Serenbe Style and Soul

with Marie Nygren

serenbe

Sunday

21

February 2010

2

COMMENTS

Salmon Cakes

Written by , Posted in marie nygren, Recipe Articles, serenbe

I featured these Salmon Cakes this past weekend at the Farmhouse and they are always a favorite!

It really is a simple recipe and I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.

  • 2 cups finely flaked poached or grilled salmon ( I prefer poached)
  • 1 tablespoon dry mustard
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh chives
  • 1 tablespoon finely chopped capers
  • 1/2 cup mayonnaise
  • 1 1/2 cups fresh bread crumbs
  • Fine dry bread crumbs, for dredging
  • 6 tablespoons (3/4 stick) butter
In a large mixing bowl, combine the salmon, lemon, juice, dry mustard, parsley, chives, capers, and mayonnaise and toss till well blended. Add the fresh bread crumbs.
Using your hands, form the mixture into 4 or 5 cakes and pat lightly in the dry bread crumbs.
In a large, heavy skillet, melt the better over moderate heat. Add the cakes and cook till golden brown, 4 to 5 minutes on each side. Keep warm till ready to serve with Caper Tartar Sauce.
Serves 4-6.
Caper Tartar Sauce
  • 1/2 cup mayonnaise
  • 1/4 cup plain yogurt
  • 2 tsp. lemon juice
  • 4 drops Tabasco
  • 1/4 tsp pepper
  • Salt to taste
  • 1 tbs finely chopped green onion and capers
Mix mayo and yogurt thoroughly and add lemon juice, Tabasco, salt and pepper. Stir in onions and capers.

Monday

15

February 2010

0

COMMENTS

The Shops of Serenbe

Written by , Posted in "the Bilt-House", serenbe

I am still amazed at times that we have a little village in what used to be our woods. Yet what amazes me the most is the level of creativity that abounds among our shopkeepers and restaurants.

Definitely one of the most fun and creative shops is The Bilthouse. Started by Jan Bilthouse a number of years ago in Buckhead, Jan opened a Serenbe shop 2 years ago and it has been a roaring success ever since.


The shop is filled with fun clothes for women, great gift items and home furnishings on the 2nd floor. Always colorful and cheery, Bilthouse is a super fun store to visit to find that perfect gift for any occasion.

I asked Jan to tell about her store and here is her delightful quote:

“Well the weather outside is frightful, but our spring clothes are so delightful” so if your travel plans take you south to warmer weather come in and The Bilt-House will take care of your warm weather wardrobe! And if you are staying put come in and see our new collection of lamps and our great new selection of reversable raincoats by Mycra Pac.



Come on out to see for yourself this weekend.




Wednesday

10

February 2010

0

COMMENTS

Mom and Mary Mac’s

Written by , Posted in "mary mac's", marie nygren, serenbe

When mother bought Mary Mac’s, the restaurant only sat 50 people and the kitchen was in the back part of the building on Ponce de Leon in Midtown Atlanta. All the cooks were older African American women who had been taught by their mama’s how to cook.

Mary Mac’s was opened five days a week for lunch and dinner with a three hour break between the two meals and closing at 8pm every night even Fridays.


My first job  was drying the silverware when I was six.  Mom would  pick up my younger sister and I every Friday and  take us back to the restaurant for the evening. I can still remember the smells of walking in the back door to the kitchen and seeing all the big pots on the stove. All the dishes were washed by hand- no big dishwashing machines yet- so I was put on silverware duty under the watchful eye of the dishwasher. 
A big kitchen apron was wrapped around me and I would get to dry silver until we went home with Mom at 8pm.

Because of Mary Mac’s proximity to downtown and it’s offices, the place filled with business men at lunch. Mary Mac’s already had a reputation for good food when mom bought it but she must have increased the goodness as the restaurant grew in popularity.

Another reason for increased growth was mom’s reputation for moving people in out with efficiency and grace. The business folks knew they could get a delicious meal quickly and be back to the office within their lunch hour. When Mom was calling checks on the steamtable line, she was working the dining room, busing tables, chatting with guests and gracefully moving people along.

When Mom came to scratch your back, you had received the signal it was time to leave so the next guest in line got their turn to eat mom’s delicious southern food.




Saturday

6

February 2010

0

COMMENTS

How mom began at Mary Mac’s

Written by , Posted in "margaret lupo" "marie nygren", "mary mac's", serenbe

I take for granted what an experience it was to grow up in a place like Mary Mac’s.

When you are in the midst of it, you can not see the wonder of it until you step back to see it from the outside in. I never thought it was particularly strange to have a mom that worked though I was one of the few girls at the time who did. I was born in 1960 and  mom  had a small  restaurant in downtown Atlanta  – Margaret’s Tray Shop. It was a cafeteria style restaurant  that served lunch daily to the office workers. A great many of it’s customers worked for the IRS and when they move their headquarters to the suburbs in 1962, mom lost most of her client base and had to close.




