A blood drenched friend
hovers
Above a shrinking husk
As his monstrous butterfly
Takes wing.
hovers
Above a shrinking husk
As his monstrous butterfly
Takes wing.
A sanguine fiend
Takes flight.
This episode is named Mizumono – the dessert of a Kaiseki dinner. Every course has been laid upon the table – now it’s time for all to be served their just desserts.
Continuity photo of Sacrificial Baby Lamb plate with blood oranges, mustard seed farfalle with sage, peppers in minted pea pods and pea shoots. |
And wow, what crazy treats Bryan Fuller has served up for this final
episode. You kind of think you can guess what might happen, but the script
amazes with its twists and surprises – and just when you settle in for the
finale’s denouement – it smashes you with an even bigger surprise! Hello Air
France! Will he stay in Paris or is Berlin calling?
My feet were up. Sofa time. From my quick perusal of the production
draft, I saw there was no dinner scene. Disappointed but philosophical, I reasoned, with all this killing, Hannibal will be far too busy to
have dinner guests, especially a fussy moody guest like Will. It should be no
surprise to me if Hannibal doesn’t need a food stylist for the final action-packed
episode. So what if they finish out the season without me...everybody bleeding out while I nap and eat bonbons on my sofa.
My concept sketch of how I plan to make the baby lamb, what accompaniments I'll make and how the plates will look. |
But No, it's Yes...I'm back in!
It’s into Day 2 of the episode’s 8-day shoot when I am snapped out of "snooze". Emails from Bryan and Jose have started buzzing. Bryan is writing in a dinner scene and wants to use lamb shoulder to represent Jack. Robyn (Jose’s research assistant) jumps in with “sacrificial lamb”. Jose adds “lamb of the Lord” and sends pages of biblical quotes full of fire and brimstone.
I suggest using “rack of lamb” to
show the ribs arching up like the steeple of a church or the fingers of praying
hands. “Baby lamb,” says Jose. “Great!” says Bryan.
And I’m off to the butcher
because it’s Easter right now and the baby lambs are all being bought up. I
reserve two over the phone, sight unseen. I’m lucky to get them.
The plates of lamb will be garnished with farfalle
(butterfly-shaped pasta) and there will be bread (not Passover, I guess) in the
basket because the script calls for bread being pulled apart and steam rising
in the shape of wings. So I make half a dozen small Fougasse to represent
butterfly wings and some adorably small Epi de ble that will look like
butterfly bodies. Sadly, this scene gets dropped so you don’t see Hannibal
tearing bread wings off bread butterfly bodies.
Lobster hatching from canteloupe and beetles emerging from cala lilies. Tiny melon balls spill out like fish eggs. |
The other accompaniments will be lobster emerging from a
broken cantaloupe. This platter seems to perplex everyone when I bring it to
set. I explain: some of you are just not letting your cantaloupe ripen enough.
Leave it for a month in the back of a warm car and it will hatch a lobster – or
something. Anyway this episode is all about the crisis of birth – you have to
break a few eggshells to get the chick.
Brilliant Director David Slade discusses how he will shoot the dinner scene. We're going for a crane shot! Yay! |
The other accompaniment is creepy garden vegetables – okra,
heritage tomatoes stuck with rattlesnake tails.
Rattlesnake tails and peacock feathers with baby yellow and purple cauliflower, purple baby artichokes, kale, savoy cabbage, patty pan squashes, a giant heritage tomato and okra. |
Second Unit back with a different vibe.
The baby lamb dinner was the last food scene of the last
episode – but I’m back in the sound stage the next day to do 2nd
Unit stuff. The editing team is asking for all sorts of pick-up shots and
inserts to flesh out the final cuts of several of the episodes. Today I have
about 6 scenes to shoot.
Where is Cooking Lady????!!!
Back in Season 1 when wonderful director Peter Medak was in the midst
of shooting a kitchen scene, he wanted knife advice. Where is Cooking Lady??!!
he lamented. But I had not been called to set that day. Later, when shooting
Will preparing food for his pups in Episode 6, it was again decided I should
not be called in. It’s just dog food.
