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1 Ingredient, 4 Ways

Articles on how to make one ingredient versatile with four different dishes from independent restaurants across the country

1 ingredient, 4 ways: Huckleberries

The dark and mysterious fruit stands out from other berries

Tara Fitzpatrick, Senior Editor

November 2, 2017

3 Min Read
Chocolate Concorde cake John Besh Caribbean Room NOLA
Randy Schmidt

Dark and mysterious, huckleberries take the menu through an overgrown berry patch at dusk: far from the ordinary, a bit dangerous with the thorns and just to the edge of sweet obsession when paired with glittery beignets, fermented shrubs, campfire meringue and more.

With so many berries vying to be the next “it” superfruit, from aronia to goji to good old blueberry, there’s one berry that stands out. Evocative of a magical Northern forest and a special time of year — nature’s limited-time offer — huckleberries are showing up on more menus — dessert and cocktail menus, especially — bringing their juicy magic to the table and unapologetically drizzling on the tablecloth with decadent deep-purple stains. 

Huckleberry beignet

Philip Pretty, chef, Restauration, Long Beach, Calif.

Price: $12

Located on Long Beach’s ‘Retro Row,’ Restauration puts the emphasis on sharing and community, with family-style serving and a big craft beer collection. Berries show up in a lot of the modern American/fresh produce-inspired dishes, as a compote with sous vide duck, for example, or in pancakes at brunch. So combining offbeat berries like huckleberry with current trends, such as dessert doughnuts, has been a win. “Between the oxtail doughnut and this dessert, I think I’ve made more doughnuts in the past month than any bakery in town,” said Philip Pretty, chef of Restauration. “My grandma used wild huckleberries in her jam, so I wanted to recreate that memory as one of my own.”

Chocolate Concorde cake

John Besh, The Caribbean Room, New Orleans

Price: $12

Chocolate glaçage, or “mirror glaze,” provides the shiny cloak on this complex dessert at The Caribbean Room, John Besh and Chris Lusk’s epic remake of a New Orleans classic restaurant on St. Charles Avenue in the Lower Garden District. The complexity comes in layers: chocolate mousse and chocolate meringue make up the foundation, and the huckleberries are broken down into a deep, dark compote that’s crunched up with chocolate-almond crumbs. Chocolate meringue sticks allude to a smoky campfire and Muscadine sorbet, made with wine grapes with origins in the American South, adds to the mysterious vibe. 

Persephone’s Demise

Manish Mehrotra, chef, Indian Accent, New York

Price: $17

In Greek mythology, Persephone — goddess of sunshine and spring weather — was kidnapped by Hades to the underworld and forced to return every fall, because she had tasted the forbidden fruit of the dead. This cocktail puts an uplifting spin on the dark side of that myth with a cold fermented huckleberry shrub, lemongrass-infused gin, plum liqueur, Chartreuse, bitters and Douglas fir eau de vie. At Indian Accent, an inventive Indian restaurant with locations in New York, London and New Dehli, this mythical elixir shares company with other ambitious and fun cocktails and a full menu of globally influenced, dressed-up Indian comfort food. 

25-layer ricotta crepe torte

Adrian Mendoza, executive pastry chef, Herb & Wood, San Diego

Price: $12

This over-the-top crepe torte contains 25 meticulously layered light-as-air ricotta crepes, lending an ethereal quality. But this flagship dessert at Brian Malarkey’s chic, lofty, wood-fire-centric spot Herb & Wood in San Diego is grounded with an earthiness provided by huckleberry compote. Candied pistachios and pistachio gelato take the dessert in different, surprising direction.

 

About the Author

Tara Fitzpatrick

Senior Editor, Informa Restaurant & Food Group

Tara Fitzpatrick is Food Management’s senior editor and a contributor to Restaurant Hospitality and Nation’s Restaurant News, creating editorial content for digital, print and events. Tara holds a bachelor of science degree from the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at Kent State University. Before joining Food Management in 2008, Tara was associate editor at National Association of College Stores in Oberlin, Ohio. Prior to that, Tara worked as a newspaper reporter in her hometown of Lorain, Ohio, where she lives now. Tara is a fan of food history, legends, lore, ghost stories, urban farming and old cookbooks. 

Tara Fitzpatrick’s areas of expertise include the onsite foodservice industry (K-12 schools, colleges and universities, healthcare and B&I), menu trends, sustainability in foodservice, senior dining, farm-to-table and innovation.

Tara Fitzpatrick is a frequent webinar and podcast host and has served on the board of directors for IFEC (International Food Editors Consortium).

Tara Fitzpatrick’s experience:

Senior Editor, Food Management (Feb 2008-present)

Associate Editor, National Association of College Stores (2005-2008)

Reporter, The Morning Journal (2002-2005)

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tara-fitzpatrick-4a08451/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/Tara_Fitzie

Insta: https://www.instagram.com/tarafitzie/

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