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Receta Sweet and Savory Bacon Jam, Fromage Fort, and Toasted Walnuts and Raisins
by Monte Mathews

Top Left: Sweet and Savory Bacon Jam. Center: Toasted Walnuts and Raisins

Right: Fromage Fort

Simplicity itself: Toasted Walnuts and RaisinsFromage Fort with Garlic and Pepper I

am always on the look-out for ways to freshen the tried and true. And as the temperature drops in the East,

and entertaining moves indoors, Andrew and I love to put out a big platter of

cheese and grapes, crackers and biscuits for our guests. If you do it right, it not only stems those

pre-dinner pangs of hunger, it looks gorgeous on your table. But our cheese platters inevitably leave us

with bits and pieces of various cheeses.

There’s leftover Brie, a morsel of hard cheese like Manchego and, if I

fish around in the cheese drawer, I can usually come up with some mozzarella

that’s too big to throw away or some gruyere that’s too good to do so. I remembered reading about what the French do

with the odds and ends and so I went on a quick and found the recipe for Fromage Fort. It’s so thrifty, I could

practically hear my mother applauding from heaven. And what a way to meld all these flavors

together and get something completely new:

A wonderful spreadable cheese, rich in garlic and pepper. So I had a new anchor for our cheese

selection. At a recent cocktail party, my clever host, Huey, had simply

combined some really good raisins with some toasted walnuts. Nothing could be simpler or more satisfying. But

my new discoveries didn’t end there. I

was confronted with a recipe I’d been wanting to try since forever. It was for Sweet and Savory Bacon Jam.

Sweet and Savory Bacon JamWhen

friends go to the trouble of pointing my search in a new direction, I am always supremely grateful. One afternoon last week, I got

years. We don’t see each other that

often because she lives between Denver, Aspen and Rancho Mirage CA. But she gets to New York annually and it’s

she’d taken the trouble to send me an article from The Denver Post’s food

section. Its author, a woman named

Stacey Brugeman, who calls herself the Denver Omnivore, says she’d wanted to

try making Bacon Jam ever since a Top Chef contestant, Kevin Gillespie, topped

a fricassee of Atlanta's Kevin Gillespie once topped

snails with Bacon Jam snails with bacon jam

in 2009. Now Kevin looks like he knows a

thing or two about bacon but I am afraid the snail topping might have turned me

off sooner than it turned me on. Stacey,

meanwhile, made this combination of thick sliced bacon, onions and shallots,

mustard, Worcestershire sauce and Maple Syrup for a breakfast party. It was such a hit that for weeks afterward

she kept getting requests for the recipe—some from people who were not even at

the original party. This kind of

endorsement sent me straight to the stove.

Here are the recipes for Fromage

Fort and Sweet and Savory Bacon Jam.

Make them and you’ll have all kinds of things to talk about over your next

cheese platter.

Recipe for Fromage Fort with White Wine and Garlic:

Beware the "Stinking Rose"

I first followed this recipe to a

1.

Set a large Dutch oven or heavy skillet over medium-high to high heat. Add the

bacon and cook, stirring occasionally, until it begins to brown and crisp, 15

to 20 minutes. Drain (or do not drain) the excess bacon fat.

2.

Lower the heat to medium. Stir in the onions and shallots, and cook until

softened, 8 to 10 minutes.

3.

Add the maple syrup, vinegar, Dijon, and Worcestershire sauce. Season with salt

and pepper. Pour in 1/2 cup of water and stir to combine. Bring the mixture to

a boil, reduce heat to low and simmer, stirring occasionally if necessary. Cook

until the the jam has a glossy appearance and syrup-like consistency, about 1 hour.

4.

Allow the mixture to cool for 20 to 30 minutes. Transfer to a blender and pulse

a few times to puree the larger pieces, stopping every pulse or two to stir and

check the consistency — it should be thick and chunky, not a paste.

4.

Transfer to an airtight container.

Serve at room temperature or slightly heated in the microwave.