Ratatouille Is Comfort Food - A Lady In France (2024)

I have a recipe for you. Ratatouille is comfort food – did you know that? It’s a tomatoey-warm Mediterranean-healthy olive-oily comfort food. I learned to make it when I was an au pair for a posh family back in 1994. (I also lived with a posh family when I studied in Avignon in 1989. And Sir’s grandparents were also posh. I’ve learned a lot about cooking and folding clothes from these people).

Do you know where the word posh comes from? It means “Port Out, Starboard Home” and was used when traveling from England to India. That was the preferred position of the cabins (afforded by the wealthy) since that was where the shade was found.

And you want shade when going to India.

But we were talking about ratatouille now, weren’t we?Ratatouille Is Comfort Food - A Lady In France (1)

I learned the hard way that watery ratatouille is not at all desirable and so you should leave it uncovered while it’s cooking. I also learned that you cannot leave the skin on tomatoes or you’ll be chomping on wiry rollsof tomato skin, which completely ruins the dish.

So let’s talk about what to do, shall we?

Wash your nightshades: 2 medium eggplants, 4 small zucchini, 3 bell peppers. I like the tricolor effect – it’s pretty, and the red and yellow ones are sweeter.

Set out your pungent onions (3 medium, or in my case 5 small) and garlic (4-6 large cloves). I went with just 4 cloves since Sir has a meeting tomorrow. (Thank you very much)

Here’s a tip. If you don’t have a garlic press, mash the garlic with the flat side of the knife and then cut. It’s a lot easier that way.

Now, fry the onions and garlic mix with 6 tablespoons of olive oil.

And while that’s browning, dice your peppers.

Oh! The red one was pregnant. Excuse me, ma’am.

When your onions look like this

your peppers should look like this. Add them in.

While the onion-pepper mix is frying, dice your eggplant.

Then when the onion-pepper mix looks like this

your eggplant should look like this. Mix it in.

While your onion-pepper-eggplant mix is cooking, peel stripes on your zucchini. It’s purty that way. Then chop ’em up.

And when your onion-pepper-eggplant mix starts to look like this

your zucchini should like this.

Add it.

Now it’s time for the herbs. Truthfully I don’t like the herbes de provence that you’re supposed to use because the thyme doesn’t soften at all and sort of stands out among the soft vegetables. If you’re finicky and want to do this properly you could put 2 tablespoons of herbes de provence in cheesecloth, which you would then remove at the end. But if you’re finicky then you should really be cooking all the vegetables separately in four different pots. Ugh. Who wants to do that?

I’m not finicky so I’ll justadd 2 tablespoons of fresh basil and a half tablespoon salt (adjust according to preference).

And here’s the clincher: 2 cans of diced tomatoes in their juice. I think they were about 400 grams each. That way you don’t have to de-skin the tomatoes yourself. And in my humble opinion, it adds the perfect amount of tomatoey-ness to the ratatouille.

At this point it’s taken me a half hour since I first started frying the onions until now and I’m going to cook it for about another half hour with all the ingredients added. An hour total should be enough, even if not all the veggies got in at the same time. But don’t you like that multi-tasking trick of chopping as you go?

There’s something to watch out for. The liquid tends to rise to the top and the bottom to lose its moisture. Like so.

Make sure you use a large and deep skillet (frying pan). It won’t work in a wok or sauce pan – the heat is not spread out enough and the ratatouille will become too liquidy. So basically you kind of need to stick around in the kitchen and stir it often. If you see that there is too much liquid, turn the heat up. If you see that it’s starting to stick on bottom, turn the heat down.

And then you can do some other amazing multi-task thing while your ratatouille is cooking, like help your kids with their homework.

Or clean the dishes that you never got around to last night.

Aah, patience rewarded. Your finished ratatouille finally looks like this:

If you have no idea what to serve it with, I recommend it as a side dish to lamb or beef. But, you know, the French are so into vegetarian dinners (unless you are entertaining). They are quite vigilant about it. There are even random police raids to check that there is no meat in sight after 2pm. So it’s not a bad idea to have some vegetarian dinner ideas on hand.

Hm. Why not make some quinoa?

At the risk of insulting your intelligence, I will say that most grains are cooked the same way. Measure out a cup (double if having guests), and fill the saucepan with water. Swirl the grains with your fingers like so.

Pour the water out very slowly and any grain that floats and gets poured out is something you would want to remove anyway. With the exception of white rice, most grains are 3 cups of water to 1 cup of grain, quinoa included.

Cover.

I should’ve multitasked cleaning my stove.

And simmer til the water is absorbed. It takes about 20 minutes or so.

Then why not serve your ratatouille over quinoa with sliced black olives and grated Swiss cheese? It has just become a not-so-French-anymore dish, but it is really good this way. I promise you.

I’ll bet even your kids (or your picky spouse) will eat it.

