Atlanta Constitution
'Breakfast
at Brennan's' serves up rich memories
by
Elliott Mackle, Dining Critic
In today's post-Prudhomme New Orleans, the words "Breakfast at Brennan's"
are of more historic than culinary interest.
Like "Dinner at Antoine's" (the book title on which the well-promoted
phrase plays), a leisurely breakfast at Owen Edward Brennan's famous
French Quarter restaurant was once almost mandatory when visiting
the city that care forgot and Mama warned us about.
That was back in the brontosaur '50s, of course - when we liked
Ike, loved Lucy, sighed at the fate of Blanche Du Bois and were
just getting acquainted with French cooking. In those days (and
at Brennan's still) la belle cuisine involved considerable amounts
of heavy cream, butter, whole eggs and alcoholic flavorings.
A typical Brennan's breakfast meant eggs with thick sauces, oysters
with rich toppings, grits with fancy gravy, perhaps a baked apple
or salad and either bananas Foster (a Brennan's invention) or crepes
suzette.
More specifically, such a meal (we didn't call it brunch then) meant
drinking in the morning without any good excuse, a definite no-no
in the straight-arrow decade.
And afterward? For many, a nap.
This commemorative volume by Brennan's sons - they operate the restaurant
today - includes recipes for the drinks and dishes that drew celebrities,
travelers and even locals to Brennan's. From Cafe Brulot and the
Sazerac cocktail to Rex salad, eggs Hussarde and Sardou, crab meat
imperial, various crepe preparations, bread pudding with (Canadian!)
whiskey sauce and - yes, indeed - bananas Foster, the ' 50s standards
are all here.
The " . . . and Dinner, Too" section of the book includes mastodon
food (beef Wellington, frog legs en croute) as well as dishes more
in tune with the considerable culinary developments in New Orleans
in the past decade. Oysters Rockefeller soup and Oysters Benedict,
though hardly diet fare, are worth space on anybody's short list
of party dishes.
Of interest to food generalists, the book begins with a history
of the restaurant as well as its not so successful descendants (one
of which in the building now inhabited by 103 West - was located
in Atlanta).
Abundant color illustrations include early menus, promotional materials,
photos and letters from influential customers such as Hedda Hopper,
Elia Kazan, Liberace, Curt Gowdy, Robert Ruark and Lucius Beebe.
There's also a sanitized account of family squabbles: Owen's sister
Ella Brennan, once his kitchen manager, tried to take over the restaurant
after his death, was forced out and now - with another brother and
assorted nieces and nephews - operates Commander's Palace and a
string of other highly regarded eating houses.
Order the book
from Brennan's Restaurant ...
Eggs
Ellen -- (Click for recipe)
Asparagus
Ellen -- (Click for recipe)
Mousseline
Sauce -- (Click for recipe)
Oyster
Soup -- (Click for recipe)
Bananas
Foster -- (Click for recipe)
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