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So many shades of green

Spinach satisfies a primal craving - but how to show it off to its best advantage? An emerald-hued soup? A rich gratin? A simple saute?

Cooking

October 31, 2007|Leslie Brenner, Times Staff Writer

TOO late for tomatoes, though you still find them, sitting plump and pretty at the farmers market. And too early for Brussels sprouts, which sound great, but they're not so easy to find yet. Zucchini still looks good, but who's in the mood now that summer's gone?

It's a funny in-between time on the produce aisle. I'm craving vegetables, but nothing feels exactly right for the season.

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And then I see spinach -- big, fat, dark-green leaves in a lusty-looking bunch. Yes, that's what sounds good. Spinach, and lots of it.

There's nothing easier to cook, and yet it's not so obvious how to show it to its best advantage.

British chef Simon Hopkinson devotes a convincing chapter to this particular leafy green in "Roast Chicken and Other Stories." (The American edition of this book, named "most useful cookbook of all time" by British magazine Waitrose Food Illustrated, was recently published.) Hopkinson is so right-on throughout so much of the book that when I see his take on it, I jump. "I have come to the conclusion," he writes, "that there is only one way to eat spinach that respects its pure iron-packed goodness. That is to saute it briefly in nut-brown butter. It takes seconds using a good-sized frying pan or, even better, a wok-like receptacle. Season it with salt and pepper, and a grating of nutmeg if you like. The taste, as a result of this preparation, is sweet and nutty, and the glossy green leaves, shiny with butter, are what spinach is all about."

Convincing? I can't wait to try it. I cook butter to a gorgeous nut-brown, toss in the leaves, saute, season, grate nutmeg, just a bit. Yes, it's delicious, but it gives up quite a lot of water. I drain it, but it keeps weeping. Good, but there must be a better way.

Creamed spinach! That dish never has the extra liquid problem because you squeeze the moisture out of the leaves. Just drop a couple of bunches of cleaned, trimmed spinach into a big pot with a couple of inches of boiling salted water. Cover and cook till it's completely wilted. Drain it, and press out the excess water with paper towels, then chop it up and set it aside. Now make a quick bechamel sauce with a little onion: Finely chop about a quarter of a white onion, sweat it in two or three tablespoons of butter until the onion's soft, then stir in a tablespoon and a half of flour and cook it, stirring, for two or three minutes. Add a cup of hot milk, a pinch each of salt and white pepper, and cook it, whisking like crazy, until it's thick and smooth. Stir in the spinach, grate in a little nutmeg and adjust the seasoning. It's hard to argue with.

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