THREE CHEESE OYSTER GRATIN
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MY MOJO (COULD HAVE) SANK INTO A MENTAL ABYSS SO DEEP, IT WOULD TAKE A KRISPY KREME-SUBMARINE TO RETRIEVE
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Hello. Sorry. I think it’s been awhile. I don’t know if there was a guideline on the Successful Food Blogging Manual specifically on post-frequencies, but I’m sure an entire week of blankness and neglect would on the other hand, dominate the entire Troubleshoots Section (As well as questions like this: What to do when you accidentally publish an unfinished post?)(Answer: Call 911.)(And: What is a writer’s block?)(Answer: Eat a donut.). Well, the truth is… that I wish there was a more socially excusable answer for my absence, you know, dog theft, broken hips, dead grandparents… house fire? Because really, anything is better than what I’m about to confess, which is the silent gasps among food-bloggers, the leading Do-Not’s under the manual’s flashing red, Skull-headed Section that you should probably read before Getting Started (Side by side with: Bad-mouthing Jesus.)(And also: Cursing out children). But the truth is that, in the past week, as honestly as I can put it… I simply got tired of foods.
Yes, if you were a food-blogger, along with the acute urge to weep after a deflated cake (Answer: Ingest alcohol and blog about that instead) and recipe-deficit (Answer: Put down the donut and make that a sandwich), this complication too can happen. But different from how I’d imagine it, which should’ve been a natural and peaceful death following a long and beautiful journey, this temporary episode came prematurely due to a self-inflicted and unforeseeable cause. In short, I simply got tired of foods because there had been simply, too much fooding. Can there be such a thing? Yes. With all this being said, if you have always wanted to start your very own food blog, but were not sure how to go about it, knowing that you can find cheap domain names could be the first step in finally becoming a blogger! When you start blogging, remember that you will constantly be writing about food. You’ll need to be writing a fair amount of text nearly every day. This can be difficult for some of the most passionate bloggers, but with the right tools, such as a website maker, a domain name, and social media, you could find that blogging is the right move for you.
After reading the above-mentioned information, you might be feeling a bit worried about the process of blogging. But don’t worry, it can be fun too! How? With the use of Gravatars! But What Is Gravatar and How to Use It? Basically, gravatars are the graphical representations of users on the web. Whenever you interact with a gravatar-enabled website (such as by publishing your own articles or by commenting on blog posts), your gravatar image can automatically show up there. Furthermore, using gravatars can save you from installing third-party plugins (to manage user accounts) and let you set up your profile on a single platform, which you can use across multiple sites. If you wish to know more about this, you can search for resources on the internet.
Furthermore, some bloggers decide to create an Instagram account too. When using Instagram, it’s more about the photos than the text. This makes it much easier to have the motivation to make a career out of food. It’s even easier to grow an Instagram account too. I’ve heard that some people can purchase followers online that are properly managed instagram accounts that can offer real engagement on your posts, helping your account to grow. When considering a career online, make sure to think wisely. Blogging requires a lot of writing, whereas Instagram requires photos and videos. Some people might even opt for both platforms!
As briefly mentioned before, I partook in an annual Beijing’s restaurants review for a city magazine, thinking it was going to be the best blogging-perk ever, but after cramming almost twenty restaurants into the past mere four weeks (that’s 3~5 restaurants per week!), things started to get a little… overcooked. Like a bridezilla on her third wedding, I had managed to turn the single, most appreciated aspect of my otherwise ungrateful life, into just another demeaning chore. To say the least, it backfired.
Even though this miscalculated experiment, for my wellness sake, timely ended last Thursday, it has left me in a prolonged state of mental paralysis where I just wanted to suck my thumbs in peace and not having to come up with another word to describe a meal other than cursing it out. I wanted to just exist… on soda crackers for a month. Or so at least, fortunately, it only felt that way. To my surprise as well, thanks to a book here and there, it only took a few days for the cravings to cook again to slowly creep back in, and literally, exploded over this weekend. In hindsight, if the two dishes I made over the weekend had flopped, my mojo would’ve sank into a mental abyss so deep it would take a krispy krem-submarine to retrieve. But no, they didn’t flop. In fact, they were both smashing success, and one of them being what I’m about to tell you – the three cheese oyster gratin.
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This recipe was inspired by what we didn’t have at Vin Vi, one of the better restaurants/izakaya we’ve dined at during this entire process, which was on their menu but unavailable the day we visited. I’ve always loved izakaya-style cheesy grilled oysters/kaki mayo, where shucked in-shell oysters are topped with a mixture of Kewpie-mayonnaise and cheese, then go under high heat to be melted into the gloriously broken, greasy, and unapologetic beauties that they are. Its absence from that meal (perhaps thankfully to that) had left a vacuum in my oyster-deprived heart that, even after the most vicious eating-fatigue, must be filled. But if there was one thing I didn’t like about kaki mayo, it’d be the pool of oil they often sit on, being the aftermath of post-high heat mayonnaise that had inevitably separated.
