A Big Little Recipe has the smallest-possible ingredient list and big everything else: flavor, creativity, wow factor. That means five ingredients or fewer—not including water, salt, black pepper, and certain fats (like oil and butter), since we're guessing you have those covered. This week, we’re making a savory jam to smear on everything.
On a good day, jam refers to “a food made by boiling fruit and sugar to a thick consistency.” Or on a bad one, “a crowded mass that impedes or blocks movement.” This three-ingredient jam is neither.
Yes, we will be boiling. Yes, there will be sugar. But fruit? Not a strawberry or peach or even tomato in sight. Instead: shallots. Lots and lots of shallots.
Sure, jam is best known as a way to stretch summer’s bounty, to make fragile berries that would’ve gone moldy in days last for weeks or months. But just as jam need not be limited to fruits—hi bacon, hello red peppers—it need not be limited to warm weather either.
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“On grilled cheese, using a really sharp aged cheddar, or perhaps a Gruyere.
On a jambon-beurre, or a baguette + charcuterie, e.g., https://food52.com/recipes/30913-the-north-beach-special
On a cheese board (of course)
On a frittata or omelette stuffed with feta, minced olives and herbs
That's just off the top of my head . . . . I'm sure I'll think of more later.
For most of those applications, I'd add to the jam a dollop of grainy mustard, or of a wickedly sharp Dijon. Some finely chopped dried sour cherries would not be amiss, either.
;o)
”
Come colder, clouder, gustier months, there are plenty of ingredients that would love to be stirred with sugar and simmered, simmered, simmered into oblivion. Especially alliums. Maybe you’ve already heard of onion jam, on ricotta-dolloped biscuit bites or goat cheese crostini. I like to think of shallot jam as the ultimate onion jam—what an onion dreams of becoming after it falls asleep.
“Shallots are one of the things—a basic prep item in every mise-en-place—that make restaurant food taste different from your food,” Anthony Bourdain wrote in Kitchen Confidential. “You should always have some around for sauces, dressings, and sauté items.”
And jam. Score a couple pounds and you’re halfway to this high-impact spread that your fridge will be thrilled (chuffed!) to have around. Here’s the cheat sheet: Dice shallots and sauté until transparent-ish, like stained glass. Treat to sugar, which will encourage deeper, darker caramelization. Then wake things up with a hefty pour of vinegar.
The last ingredient depends on you—or, more specifically, what you already have around. My vote is for malt vinegar, widely known as the finishing touch on fish-and-chips, but it's a wonder-ingredient in countless other places, too. In this case, it gives shallot jam a roasty, toasty—and, yeah, malty—flavor. Feel free to swap in other vinegars like white wine, red wine, rice, or any of those mixed with balsamic or black.
Once you have shallot jam around, the world is yours, as far as your eyes can see. Try it with:
Buttered toast
Triscuits and Gouda
Pork chops with sautéed peppers
Crispy sausage and scrambled eggs
Chopped liver (or liver mousse) toasts
Penne with butter and Parmesan
Roast chicken and any vegetables
Oil and vinegar as a vinaigrette
Rice-and-beans burrito
Fettuccine with Greek yogurt
Quesadilla or grilled cheese
I won’t try to hide it—the last one is my favorite. On a bad day, I’ll sandwich seedy bread, sharp cheddar, and shallot jam, griddle it until crispy outside, melty inside, then take a bite while it’s still too hot. Just like that, the bad day becomes a little better.
How will you use shallot jam? Let us know in the comments!
Put down those long grocery lists. Inspired by the award-winning column, our Big Little Recipes cookbook is minimalism at its best: few ingredients, tons of flavor.
Emma was the food editor at Food52. She created the award-winning column, Big Little Recipes, and turned it into a cookbook in 2021. These days, she's a senior editor at Bon Appétit, leading digital cooking coverage. Say hello on Instagram at @emmalaperruque.
This is the first time I heard about this recipe and it's interesting. I think it will be perfect to put it on top of toasted bread. I will definitely try to make this. Thank you for the video, watching it makes it easy to follow the steps to make one.
On grilled cheese, using a really sharp aged cheddar, or perhaps a Gruyere. On a jambon-beurre, or a baguette + charcuterie, e.g., https://food52.com/recipes/30913-the-north-beach-special On a cheese board (of course) On a frittata or omelette stuffed with feta, minced olives and herbs
That's just off the top of my head . . . . I'm sure I'll think of more later.
For most of those applications, I'd add to the jam a dollop of grainy mustard, or of a wickedly sharp Dijon. Some finely chopped dried sour cherries would not be amiss, either.
Join The Conversation