DSC_0260

Poppets, do I have a story for you. Four days before my manuscript due date, last Thursday, to be precise, I woke up feeling rather strange. This strangeness got worse all day and by the end of it, I found myself in the hospital with an anesthesiologist pumping stuff into my arm just before some very nice doctors relieved me of my appendix. Ain't that a kick in the head?

I got out of the hospital yesterday and am feeling a little bit like I got hit by a truck, both literally and figuratively. My head's still all woozy and I have the oddest tugging sensation on my insides and the deadline situation makes me want to cry and I really want to take a shower and it would be lovely to be allowed a cheeseburger for dinner instead of broth and boiled zucchini and to top it all off, I can't stop thinking about how, if I'd been born a Pilgrim, my life probably would have ended rather abruptly at 33. (Of course, if I'd been born a Pilgrim, a great many things probably would have ended my life much sooner than at 33, but logic and rational thought are not having a great day right now in the Mind of Luisa, so bear with me.)

I am trying not to wallow too much in the vat of Self-Pity (see Not Being Born A Pilgrim and so on for reference), but abdominal surgery, a missed deadline and the lack of a daily shower is starting to take its toll on your heroine. But before I slide completely off my rocker into the deep end, I need to quickly tell you about something sort of quietly wonderful.

It starts with my balcony, a little patch of white-tiled space nestled into the corner of our apartment building. By some stroke of luck, though it's on the courtyard side of the building and we are surrounded by apartments on all sides, no one can actually look into our balcony, which would be lovely if we were the type to sunbathe naked and as such is just sort of nice because we can have lunch out there in the summer without feeling watched (old Berliners love to watch people) and because I can neglect the plants out there without anybody giving me a disapproving look.

The only plants I have growing on the balcony are herbs, because I hate buying herbs only to see them grow black and moldy in the fridge and because I like my balcony plants to be useful, not just pretty. (Even if I do go and neglect them every now and then). I have high standards for plants, you see. So I've got two types of mint, oregano, thyme (that keeps migrating from its pot to other pots, magically), basil, rosemary, a very sad lavender bush and an exuberant spray of sage. So exuberant, in fact, that it sometimes feels as though it could be growing about half an inch a day.

The sage got to be a bit of a problem, in truth. To use it up, we tried eating a lot of ravioli in sage butter for a while. Surprisingly, that gets tired pretty quickly. So when I stumbled across David's method for using up sage, I never looked back. He first got the recipe from his friend Judy Witts Francini and, folks, it is a secret weapon if I've ever seen one. Now let me be clear: I have always nursed a healthy suspicion of herb salts. Or herb rubs. They seemed like a gimmicky way for chefs to sell products in grocery stores. The idea of cooking with them left me cold. But David has never led me astray. In fact, I'd probably eat a cold rubber tire if David told me that, marinated in Korean chile paste and sprinkled with sesame seeds, it tasted good. (Actually, that does sound good. Sweet cracker sandwich, people, I need some real food.)

DSC_0322

So I cut back my sage and rosemary plants, chopped them up very finely with a mess of garlic and a big spoonful of Maldon salt and then let the mixture, sandy and herby and fragrant as all get out, dry on my kitchen counter for a few days. When it was good and dry, I packed it into a little jar and forgot about it. Really!

Weeks later, starving on a Sunday night, we had nothing but some nice bread and some very ripe tomatoes in the house. No cheese, no pasta, no nothing. Rummaging through the cupboards, I stumbled upon my herb rub. On a whim, I decided to quick-roast the tomatoes mixed with the herb mixture, liberally splashed with olive oil. What emerged from the oven was rather difficult to stop eating, especially when we started dragging the bread through the herby, tomatoey olive oil at the bottom of the baking dish. Next up was a pot of beans that I'd cooked into creamy submission, but that desperately needed some pepping up. I spooned the beans into a baking dish, mixed them with a bit of the herb rub, a good glug of olive oil and a few shreds of canned tomato and put that in the oven until the house smelled like a rustic Tuscan lodge (or something). We put pieces of toasted peasant bread into our deep soup plates and ladled the baked beans over the bread and attacked. Dinner was a quiet affair that night, nothing but spoons clanking against plates and lips smacking.

The herb rub has pepped up rice salads and simple roast chickens, a lackluster pork tenderloin and countless pots of beans. I've dipped into it over and over again until, a year later, the jar's entirely empty. Which is serendipitous timing, because my sage plant has gone into overdrive once again.

To sum it all up, people, you need this stuff in your stash. It will make countless Sunday night dinners, when you're cobbling together weird little meals out of odds and ends, that much better. It will make you seem refined and with-it when you mix it with olive oil and set it out for nibbles with some nice bread before dinner. It will help your balcony looking neat and groomed and, best of all, it just tastes so good.

