A Quest to Reproduce a Top Chef's Recipes at the South Pole
By MICHÈLE GENTILLE
Special to THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
March 15, 2008; Page W1

South Pole

It was -93 degrees Fahrenheit with the wind-chill factor when I first
reported for work five months ago as a sous-chef at the Amundsen-Scott
South Pole Station. Executive chef James Brown greeted me on the
runway with a hug. Summer, the period of 24-hour daylight that lasts
from October to February, had just begun.

At the South Pole station during those months, 250 scientists,
researchers and assorted staff study topics from global warming to
glacial paleontology under the auspices of the National Science
Foundation, a U.S. agency that funds scientific research. Our job is
to feed them. My day begins at 4:30 a.m., when I pull on my chef
uniform and then top it with padded overalls, a layer of various
fleeces, and a bulky insulated Pole jacket -- an outfit required to
get to the building with the nearest bathroom. I appear at the
station's galley at 5 a.m. to begin cooking lunch.
[See photos]1
Michèle Gentille
Sous-chef William Watkins prepares a meal in the new kitchen of the
Elevated Station, which has been in full use since 2006.

At the Pole, we try to turn mostly frozen and canned products into
delicious, nourishing food. I wondered if we could do the same with
recipes from the restaurants of a chef I've worked with, Laurent
Tourondel. (I'm a chef and free-lance food writer, and worked as a
recipe tester for his new cookbook.)

Mr. Tourondel uses seasonal, local products at his "BLT" (Bistro
Laurent Tourondel) eateries -- a practice that was impossible for us
to replicate at the South Pole. But he is also a fan of rustic
cooking, both American and French, much of which evolved through
imaginative cooks working with limited supplies during times of
hardship. I proposed that I adapt some of his recipes for cooking at
the Pole. Mr. Tourondel liked the idea and agreed to provide advice
and feedback along the way.

For us in the kitchen, it would mean applying principles of
contemporary French-American cooking -- where produce grown within 100
miles of a restaurant is particularly prized today -- to a kitchen
3,000 miles away from the nearest farm.
[South Pole photo]
The newly dedicated Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station.

Cooking at the South Pole presents serious challenges. The 60 or so
wintering crew who braved 24 hours of nighttime between March and
October without any traffic in or out didn't see a fresh root
vegetable or piece of fruit for seven months. By the end of October,
weather is just warming up to above -58 degrees, allowing aircraft to
arrive with unfrozen produce from New Zealand, known here as
"freshies." Although freshies are scheduled to be flown in once a
week, weather often interferes.

There is a greenhouse at the station -- at 2,800 cubic feet, a small
oasis of loveliness -- that turns out just enough produce for salad
two or three times a week. The variety of vegetables and herbs in the
greenhouse, which range from fresh eggplant to jalapenos, are all
produced hydroponically, using only water and nutrients and no soil.

But for most dishes, the kitchen relies on frozen and canned products.
Some of these are housed in a few buildings around the station, such
as the geodesic dome built in the mid-1970s that used to serve as the
main South Pole station.

Our kitchen is in a new structure we refer to as the Elevated Station,
so called because it stands on 36 columns, each 12 feet tall and
designed to be jacked up in increments to lift the building another 24
feet, thus ensuring it will not be buried under accumulating
snowdrifts in years to come.
[South pole photo]
Production cook Joanne MacCartney serves breakfast.

Many other products are stored outdoors on elevated snow banks topped
with wood planks. Defrosting is a big part of the job. It takes meat
and poultry between nine and 14 full days to thaw in the galley's
refrigerated walk-in, while a large can of fruit or vegetables, known
as a #10 can, takes seven days to thaw at room temperature.

Once the ingredients are defrosted, cooking here can still be a
difficult task. The moisture-free air at the station has such
potential for fire that all galley equipment must be electric. There
is no such thing as sautéing; we cook on an electric surface that
takes at least twice as long to heat as open flame. Because water
boils at a cooler temperature at this altitude -- about 9,300 feet
above sea level -- a pot of soup large enough to feed the lunch crowd
can take a good three to four hours to heat up. Dry beans reach the al
dente stage after about 10 hours.

At the beginning of the 20th century, Norwegian Antarctic explorer
Roald Amundsen calculated a trekker required a good 7,700 calories per
day to survive this kind of cold. No big surprise, then, that at the
South Pole we serve meals that are heavy on meat and potatoes. During
the 2006 winter season, the average individual consumption of beef hit
nearly 85 pounds, along with 18 pounds of butter and 24 pounds of
French fries.

With these challenges in mind, I created a menu from Mr. Tourondel's
cookbook, "New American Bistro Cooking." Mr. Brown, the Pole's
executive chef, agreed to the experiment and worked with me to produce
it. We enlisted all 10 cooks in the galley, and each of us signed up
to oversee one dish.
[South Pole photo]
Kevin Torphy, the winter construction supervisor, in the station's kitchen.

Every recipe required some substitutions. For the salad of marinated
mushrooms with tomatoes and cilantro, we had no fresh mushrooms, so
Dan Von Bank, who handles materials for the galley, used a mixture of
dried porcinis and shiitakes and canned buttons as well as dried herbs
and pre-ground coriander.

Mr. Tourondel expressed his approval. "Dried mushrooms are very good,"
he said, although he noted that ground coriander is very different
from fresh cilantro -- "but if you have to, make do!" he added. Mr.
Von Bank had to cook the mixture much longer than indicated in the
recipe, partly because the mushrooms were dried, but also because at
this altitude acids such as wine and tomatoes don't mellow easily. But
the dish proved a success, and our diners relished it.

One of the most resourceful adaptations was the rendition of Mr.
Tourondel's creamed spinach by dinner-production cook Chris Brazelton,
an ex-marine with 12 years of kitchen experience. He took the hard
spinach bricks stored on the outside deck, wiped the snow off the
boxes, and defrosted and dried the greens in the tilt skillet, a large
electric pan that holds about 30 gallons and can crank up to 400
degrees very quickly.
[South pole photo]
Labeled crates of food are stored on the snow behind the station.

He had no heavy cream, so he made a béchamel sauce with the milk we
use daily: powdered skim. He added extra butter for consistency and
perked it up with a little allspice and cinnamon as well as the
called-for nutmeg. For Gruyère, he substituted a New Zealand cheese
called Tasty, similar to Monterey Jack, and a local Emmenthal-style
cheese. It worked; one carpenter told me he had three helpings.

Others succeeded with the addition of a little fresh produce. Will
Watkins, the dinner sous-chef, made the Macaroni With Tomatoes and
Spicy Sausage. We had all the ingredients, although our tomatoes are
crushed and frozen, and our dried pasta has been frozen so deeply and
its texture so altered that it falls apart as soon as it is cooked al
dente.

But Mr. Watkins had good quality Italian sausage and was able to
harvest some fresh basil and arugula from the greenhouse. "That's what
really made the dish," he said. Mr. Tourondel agreed. "I think fresh
herbs are one of the most important and underrated ingredients," he
said.

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