She went to work for Mary McKensie who had started Mary Mac’s in the late ’50s. A few weeks after starting, Mary announced she was getting married and moving to Florida. “Do you want to buy the place Margaret?” she asked. Thus started mom’s amazing time at the restaurant.



Mom had picked up her passion about  food from her mother, Lucille Kennon. Miss Lucille, as she was known in Columbus Ga, had been widowed at a young age and left with 5 children to support. She left the family farm in Salem, Alabama and moved across the river to Columbus. In need of a job, she went to work for the school system and eventually became Georgia’s first female dietitian for the school’s. Mom would go to the kitchen with her mother in the morning before school and then meet her after for the walk back home.


Though mom graduated from Georgia Women’s College with a degree in Latin at the age of 19 and as the valedictorian!, something in that kitchen must have “cooked” her because when she moved to Atlanta several years later as a divorcée with a young son, she went to work for a hotel in Atlanta, then the tray shop and the purchase of Mary Mac’s in 1962.



When I think about it, mother had amazing courage because there wasn’t a lot of societal support for working women. Yet, she had incredible support from her family, especially my grandmother and aunts. All of them working women with college degrees- even my grandmother who had her degree from Pratt Institute.

My mother was constantly encouraging (sometimes pushing) to find a career and a passion. The subject was never about getting married and having children as might have been expected. 

In my family, the women were expected to pursue the career of their choice. And like my mother who watched hers, I choose the world of food to make my mark.

Wednesday

3

February 2010

0

COMMENTS

Slow Food

Written by , Posted in "slow food atlanta", serenbe, Southern Chef Series, Watershed

Slow Food is an organization that started in Italy to promote the idea of celebrating the experience of a shared meal with lovingly prepared food- not just a quick fast food bite.

The group received such attention that chapters have been formed all over the world. Atlanta Slow Food is hosting an event that I am excited to tell you about. And it features two of my favorite chefs from our Southern Chef Series, Linton and Kevin.





Slow Food Atlanta is pleased to invite you to 
FAMILY DINNER WITH CARLO PETRINI



Sunday, February 21 
7 p.m. 
Watershed Restaurant 
406 W. Ponce de Leon Ave. 
Decatur, GA 30030



Join seven of Atlanta’s favorite chefs for an intimate, family-style dinner that pays homage to food memories of the South and raises funds for Slow Food’s Terra Madre Foundation.  In addition to sharing five courses of reinterpreted southern family recipes — each course inspired by a food memory from the preparing chef — guests will enjoy a word from Slow Food International Founder Carlo Petrini on the importance of Terra Madre and the future of Slow Food and a rare performance by Emily Saliers of the Indigo Girls.

Chefs for the dinner include Linton Hopkins of Restaurant Eugene, Kevin Gillespie of Woodfire Grill, Steven Satterfield of Miller Union, Kevin Ouzts of The Spotted Trotter, Billy Allin of Cakes & Ale, Scott Peacock of Watershed, and Cathy Conway of Avalon Catering.

Tickets are $150 per person if purchased before Monday, February 15;
Tickets are $175 if purchased after February 15.  
VIP Tickets are $250 per person and include a seat at Carlo Petrini’s table (limited availability).

Purchase your tickets at www.slowfoodatlanta.org. Proceeds from the dinner will be donated directly to Slow Food’s Terra Madre Foundation.

Sponsored by:



Tuesday

2

February 2010

2

COMMENTS

Paint Our Town Red!

Written by , Posted in Paint the town red, serenbe

This weekend in Serenbe is really going to be special. Please join us for a pre Valentine’s celebration as we “Paint the Town Red!” 

All of our businesses, galleries and restaurants are offering fun ideas and promotions for your Valentine shopping. Everything from “red” gifts, a new shop opening, riding lessons, singing and our efforts to offer Help for Haiti. For this weekend only we also have some outside vendors joining us.

We have so many wonderful happenings this weekend, there was just too much to list in one short blog posting. Please click Serenbe to read about all of the festivities.

We can’t wait to see all of you as we Paint the Town Red!”

Friday

29

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

Thinking of Mom

Written by , Posted in "mary mac's", serenbe



People always ask me if I cooked as a child in mom’s restaurant and are surprised when I say no. I did cook with mom at home on the weekends in our kitchen but in the restaurant, I only remember drying the silverware, that is all she would have me do!

Actually, Mom didn’t physically cook in the restaurant kitchen either, they were her recipes but she never cooked. Mom had 20-30 people to prep and a kitchen manager. I never saw my mom cooking in the kitchen at the restaurant. She had the bakers, vegetable people, meat people… from my recollection, she never cooked in the kitchen. She would create recipes, she would do that at home but never cooked them.