That is all. I feel better already.

Herb Rub
Makes 1 small jar

A very large bunch of fresh sage, two to three times as much as the rosemary
A large bunch of rosemary
8 garlic cloves, peeled
1 heaping tablespoon Maldon salt

1. Pick the leaves off the sage and rosemary stalks. In a small food processor, chop up the herbs with the garlic cloves and salt until the mixture is pretty fine. Discard any sticks or seeds.

2. Spread the herb mixture on a baking sheet and let it dry for about three days. Once dry, store your herb in a tighly-sealed in a jar for up to a year.

Posted in , ,

67 responses to “David Lebovitz’s Herb Rub”

  1. Alana Avatar

    Last year, just about this time I too felt funny, whisked myself to the hospital, and woke up a few hours later without my appendix. I can now report that recovery was swift, and the scars are pretty rockin’. Here’s to a speedy and herb-filled road to health!

    Like

  2. Pam Avatar
    Pam

    It’s my first time commenting here! I’m so sorry about your surgery, your deadline, and the horrible stuff they make you eat post-surgery. I hope you’re on the mend.
    This post is heaven sent. My sage is threatening to take over the world. I’ll definitely try this!

    Like

  3. Sasa Avatar

    That’s ONE way to get around a deadline! And I thought I was a good procrastinator. Hope you get some proper food soon x

    Like

  4. Liana Avatar

    Luisa, darling, so sorry to hear you had an appendix emergency! And I, too, am glad you are not a pilgrim. I’m also glad your appendix waited to quit until after your wedding. OK, off to snip the sage off my plants and make this yummy-sounding rub now… xoxo

    Like

  5. Rocky Mountain Woman Avatar

    I noticed a reference in the comments to “today I get to shower”
    Oh how well I remember that first shower after my hysterectomy….
    heaven on earth that shower was….

    Like

  6. Margaret Avatar

    Hope you feel better soon Lisa! And is it essential to use Maldon salt? Or will any type of sea salt do? Thanks for sharing!
    The Bite Size Baker

    Like

  7. heather Avatar

    OF COURSE i wish you a speedy recovery, and no discomfort generally…but i must say, i grew up reading ‘madeline,’ and OH MAN did i ever want my appendix out!!! best wishes for feeling better post haste! 🙂

    Like

  8. Lauren Avatar
    Lauren

    I’m glad I’m not a pilgrim either. Get well soon!

    Like

  9. Jennifer Avatar

    I’ve been reading your blog for years, though I’ve never commented (isn’t that terrible?) and just wanted to tell you that it’s always a delight to read what you’ve written 🙂 Hope you feel better soon!

    Like

  10. David Avatar

    Glad you like that rub, too. I make a ton of it and use it all year. You’ll appreciate your ‘stash’ more as the months go on, and on…

    Like

  11. Stephanie Avatar

    What timing your appendix has! Do you think it was sitting there, waiting, waiting for the most inconvenient time to burst? If so, it was definitely not a cooperative organ to host, and so I’m glad you are rid of it.
    But I’m sorry you have to spend the next while recovering — when you should be spending carefree days eating ice cream at the park, manuscript already submitted . . .
    I wish you a very speedy recovery and many good books to read during it. Get well soon!

    Like

  12. laken Avatar

    Your writing is always perfection. And I’ve bookmarked this for the rub recipe — can’t wait to try it out!
    Feel better, Luisa!

    Like

  13. Tisha @ Wedding Aisle Runners Avatar

    @Stephanie Rose – I agree totally. Sage was one of the herbs that I never mastered. I tried it on chicken but it kind of overpowered the whole dish. Didn’t expect the slight peppery flavor that it gives off. Anyway, thanks for the tips!
    Tisha

    Like

  14. Tommmmrawwr.blogspot.com Avatar

    Am definitely gonna give this a go! Sounds very tasty and would work well with a lot of things! Thanks!

    Like

  15. Jenny Avatar

    Great recipe, now my sage is on the menu! Continue feeling better!

    Like

  16. Linda Avatar
    Linda

    Hope your feeling better, Is there anyway toget the bean recipe from you. Do not have a herb garden this year but will keep recipe for future use, Thank you,
    Linda

    Like

  17. Molly Avatar

    Oh, Luisa, you poor dear!!!
    I do hope you are feeling better, if not ENTIRELY, just yet.
    And to come back with a recipe, to boot! The very idea of this is grand, from using up scraggly sage (isn’t it ALWAYS?) to looking refined when we’re most definitely not. And though it is nothing near as important as appendicities, I do like the idea that I’m not the only one who makes weird meals out of odds and ends 🙂
    Cheers and good health to you, sweet thing.
    xo,
    Molly

    Like

Leave a comment