But it’s not just dog food! This is an important scene that
shows Will is transforming into Hannibal. I need to be there to help infuse the
scene with essence of Hannibal. I protested to all who will listen. But not too
loudly: the scene was being shot in Will’s cabin – on location, way far from
the city lights. At night. Up north. In the cold dark snowy sticks.
Here's the shooting schedule as a beat sheet. My dog food scenes in red at the bottom. (copyrighted property of C. Burne and Gaumont International - reproduction prohibited) |
As luck would have it, they didn’t have time to shoot the
scene that night so it was dropped. But it is back in now, for Episode 12 and being
shot by 2nd Unit, in Stage 2 of the studio. I knew the writers would
put it back in. It’s an important scene in tracking Will’s transformation. In
this scene he’s alone, cooking. Not for show – not part of the “lure” that he
is setting with Jack. He’s truly becoming Hannibal.
For Will’s dog food close-ups I’ve brought a lovely
assortment of rice; Wehani, wild and basmati, some garden vegetables, fresh
turkey meat and stock– to show Will is taking care with ingredients. My best
touch: pots of spunky little rosemary plants. If Hannibal has a wall of herbs
in his dining room then Will should have a window sill of baby rosemary.
Cooking Lady in da house
On a good day, the 2nd Unit pace is fast, the
humour is high and the energy is creative. Today is a good day – in spite of
the crushing list of shots to do. Chris Burne is directing so he will be
spinning LPs on the old turntable while we shoot in the cozy “round room” set (Verger’s
bedroom). To set the mood for Mads, he sets out a big mason jar (formerly used
for snuffing birds) stuffed with flickering dinner candles. The effect is
charming, the atmosphere feels intimate and the extreme close-ups come out great.
Chris directing Mads in ortolan eating close-ups Candles and Mozart for mood. Loretta Ramos (Living Dead Guy) took this great photo while I was strangling fake birds in the back. |
The mood carries over smoothly to the next scene: kholodets
close-up inserts. Everything is calm and cool. Well, except for the maiming and
blood-letting I hear in Studio 1 when I’m over there getting stuff off the prop
trolley.
They’re shooting Willdigo’s birth scene – Hugh is in throes of becoming
Willdigo. He lets out a long blood-curdling howl in the agony of birth. I wince
as I hear Hugh wail again for 2 more takes. Each one sounds pretty convincing to me -- I
wonder what the director is looking for. The crew is pretty impressed with
Hugh’s vocal efforts and breaks into applause when the director finally yells
“Cut”.
Pulling a skein of saran wrap out of a marzipan bird to make it hollow and easier to eat. |
.
Studio 2 is a rabbits’ warren of sets right now – so many
inserts from various episodes have been requested to round out the final edits
before they go to broadcast. Every time I round the corner to go to Studio 1, I
almost trip over a fake dead horse that is lying on the floor – whether he’s
finished with his scene or waiting for it is hard to tell. I resist the urge to
take a selfie with it.
Bird (fake) drowned in Armagnac |
Is there life after Kholodets?
After the kholodets, we have ortolan scenes to shoot and
suckling pig and inserts to do as well, so I have a lot of work ahead of me
before my final wrap. Martha de Laurentiis and Loretta Ramos (Living Dead Guy)
have noted that it’s my last day on set and graciously drop by my worktables to
say a warm goodbye. Other crew wander by for goodbye hugs.
Getting the Jelly Beast ready for close up insert shots of the Kholodets that almost killed me |
When my food scenes are all done, the stage shifts. The crew
slips into the darkness to get ready for the next thing on the call sheet: a
closed set – where Alana is swallowed by inky shadows in her bedroom. Stage 2
is literally abandoned as everyone either hustles to get ready for the next scene
or dashes out to have a quick smoke, get something from the craft truck or go
for a 10-1 (to pee, in walkie-talkie code). I’m alone in the vast cluttered bunker
to pack up for the last time in this long season and head home. Alone with my
thoughts.
Me waiting to shoot my interview with Dr Insanity's "Post Mortem" |
Producer/Director Sharon Seto doing a Hannibal promo shoot in my kitchen studio |
We had begun shooting in September and now it’s early April.