Ratatouille Is Comfort Food

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From: Lady Jennie

Recipe type: Side Dish

Serves: 6

Ingredients

  • 3 medium onions
  • 4-6 large cloves garlic
  • 6 Tablespoons olive oil
  • 3 bell peppers
  • 2 medium eggplants
  • 4 small zucchini
  • 2 Tablespoons basil
  • ½ Tablespoon salt (adjust accordingly)
  • 2 cans diced tomatoes in juice, 400 grams each

Instructions

  1. Chop the onions and garlic.
  2. Stir-fry them with the olive oil in a large skillet.
  3. While that's frying, chop the peppers and add them.
  4. Then chop the eggplant and add them.
  5. Then peel stripes off the zucchini, chop and add them.
  6. Add the basil, salt and the 2 cans of tomatoes.
  7. All of this should take you a half hour or so.
  8. Cook the ratatouille for another half hour until all the vegetables are tender.

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Ratatouille Is Comfort Food - A Lady In France (2024)

FAQs

What is the significance of ratatouille in France? ›

Originating in Nice, ratatouille is a reflection of the region's abundant produce. Historically, it was the food of farmers and peasants, a cost-effective way to use up summer vegetables.

Why is ratatouille considered a peasant dish? ›

Traditionally Ratatouille was considered peasant food owing to its preparation style of “rough cut” vegetables and the economy of a dish that could be eaten with cheap rice, pasta or dipped into with chunks of bread. In recent times it has become a dish prepared by top chefs and served in the finest restaurants.

What was the final dish in ratatouille? ›

The climax of the film sees Remy prepare the titular dish in the form of confit byaldi for the notoriously harsh food critic Anton Ego, who unexpectedly loves the dish due to nostalgia for his mother's cooking of traditional ratatouille.

What is the story behind the ratatouille dish? ›

History of Ratatouille

This beloved summer stew first emerged as a solution for hunger, as it was invented by poor farmers back in 1700s Provençe. With so many bellies to fill, nothing could go to waste. Accordingly, the French peasants would cook their leftover vegetables for hours to create a hearty, coarse stew.

Who is the French girl in Ratatouille? ›

Janeane Garofalo as Colette Tatou, Gusteau's rôtisseur, and Linguini's love interest, inspired by French chef Hélène Darroze.

What is the deeper meaning of Ratatouille? ›

At its core, “Ratatouille” entertains one foundational question: Should we as a people choose ignorance or empathy? In the film, rats are stigmatized to only be troublemakers, and humans to only be killers. But, Remy the rat makes a different choice.

Why do they call it ratatouille? ›

The teeming summer gardens of Mediterranean France are the inspiration for and source of ratatouille, a dish whose name is taken from two related words: ratouiller, meaning to agitate or stir a liquid, and tatouiller, meaning to beat (as in the drumbeat called the tattoo) or to shake.

How old is Remy in ratatouille? ›

Remy's age is never mentioned and the movie takes place two years after Gusteau died. Some viewers say that the final conversation between them in the car is meant to suggest that Remy is Gusteau reincarnated and that's why he has his talent for cooking.

What is the old lady in ratatouille? ›

Mabel is a minor antagonist in Disney/Pixar's Ratatouille (2007). She's an elderly woman who lives in a countryside cottage away from Paris which was originally the home of Remy, his family and his friends. She was voiced by the late Sally Kellerman.

What is the moral of Ratatouille? ›

It conveys a message that there are a lot of difficulties in our life, we just need to be like Remy, focus on our goals, and find out a way to achieve them. We all are unique in our own ways. We need to figure out our strengths and polish them from time to time.

Why is Ratatouille so loved? ›

The Story

What makes Ratatouille so special is that its story covers so many bases without feeling overstuffed: Remy's storyline deals with identity and finding one's passion, Linguini has to learn to grow a backbone, and the commercialization of good food even gets its nose into the picture.

Is Ratatouille based on real life? ›

While Gusteau's itself isn't a real eatery, there's one restaurant in particular that inspired it: La Tour d'Argent in Paris. Like Gusteau's, La Tour d'Argent stands on the banks of the River Seine, and it serves up outstanding French fare.

Why is Ratatouille so special? ›

The Story

What makes Ratatouille so special is that its story covers so many bases without feeling overstuffed: Remy's storyline deals with identity and finding one's passion, Linguini has to learn to grow a backbone, and the commercialization of good food even gets its nose into the picture.

What does Remy symbolize in Ratatouille? ›

Remy represents the classic case of imposter syndrome. He does not believe in himself or his skills, and feels as if he comes from the “wrong” background, even doubting himself while cooking in a professional French kitchen.

What are three interesting facts about Ratatouille? ›

  • Chef Gusteau is featured in real magazines with realistic cover details. ...
  • Anton Ego's nickname and office reference death in several ways. ...
  • Furniture in the movie is detailed to show age, wear, and claw marks. ...
  • The rats make tables and boats out of small, everyday objects.
Jun 29, 2022

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