's favorite visual design style. His house and work are both filled with furniture and light fixtures from the Deco era.
Unlike my dad, who is alive, healthy
and happy, Patrick Nagel died at the peak of his life and career, at
thirty-eight years of age. Strange as it sounds, immediately after
participating in a fifteen minute celebrity 'Aerobithon' to raise
money for the American Heart Association, Nagel was found dead in his
car. From a heart attack. The Reagan Era was a bitch.
This past weekend I was in a fun, food
frenzy in the kitchen. I just wanted to make stuff. I see some
rhubarb. Let's make a cake! I see leftover coffee and a pork
tenderloin. Let's make a marinade and grill stuff! I see beets and
carrots. Let's make a borsch! I see Greek yogurt and horseradish.
Let's make a garnish for the borsch! You get the idea.
The borsch came out so
bright, saturated, rich and vivid that it immediately reminded me,
visually, of Pop Art. Flashes of bright colors and sharp shapes from
the works of Warhol, Lichtenstein, and yes, Nagel rushed through my
head. Fred agreed, but his head was swimming with images of Bauhaus and Kandinsky. Which is totally appropriate for cold borsch as all three are/were Russian! And thus our Sunday unfolded into the eighties-inspired
photoshoot of borsch. I did very little styling on this shoot. Fred
really ran with it on his own. I picked the soundtrack: The Go-Go's.
Right around the time that Nagel was at his peak, so were The
Go-Go's. And right around that time I participated in a lip syncing
'class' at Summer camp. And our group's piéce de résistance was,
you guessed it, 'We Got the Beat'. I was Belinda Carlisle and my
tennis racket was my guitar. Though I'm pretty sure Belinda Carlisle
did not actually play the guitar. Man, I miss my Swatch.
The bosrcht was quite good. A success.
It was rich and bold with a rear kick of subtle heat from the white
pepper and the horseradish yogurt. It was complex on the palate but
finished very neatly. This innocent little soup also made a morbid
mess of anything that came near it. We had so much left over that we
took it up to a Memorial Day BBQ in the canyon. I
think I saw one person try it. Who can blame them? At a cookout
abundant with steaks, lamb, burgers, sausages, corn salad, chips,
banana crème pudding and booze, who wants to deal with a bowl of
borsch?
Ah, well. It's not for everyone. People
kind of either love it or hate it. I'm not certain what Patrick Nagel
liked to eat, but if he's anything like my dad, borsch was not high
on the list.
Me, I'll take a bowl any time.
Chilled Beet Soup with Horseradish
Yogurt
Serves 4-6
INGREDIENTS
4 cups (or more) chicken stock
4 cups (or more) chicken stock
1 pound beets, peeled, chopped
1 cup chopped onion
1 cup peeled chopped carrot
2 teaspoons chopped garlic
1 teaspoon sugar
1 bay leaf
2 Tablespoons horseradish
A handful of fresh chives, trimmed
Greek yogurt
Generous salt & white pepper to
taste
DIRECTIONS
Combine 4 cups broth, beets, onions, carrot, bay leaf and garlic in medium saucepan. Bring to boil.
Combine 4 cups broth, beets, onions, carrot, bay leaf and garlic in medium saucepan. Bring to boil.
Reduce heat to medium-low; cover and
simmer until vegetables are very tender, about 35 minutes. Cool
slightly. Remove bay leaf and puree in blender in batches until
smooth. Transfer to bowl.
Thin with additional stock if soup is
too thick. Mix in sugar. Season with salt and pepper. Cover and chill
until cold, at least 4 hours or overnight. (Can be prepared 2 days
ahead. Keep refrigerated.)
Ladle soup into bowls.
In a small bowl, mix horseradish and
yogurt. Put a dollop of horseradish mixture in the middle of the bowl
of soup and top with chives.
One year ago: Classic Shad Roe with Bacon & Fresh Herbs
Two years ago: Yerp: Part 1 (of many).
Three years ago: Sautéed Baby Artichokes with Olive Oil, Garlic & Lemon
I love it! Naturally without chicken stock ;)! The addition of greek yogurth is a great idea! Some time ago, i maked a red soup in another version (http://ricettealverde.blogspot.it/2013/03/vellutata-rossa.html), i hope you like that.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your recipe, excuse me for my english... :(
Letissia,
ReplyDeleteYes! Chicken stock is totally optional. The yogurt was a fun touch - a little denser than a creme fraiche, to hold up those chives! I'll check your recipe out, for sure.
Thanks for reading!!
Great color, it's so vibrant... a soup served cold... hmmmnnn oh yaeh it's the same as I found when serching for more healthy recipes like borscht am I right? Definitely I'll try this out... thanks for the share
ReplyDeleteInteresting thouughts
ReplyDelete