Posted by - Bruce Main -
on - November 28, 2023 -
Filed in - Arts & Culture -
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Have you ever noticed how climbing bines of emerald hops resemble pea plants? Like hops, peas are botanically fruit, but that doesn’t stop many people from regarding them as green vegetables. Just as peas are eaten in spring salads and exalted as summer produce, hops play an important role in supporting farmers market fare, bolstering beers with lighter grain builds to better pair with bitter greens and brassica.
Chefs such as Josh Niernberg at Bin 707 Foodbar in Colorado are finding ways to marry their local flavors and tap lines. Bin 707 is in Grand Junction, just 25 miles east of the Utah border, in the fertile region known as the state’s wine country. It’s also historically renowned for beet farming. Niernberg sources his from nearby Palisade, where sugar beets were once a big industry.
“We’ll use them fresh, salt-roasted, smoked, and pickled—that’s how we manipulate acid, salt, and savory [in a dish].” It’s a vegetarian riff on his elk tartare, which upon first glance looks identical, but the beets are either salt-roasted or smoked, tossed with citrus, dressed with a vinaigrette, topped with honey yogurt, then adorned with puffed beet-dyed tapioca crisps and a crest of frisée. “I’m big on sour [beers], not super heavy on barrel, with a little bit of salinity,” says Niernberg, suggesting Verboten Brewing’s Roll in Ze Watermelon Gose as a perfect foil for the beet dish. “The beer has green rind, not bright red watermelon flavor,” which adds a splash of necessary acid to beets’ inherent earthiness.
When Niernberg and his wife opened the restaurant in 2008, access to local seasonal produce highly informed their menu. There was no shortage of opportunities, but in trying to capture the rich and vibrant farming community, so much of the menu conception was preserving those flavors for future use. Fermentation is a main component of Bin 707’s larder. “Wild beers are hand-in-hand with preservation,” from the many pickles to conservas that are highlighted on the menu, pairing well with Crooked Stave’s lacto–fermented sours and farmhouse beers like Jester King’s Le Petit Prince, with notes of citrus and straw. “I want to sit down and session [these beers] with dinner,” notes Niernberg.
Another facet that Niernberg considers is cellulose, the fibrous cell structure of many fruits and vegetables. “It’s more the [water] weight of the dish than anything,” Niernberg states, explaining the dehydration process he uses for most vegetables. “First we dehydrate, then use a 3 to 4 percent saline brine, do some lacto-fermentation, then slice and dehydrate again.” Not all of his bumper crop fare becomes condiments or crispy chips, though—a transformation that is less about taste than texture.
In a similar form, radishes are ubiquitous as crisp accents and garnishes, tiled atop a trout rillette as if scales, or found throughout the menu at Tacoparty, Niernberg’s taco shop down the street from Bin 707. When it comes to the array of radishes, Niernberg believes “their sweet spot is a cold fresh lager,” offering up Rhode Island’s own Narragansett Lager, which is new to Colorado. Even though radishes aren’t the star of a mussels and lemon verbena curry dish, Niernberg uses large slices of daikon in place of bread, adding a clean, fresh bite to the dish.
For smaller snacks, Niernberg self-admittedly overutilizes a common brassica: cauliflower, which he deems “the champion of any appetizer.” Crispy fried cauliflower is strewn over sunflower and mayacoba hummus and drizzled with spicy and sweet honey-inflected chili oil, giving the dish a kick. The same impact is found in Tacoparty’s crispy cauliflower taco, with green chile mole verde, queso fresco, sage honey, chives, and salsa macha, all on a house-nixtamalized blue corn tortilla. Here, pale ales and IPA reign, cleansing the palate of heat and sweetness.
