50 Women Game Changers in Food - #34 Ella Brennan - Catfish Fingers with Tomato Tartar Sauce

8:59 PM



From the kitchen of One Perfect Bite...Fasten your seat belts folks,'cause you're in for a bumpy ride. Today we are exploring the work and influence of Ella Brennan, a restaurateur who holds position 34 on the Gourmet Live list of Women Game Changers in food. She is a fascinating woman whose zest for life, devotion to family and studied knowledge of the restaurant business has given her legendary status in the culinary world. She is off-beat, edgy and a bit eccentric, one of those rare individuals who add a splash of vibrant red to a world that is too often gray. To know her, you must understand where she came from and a bit about her family. She was born in the Irish Channel, a neighborhood in New Orleans, to a family of three boys and three girls. Her father was a handsome raconteur and her mother, a gifted cook, loved to entertain. It was, however, her brother Owen who drew her to the restaurant world. While she was in high school, he bought a restaurant in the French Quarter called the Vieux Carre. Apparently, even as a young woman, she had an intuitive sense of the business, and she was unrelenting in her criticism of his venture. It was a bit more than the classic thrust and parry of siblings. He challenged her to improve what she saw. She accepted. Though she was still in high school, she ended up doing whatever he didn't like to do. That included the hiring and training of staff, menu planning, bookkeeping and inventory control. She was keenly aware of her inexperience, so she turned to books to learn each skill she needed to operate the restaurant. Then she turned to people she thought might have something more to teach her. She spent hours talking to diners, food and wine merchants and the kitchen staff. By the time she was 18, she was running the place and it became an enterprise that employed the entire family, save for her gentile mother, who refused to work in the French Quarter. The hours were long and arduous and she never, at any point in her career, stopped working. Today, she is the matriarch of a New Orleans family that operates a dozen restaurants, including the Commander's Palace, her baby. Though she is retired, she lives next door to the restaurant which is now run by her daughter, Ti. Word on the street says she finds it hard to stay away and visits the kitchen several times aweek. We are told she is still irreverent, wildly entertaining and has retained the curious mix of elegance and earthiness that has always been her hallmark. She remains a serious student of all that interests her. Ruth Reich credits her with defining a new type of restaurant that is distinctly American and celebrates the regional food of this country. She is credited with pioneering the notion of nouvelle Creole cuisine, elevating the profile of Louisiana cooking throughout the world and in doing so earning for herself a place in the culinary history of the nation. Ella Brennan is a fascinating woman who has rubbed elbows with princes and paupers and trained chefs who changed the way America eats. If you'd like to know more about this unconventional woman and her family, you'll find a quick and insightful read, here.


Now comes the tricky part. By her own admission Ella Brennan, who has a golden palate, "can't cook worth a lick" and drolly suggests, "I never took to the kitchen." That means that those of us who want to feature recipes that highlight the food for which she is famous have to scratch like hens in dirt to find them. When I saw this one, I knew I'd have to give it a try. I don't know a lot about this type of dish, so if I misrepresent it in any way, please forgive my ignorance. I served these catfish morsels as finger food on game day. I suppose they could be served as an entree, but I was concerned that that a meal-size portion would be too high in calories to be acceptable to many of you. These are very nice, but when I make them again I'll use half the mustard called for in the recipe. I found it to be too intense in flavor for my palate and will use mayonnaise to replace some of it next time around. This is a nice recipe and I know that those of you who try it will enjoy the catfish fingers. The dipping sauce, actually a tomato remoulade, is really, really good and would also be wonderful with chicken fingers or used to dress a salad. Here is Ella's recipe.


Catfish Fingers with Tomato Tartar Sauce...from the kitchen of One Perfect Bite courtesy of Ella Brennan via La Belle Cuisine


Ingredients:


Tomato Tartar Sauce


1 cup pur

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