And so once again it’s asparagus season. That’s very much a good thing as far as I’m concerned, being a Worcestershire lad. For a few fleeting months, we can get these quality shoots before we’re back to the pencil thick imports from God knows where. I try and avoid these.
They’re brilliantly adaptable, whether steamed, grilled, roasted, thinly sliced in a salad etc etc. Best of all it’s very good for you, being packed with antioxidants and vitamins B & K apparently.
*closes wikipedia*
The only downside of course, and I know I putting myself out there, but I’m one of those people with the apparent genetic predisposition to notice the, err, after-affects. I’ll say no more it’s a food blog after all 😉
Of course asparagus is classically paired with egg and/or hollandaise, and this recipe isn’t a million miles away in terms of ingredients.
The Parmesan custard, though prepared differently, is based on a starter I used to like in an Italian recipe. That was thick like crème pâtissière, but this has been prepared thinner, more like a crème anglaise. Or custard as we call it here. I finished it off with some anchovy infused croutons.
The asparagus was prepared my favourite way – chargrilled. But then I prefer most things chargrilled.
Massive umami flavours result of course and although this would make a nice lunch or starter by itself, I added some roast chicken and a little side salad to make it a bit more substantial for dinner.
Serves 2
For the asparagus
- 8 lovely large, fresh asparagus spears!
- 1 lug of garlic oil
- Salt and pepper
For the parmesan custard
- 350ml whole milk – cold or room temperature (if you have time – infused with 1 tbsp black peppers and 1 bay leaf – cooled)
- 4 tbsp grated Parmesan
- 2 egg yolks (room temp)
- Salt to taste
For the anchovy croutons
- 1 large or 2 small slices of stale bread – cubed
- 3-4 anchovy filets
- 3 tbsp olive oil
You don’t have to do this , skip to the end if you prefer! Start with the milk. Heat it in a pan to a simmer with the bay leaf and peppercorns to infuse the flavour. Take off the heat, strain and leave to cool in a bowl.
For the asparagus: drizzle and roll in the garlic oil. Season well with salt and pepper.
Get an iron griddle screaming hot and char them all over until cooked. Press them and they’ll give a little when done, but not overdone.
Remove and keep warm.
At the same time, heat the oil in a smallish pan and fry the anchovy fillet until they dissolve into the oil. Fry the bread in the delicious oil until brown and crispy. Take off the heat and keep warm
Finally, do the parmesan custard – it needs your attention so do it last. Pour the milk (infused or not) into the a cold milk pan and add the egg yolks and Parmesan. Whisk thoroughly. On your smallest hob, heat gently stirring continuously until it’s thickened. When stirring, make sure you get into the edges of the pan or it’ll curdle the egg – I use a silicon spatular. Reduce until it becomes a nice thick sauce. Taste and season.
Serve the Parmesan custard over the asparagus with the croutons on top and with the roasted chicken/side salad if you like.
That sounds delicious!
I was about to make Hollandaise for mine yesterday, when I realised that I had a big bowl of homemade Allioli in the fridge which needed eating. Since Hollandaise and Allioli must be cousins, I warmed that up and poured it on the asparagus – it was fantastic 🙂
Cheers MD, was a nice combo! I think the croutons made it. The allioli sound good though. One to try next….
I’ve never successfully chargrilled asparagus. Do you have any tips to offer me, as I’d love to try again. I just posted a coconut milk soup recipe with asparagus that you might like a look at.
~ Misky
Just to oil them and check them often Misky. They only took a few minutes on a really hot griddle. I just push one with my finger and when it starts to ‘give’ a little, it’s ready. I’ll check out your eclipse now, haven’t been on the reader yet this evening.
Recipe, not eclipse! Spell checkers eh?
This is the perfect treatment for lovely British asparagus. Despite our shared genetic predisposition, I cannot resist this lovely veg 🙂 and I will try making your custard. Thanks! T
Thanks T, glad I’m not alone 😉 Give it whirl, I think next time I try a little cream and butter in there – uber rich 🙂
Nice.
Thanks Rosemary 🙂
Looks delicious! I too, am a fan of asparagus…but at the moment we only have imported ones from Spain!
Thanks! Still a bit early in the season for you guys? Nice to get it here whilst we can.
I love asparagus but prefer the white thicker sweeter one’s where Belgium is also famous for,…( also called the white gold,….I will use them in this georgous & very stylish recipe! Yummmmm!
Thanks Sophie – never tried the white variety, must try and get some!
What an elegant dish!
Thank you very much 🙂
YUM!!!
Thanks! I’ve just enjoyed browsing your very nice blog!