It’s been an exhausting whirlwind. The excitement, the boredom, the sleepless
grueling days and nights of running at top speed on empty. The camaraderie, the
conflicts and the wonderful creative challenges. I’m so happy that it’s over but I feel a
little sad as I pull out of the lot. Will I miss this madness – I can’t tell. All
I want to do is sleep. Oh yeah, and eat.
Definitely hungry now.
Could eat a whole roasted sacrificial lamb….and I’ll bet you
could too!
There's so much more leg room on this Air France jet.. |
Get your aprons on. It’s dinnertime!
Baby lamb |
Rack of Sacrificial Lamb
Roasting baby lamb is a lot like roasting suckling pig. It
is indescribably delicious and delicate but needs a huge oven and a large group
of people to eat it plus it can be tricky getting a baby lamb from Mr Grocer so
I’m going to give you an alternative recipe for rack of regular lamb – still delicious
yummy but easy to get. If you do a pair of racks, you can platter them propped
on each other like praying hands as I did for Hannibal’s dinner with Will.
I’ve given two different types of seasoning – one a herb rub to oven roast and the
other an Asian marinade to barbecue. Both are great but the marinade takes a bit of
pre-planning.
2 racks of lamb (each 5 to 8 bone)
Style One: Herb marinade:
¼ cup olive oil
3 to 4 cloves of garlic, crushed
3 sprigs rosemary, stems removed
to taste crushed pepper, sea salt
1. In a small bowl, combine all ingredients and rub into
lamb.
2. Roast in preheated oven at 425° for 20 to 25 minutes or until
medium rare. Rest for 10 minutes and slice and serve.
OR if you want to try something different and can start a
day or two ahead:
Style Two: Satay marinade
1 4-oz bar coconut
cream
2 Tbsp water
6 Tbsp peanut butter
2 Tbsp soy sauce
3 Tbsp Satay sauce or Hoi Sin sauce
2 cloves garlic crushed
1. In a small
saucepan, melt coconut cream in water over medium heat, cool and stir in
remaining ingredients. Spoon over lamb and marinate, refrigerated, overnight or
up to 2 days. Reserve excess marinade for basting during cooking.
2. Fire up the BBQ (or preheat the broiler) and barbecue 12
to 15 minutes or until medium rare or broil 4 to 5 minutes per side. Brush with
reserved marinade. Allow to rest for 10 minutes and slice and serve.
So many Hannidinners - so little time...
Here are some that came in last week...Plus the very first one I ever got - from season one..
Chris M did Duck Baked in Clay decorated in flowers and vines 1) just out of the oven |
Chris' duck- 2) cracking off clay and unwrapping lotus leaf |
Chris' duck - 3) slicing into the fruit stuffing |
Tee working wonders, stuffed quails with blood sausage and plated them with pomegranates and beet and potato galette |
David made this beautiful plate of Huevos in Brioche |
Tasty looking Sacromonte Omelette also by David |
Alex S celebrated the return of everyone's favorite ginger - and Season 3 - with a really beautifully photographed plate of very lovely Lomo Saltado |
Justin and his wife have weekly Hannibal-themed hors d'oeuvres to snack on during the show. They made the Sweetbread-stuffed Quail - plump and luscious looking. |
Justin's quails on their way into the oven |
Vic F often make Hannidinners - here's his osso buco |
This is Vic's juicy looking version of Hannibal's stuffed chicken thigh |
Another of Vic F's Hannidinners - Stuffed Veal from Season One He made Lomo Saltado for this season's finale. |
X rated stuffed quail cooked and styled by Justin I |
Bone marrow by Justin |
Melon rolls - see more of Justin's dinner in his album |
Solya made my Sacromonte Omelette and blogged about it |
Alicia G added her personalized touches to my osso buco recipe and also to Jose Andre's Saffron Risotto recipe and was inspired to blog about the delicious results! |
Thanks for all the fun this season sharing your Hannidinners. I hope you loved the finale, continue cooking and will be back for more servings of same in season 3!
Except where noted, all content copyright of Janice Poon and Feeding Hannibal and reproduction is strictly prohibited