So I substituted the mayonnaise with a thick béchamel sauce infused with dry white wine and loaded it with shredded white cheddar, gruyere, and a daring pinch of freshly grated nutmeg. Then after blanketing the shucked oysters from all directions with this stringy goo, it was then covered again with freshly grated Parmigiano cheese, more freshly grated nutmegs (the key, people, the key), and a few/or many little nubs of unsalted butter. Baked under the top-broiler for 13~15 minutes, the sweet oysters had released their juices to be blended as part of the cheesy pool of joy, slightly shrivelled and firmed up but still supple to the bite, smoldering under a crust of golden and bubbly surface. I’d warn you that it was hot, but again it might had been too late. After all, even I, who have been subjected to an entire month of human-foie gras feeding regimen and was already at the stage of over-ripened-for-harvest, couldn’t resist to (huff~ huff~ huff~) tuck one into my mouth right out of the oven and part the burning white sea with a torn piece of crusty sourdough.
And guess what, it was worth the burn, worth the paralyzing month of restaurant-hammering that ultimately led to it, worth every dragging agony to crawl back to the kitchen to make it, and now the what’s-one-more bulge of fat sticking out from places I don’t even know exist on my body. Hey, my friends, if you ever feel tired of foods, going in or churning out. Take a couple days off, eat some soda crackers. Then come back, and make this. And I promise you, all shall be good again.
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Ingredients
- 8~10 large shucked oysters
- 2 tbsp unsalted butter
- 2 tbsp all-purpose flour
- 1 cup (240 ml) whole milk
- 1/4 cup (60 ml) dry white wine
- 3/4 cup (75 grams) shredded white cheddar
- 3/4 cup (75 grams) shredded gruyere
- 1 clove garlic, grated
- 1/3 tsp sea salt, plus more to adjust
- 1/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper
- 1/8 tsp ground white pepper
- 1/8 tsp freshly grated nutmeg, plus more to top
- Freshly grated Parmigiano cheese to top
Instructions
- Rinse and clean the oysters to get rid of any impurities, gently dab dry, then set aside. In a pot over medium heat, melt the unsalted butter then cook the flour for 1 min. Whisk in the whole milk and dry white wine, and continue whisking until the mixture comes to a simmer and has fully thickened, then keep cooking for 5~6 min until reduced slightly and the alcohol has evaporated. Turn off the heat, then add the shredded white cheddar, shredded gruyere, grated garlic, sea salt, ground black pepper, ground white pepper and freshly grated nutmeg, and stir with a fork until the cheese has fully melted (taste and re-season with sea salt if needed).
- Preheat the top broiler on high. In a shallow oven-proof skillet, spread 1/2 of the cheese sauce on the bottom, then arrange the oysters evenly and cover with the rest of the cheese sauce. Grate enough Parmigiano cheese to entirely cover the surface, then scatter a few extra nubs of unsalted butter here and there. Bake on the middle rack of the oven for 13~15 min, until it's bubbly and golden browned. Grate another generous pinch of fresh nutmeg over the top (do not be shy with the nutmeg!), then serve immediately with crusty sourdough.
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Kari Jaquith
April 13, 2015 at 8:58 PMThis looks amazing and makes me really happy that I live where Oysters are plentiful!
Liz B. @ Umami Life
April 13, 2015 at 10:11 PMOMG how do you do what you do?! This looks delicious and decadent. Just thinking about whole milk, white wine and cheese whipped up is making me hela hungry…
http://thatumamilife.wordpress.com – a clean eating bento blog
Ursula @ LilVienna.com
April 13, 2015 at 10:33 PMMhhhh Cheeeesz. Love this trio!
Michelle @ Hummingbird High
April 13, 2015 at 11:01 PMThere IS such a thing as too much food, especially as a blogger! Food fatigue, it’s a real thing.
S Lauren | Modern Granola
April 13, 2015 at 11:24 PMI love this space so much!!! Seriously. And this looks delicious. I love your food photography, styling, and interesting recipes. You are a constant source for inspiration!
Marie Warne
April 14, 2015 at 1:27 AMYou had me at the word gratin. Anything draped with a blanket of crispy melted cheese makes my heart sing. I also love oysters so this combination seems like a no-brainer. Thank you for supplying me with my daily dose of food porn.
