Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday--the last day of revelry and indulgence before the Catholic observance of Lent--falls on March 4 February 9 this year (2016), but cities from New Orleans to Venice to Rio de Janeiro are already getting the party started, with all manner of celebrations going on.
Lent is typically observed with austerity and sobriety, with Catholics tasked with following a spare, meatless diet in the 40 days preceding Easter. Between Epiphany and Lent, however, comes carnevale, or carnival, a celebration of the flesh that often culminates in fanciful masked balls and fantastically costumed parades, with roots in pre-Christian folk customs. San Francisco's own dance-happy Carnaval parade is typically held in late May, a more flesh-friendly time for dancing down Mission Street in little more than giant feathers and a strategically placed sequin or two.
Although Mardi Gras parties happen throughout Europe, Greece, the Caribbean, Mexico, and South and Central America, the holiday is most closely associated with the culture, food, and music of New Orleans. While the purple-gold-and-green-glazed king cake is a staple for the holiday, there's no denying that the puffy yeast-raised doughnuts known as beignets--in all their freshly fried, powdered-sugar glory--are a delight of Big Easy proportions every day.
You can find them on brunch and/or dinner menus at many Southern-themed restaurants in San Francisco and Oakland, including Boxing Room in Hayes Valley, Brenda's Soul Food in the Tenderloin (which makes both sweet and savory versions), the Elite Cafe in Pacific Heights, Just for You Cafe in Potrero's Dogpatch neighborhood, Bistro Boudin at Fisherman's Wharf, 1300 on Fillmore in the Western Addition, Pican in Uptown Oakland and Brown Sugar Kitchen in West Oakland. You'll even find orange-blossom beignets on the dessert menu at the Basque restaurant Piperade, near Telegraph Hill.
But the best beignet is the freshest beignet, and for that, nothing beats making your own. The dough is a simple yeast dough that's mixed up in minutes, then left to rise for an hour. Cut into squares and dropped into hot oil, the dough swells into golden brown puffs almost instantly, ready for dusting in powdered sugar. Serve with a steaming cup of cafe au lait, and laissez les bons temps roulez!
Beignets
Recipe adapted from World of Doughnuts: More than 50 Delectable Recipes from Around the Globe, by Stephanie Rosenbaum.