Another often overlooked vegetable is the humble potato, which Niernberg highlights in a yellow banana potato bisque—paying homage to the San Luis Valley, which prospered from the potato economy for the past 150 years—bolstered by a kick of ‘nduja (soft Calabrian sausage) and dotted with trout roe and herb oil. Niernberg loves pairing this with Crooked Stave’s Sour Rosé Ale to amplify the spice while contrasting the starch. La Cumbre’s Vivid Wild Hazy IPA and Bottle Logic’s Hanamachi Black Rice Lager also grace the menu, adding a bitter backbone and a nutty dry complement, respectively, to many dishes that call out Colorado’s famous Olathe sweet corn, Fremont beans, and more.
Ji Hye Kim, of Miss Kim in Ann Arbor, Mich., tends to cast vegetables in supporting roles as opposed to the lead on a plate, such as pea shoots tossed with garlic and jalapeño, miso butter-glossed asparagus, and sauteed corn round, which are largely inspired by Korean banchan. These side dishes, kimchi and beyond, are traditionally placed on the table before the main dish arrives. “When we first opened [Miss Kim], we had entrees with three or four banchan, which included kimchi.”
“Bitter greens, like watercress or spicy mustard greens, go surprisingly well with slight bitter notes,” Kim comments, noting dishes like classic Bibimbap, a rice bowl with greens, pickled vegetables, and topped with a fried egg, or Tteokbokki, sauteed rice cake rounds often served with seasonal vegetables and mushrooms, a dish inspired by 19th-century vegan cuisine served in palaces. For lighter salads, she’ll tend to choose lighter beers, like Upland Brewing Co.’s Champagne Velvet and Brew Detroit’s Citrus Blonde, allowing guests to really taste the vegetable instead of overpowering it.
“Beer with Korean cuisine functions a bit differently than other foods,” explains Kim, describing the philosophy of chimaek (chicken and beer) and pimaek (pizza and beer)—words that define certain food and drink combinations in Korea. Kim believes vegetables and beer should be held in the same regard. “Ya, which means vegetable, is also a prefix for something sexy, so why not make vegetables and beer sexy and call it yamaek?”
When Miss Kim opened in fall of 2017, “Drinkers just wanted IPAs, but not all IPAs are the same,” Kim concedes, “whereas with these [aforementioned] pairings, beer is meant to refresh the palate.” She serves many saisons, Pilsners, and light lagers, like Stillwater Artisanal Ale’s Extra Dry sake-style saison, and will occasionally offer a porter or stout. She also likes Brew Detroit’s Cerveza Delray Oscura, a dark Mexican lager. Kim connects these darker flavors to Korean BBQ, in which most meat is marinated in deeper, dark flavors like soy sauce, garlic, sesame, and scallions, without any acidic element—pickles and kimchi provide that balance, but so does beer.
By Josh Niernberg, Bin 707, Tacoparty
Yield: Approximately eight 10-ounce servings
This recipe uses small fingerling-style Colorado-grown yellow potatoes from the San Luis Valley. We’ve seen them called Yellow Banana and Yellow Jelly potatoes. The key is a very low starch/high sugar content potato.
Ingredients
Directions
Note: If bisque is too thick, adjust with either milk or water. Make sure to readjust seasoning after diluting as needed.
To serve:
Garnish the bisque with a dollop of both crema and parsley oil. Make a crescent shape around the crema and oil with lightly crushed multi color potato chips. Gently add trout roe (if using) to the chips. Garnish the chips and roe with fennel fronds.
By Ji Hye Kim, Miss Kim
This is a quick and easy vegan version of the sauteed Tteokbokki we serve at Miss Kim. It was inspired by the old palace version of Tteokbokki from the 19th century. The original palace version is very luxurious, full of various vegetables and mushrooms, pine nuts, and beef. We make ours simpler with seasonal vegetables and mushrooms, quickly sauteed in a hot pan to order. We decided to skip the beef because the vegan version was so tasty and we didn’t think it needed meat.
For the sauce:
Mix all ingredients in a large bowl, making sure all the sugar is dissolved. Keep the finished sauce refrigerated. It will last a few weeks.
For the rice cakes (aka tteokbokki):
Directions
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