Jeff Winett
April 14, 2015 at 3:16 AMOh my, what you have just shared….Thank you dearly for this. Only yesterday, my husband and I were at the Sunday Hollywood Farmers market. There is a vendor from San Diego who drives up every week, and they shuck amazing oysters on demand. What you have single-handedly done is plan a decadent and comforting Sunday night supper. My cooking this week has been planned, and our Sunday dinner guests to come do not eat Oysters…..I can all but guarantee, that a week from this coming Sunday, our dinner is set in stone. Hubs is always thrilled when I craft one of those overnight risen artisinal loaves, and now you know what I will be obsessing over, for the next 13 days :) If I’m not being an email hog, I will post the results….Cheers, and thank you again for your cooking minds eye. “Baking” under a broiler….wow, who’d a thunk it?
Jeff
Lynn | The Road to Honey
April 14, 2015 at 4:25 AMI am so glad that you managed to claw your way out of your food induced coma to bring us this lovely, little dish. I live in New England and we love our seafood and oysters and I am digging this new way to prepare them. First, let me run the Boston marathon (this weekend!!!) and then whipped this up. Ok. . .not really running this race but will need to in order to free up the calories for this indulgent yummy. Does it count if I run it in my dreams?
mandy@ladyandpups
April 14, 2015 at 3:21 PMLynn, cast iron pans are heavy and they burn calories just to carry… it’s true
Kat
April 14, 2015 at 6:13 AMThat looks amazing!! How big was the skillet you used? I don’t want this to spread too thinly on my cast iron!
mandy@ladyandpups
April 14, 2015 at 3:23 PMKat, my skillet was small, around 20 cm/8″ in diameter!
Kelsey M
April 14, 2015 at 9:49 AMIs this real life? I mean, really!
I just wish I had seen this before I left MD (local shucked oysters galore near my mom’s house) and could have picked some up!
-Kelsey
Linda | Brunch with Joy
April 14, 2015 at 1:01 PMI feel you! It happens from time to time and too often I wish I have superpower to stop time so I can take a breath. I guess I still need more practice. On the other hand, did you hear my tummy just said thank you for this three cheese oyster gratin? I love oyster, especially oyster pancake or grilled. But this one looks fabulous, too!
Desiree @ whatsinseasonwithdes
April 14, 2015 at 7:14 PMWow! What I would give to sit with this gratin and sop up every last bit with as much bread as necessary.
Karen
April 15, 2015 at 7:12 AMYes!Yes! I didn’t think anyone else ever got tired of food! Thank you. Usually when I fall in this abyss,
it’s your amazing postings and food that can pull me out. Everything else is just run of the mill. Thanks Again!
Dana Renée
April 15, 2015 at 11:36 PMYUMM!!! An oyster gratin – this is genius! Will definitely be trying this recipe out when oysters are back in season here!
ellie | fit for the soul
April 18, 2015 at 1:40 PMI need to eat this asap!!! Oysters are my favorite and the stinkier the better 0_0 But it’s really strange that too much of a good thing can make us tired, huh? Whenever I eat out back to back or at restaurants that I didn’t choose because I’m with a group of people, I feel like I need to rest my tummy. That’s when salads come to the rescue though :)
nann
May 21, 2015 at 1:48 AMI was wondering what I could substitute for the flour? Looks so yummy but can’t do the flour.
Thanks in advance for you suggestion!
Cheers
Nann
Amy Sullivan
November 25, 2018 at 7:11 AMHi, this was nice to make and I had high expectations but it did not work out. I’ll try it again and see if I can make it work better.
I live where we have lots of oysters so I doubled the cheese sauce recipe, but used much more oysters- maybe 40. I was serving 4. I think that was one issue- they threw off a lot of liquid that wouldn’t have been accounted for in the original recipe. The other issue is that cooking them in the middle of the oven with the broiler on simply made the top brown up very quickly, bubbling drastically, and so I turned off the broiler after 3 minutes and let them sit in the hot oven for 10 more minutes hoping for the best. Unfortunately this didn’t allow the sauce and oysters to get to work together.
We had bowls of soupy cheesy oysters for supper, which isn’t the worst thing, but this recipe is not flexible at all, not for people who expect to eat more than three oysters, and regardless I’m not sure the broiler method is a good one for keeping this together.
mandy@ladyandpups
November 25, 2018 at 12:50 PMAmy, in that case I would suggest browning the oysters in hot skillet with butter first to eliminate the liquid issues.
Jynne
August 26, 2023 at 3:48 PMI love finding your old recipes, I followed the recipe almost to the letter. Unfortunately I was too busy drinking the wine to add it. Rookie mistake. Still was absolutely delicious!! I used Bluff Oysters because it was all I could find and the parmesan really cut through the zink, briny-ness. Thank you again, I’ve followed a few of your recipes and they are always punchy and delicious