One thing Mom was famous for besides her cooking was her back scratching. She would go over to her customers, touch them, and scratch their back. People loved that from mom but they also knew that especially at lunch time, a backscratch also mean’t it was time to go. Funny, years later I find myself also reaching out to my customers in a similar way. 

In the past few weeks there has been lots going on. I have been thinking a lot about mom as I’m writing the blog and recently in the Farmhouse  I am signing my mom’s cookbook…. to have 3 woman asking me to sign my mother’s cookbook…. it amazes me. Someone asked me for my red pepper soup recipe the other day and I realized I just kind of put things together. I was able to give her the ingredients but don’t really have the amounts written down.

It still seems weird to me that people ask these things.


…….it even makes me think of my own cookbook one day!


Thursday

28

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

Two Days With Linton

Written by , Posted in Linton Hopkins, marie nygren, serenbe, Southern Chef Series

What could be more fun for a Southern foodie than spending 2 days with one of it’s most passionate champions? It was such a pleasure to have Linton Hopkins (Restaurant Eugene and Holeman and Finch) in my kitchen this past Sunday and Monday. He shared not only some of his delicious recipes with us but his extraordinary knowledge about Southern food and it’s history. Stories about sorghum syrup and broken rice, tracing back the origins of some Southern foods.

And then the passion split over into the dishes he came to teach the participants. Braised Beef Short Ribs with Wild Mushroom Risotto and Sautéed Serenbe Farms Spicy Collards, Butternut Squash Soup with Brown Pecan Butter. For lunch Monday, sheep’s Milk Ricotta Gnudi with a country ham broth and wild mushrooms. Linton taught the fine art of how to build a salad and stuff deviled eggs (no boundaries- let your imagination go). We finished with Panna Cotta with Coca Cola Cranberry Chutney.
     Then time with Linton- no pretense, no “rock star” attitude. Just sitting around the table in the good old Southern tradition talking about things you love- good food and friends.

                                It was a delicious time in so many ways.

See my next posting for Linton’s gnudi recipe.

Wednesday

20

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

Getting ready for Linton

Written by , Posted in "holman and finch", Linton Hopkins, serenbe

Our cousin Caroline and her husband Steve took Steve and I to dinner last night to celebrate my 50th birthday. In anticipation of Linton’s upcoming weekend for the Southern Chef Series, I chose Holman & Finch. What an amazing meal!

Whenever I go out to eat, I usually make a meal of appetizers as I feel they are more interesting and creative compared to the main dishes. The beauty of H & F is all the plates are like the appetizer section- all creative and many are very unusual. And everything is suggested to share- another favorite food activity of mine. (It is a Nygren family tradition when the 5 of us go out to eat that we rotate plates around the table so everyone gets a taste!)

Every dish last night was delicious…… Fish & Chips, Steak Tartare, Fried Oysters, Skate Wing with Fennel, Brussel Sprouts with Benton’s Ham, Roasted Haruki Turnips, Watermelon Radish salad, and Chocolate Sticky Toffee Pudding cake.

We shared it all and cleaned our plates. I was sopping up the sauces with H & F’s fabulous bread. Every time I eat there it reconfirms what I read in a recent article that one of Atlanta chef’s favorite places to eat when they go out is H & F. And as we were finishing our dinner, Steve’s partner from his Peasant restaurant days, Bob Amick was coming in for dinner with his family. Linton knows his stuff!

It should be a fun filled and delicious class this weekend. I am personally looking forward to making the gnocchi!

There is one opening left if you would like to join Linton in my kitchen with 9 other guests. Call 770.463.2610 for reservations.

**photo by James Camp

Wednesday

6

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

My current inspiration

Written by , Posted in "frank stitt", marie nygren, serenbe

I was cleaning around my kitchen the other day and began looking at all of my cookbooks. It reminded me that I haven’t written about any of my favorite cookbooks lately.

One that is so wonderful and a great source of inspiration for me is Frank Stitt’s Southern table. (click on this link to take a peek inside the book)

What most inspires me about Frank is that he was the first Southern chef to take Southern food and elevate it beyond the level of meat plus three.

Several of my favorite dishes come from his cookbook. Sometimes I follow them to the tea (why mess with perfection) or sometimes it’s fun to add my own twist on things. To me, that is what makes cooking fun, experimenting with ingredients to change a recipe and make it your own. Frank’s Buttermilk Vinaigrette is still one of my personal favorites and used quite often at the Farmhouse.

When Inn guests ask me about my favorite Southern recipes, what comes immediately to mind are Frank’s restaurants in Alabama. A great road trip for me is to visit Bottega Restaurant and Café and hang around and enjoy dinner at Highland’s Bar and Grill. I would encourage all of you to visit both restaurants for a true culinary treat.

Frank’s food inspires me on a daily basis because it is so amazingly delicious and to me he is a master Southern Chef.