How To make Country Pate
1 1/2 lb Boneless pork, ground fine
-twice 1 lb Boneless veal, ground fine
-twice 3/4 c Dry white wine
2 tb Brandy
2 tb Oil
Salt Freshly ground black pepper 2 lg Onions, sliced thin
2 sm Cloves garlic, halved
1 lb Fresh pork fatback, sliced
-thin 1 Cornichon pickle for garnish
Servings: Makes about 3 lbs From: Sallie Krebs DIRECTIONS: In a large bowl, combine the pork and veal. Mix the wine, brandy and oil with salt and pepper to taste, and pour the mixture over the meats. Scatter the onions and garlic on top. Cover the bowl tightly and refrigerate it for at least 24 hours. Preheat the oven to 375-F. Discard the onions, but put the garlic through a press and knead it into the meats together with the wine mixture. Break off a small piece of meat and fry it in a lightly oiled skillet over moderate heat for 3 or 4 minutes, or until its juices run clear, without a trace of pink. Taste the piece and, if you like, add more garlic, salt and pepper. (Pork is unsafe to eat uncooked; do not taste the meats raw.) Slightly overlapping the slices, line the bottom and sides of a 2-quart terrine mold or a 7 1/2 x 3 1/2 x 2 1/2 inch loaf pan with the fatback. Pack the meat mixture into the mold, and arrange the remaining slices of fatback on top of it. Fit foil over the mold, or cover the meat mixture with foil and a lid. To let steam escape, pierce a hole in the foil with a skewer. If you are using a lid, insert the skewer through its hole to puncture the foil. Set the mold on a rack in a large pan or dish. Place them all in the oven, and pour enough almost-boiling water into the pan to cover 2/3 of the mold. Bake for 2 hours or until the pate shrinks slightly from the sides of the mold and the surrounding fat and juices are a clear yellowish white with no traces of pink. Or insert a meat thermometer; it should register 160-F when the pate is done. Take the pate from the oven, but leave the foil in place. Set the pate on a rack to cool to room temperature. Then put another pan with a heavy can or weights inside it, or even a brick, on top of the pate to compact the meats. Chill the pate thoroughly (overnight is best) with the weights in place. Before serving, cut the cornichon into a fan shape, slicing lengthwise through the pickle 4 or 5 times to within 1/2 inch of one end. Spread the slices into a fan, and garnish the pate with it. Source: Best Recipes from Time-Life Books, ISBN# 0-517-06502-9 Originally from: Great Dinners from Life
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Campagne Terrine – Bruno Albouze
When you turn a classic terrine de campagne into a stunning prosciutto wrapped terrine yule log! You've got the ultimate charcuterie delicacy for your holidays ????????????
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How To Make A Game Pate. Pâté de campagne. TheScottReaProject
A Wild Game Pate.Country Pate..A Beautifully simple.Game Pate,based on the French classic,Pate De Campagne. Using Rabbit,Pheasant and pork, ( no livers)with garlic and herbs de Provence.The most tastiest dish you will make for the least amount of work,Give it a try its simplicity itself.A super seasonal Game Dish.Many thanks.
Where The Pheasants Come From..
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TheScottReaProject.All About The Butchery,Preparation,And Cooking Of,Great British,Meat,Fish And Wild Game.By Scott Rea.Master Butcher/Fishmonger.Former Butcher Of The Year.Self Taught Cook/Frustrated Chef.Cooking Simple And Delicious Seasonal Dishes Through The Year.Pleased To Meat You..
Tripel Country Paté (Paté de Campagne avec Tripel)
Everyone thinks of liver when they think of paté, but not all patés contain organ meat (even though they are awesome). This recipe is for a country style paté that features the La Fin Du Monde Tripel from Unibroue (instead of the traditional cognac and the Imperial Red Ale Bacon. After steaming in a water bath for ~2½ hours, the paté is pressed and refrigerated overnight. The resulting piece of charcuterie is deliciously decadent, but it is a treat for the meat-lover and food explorer.
Hardware
• ½ cup La Fin Du Monde Tripel
• 3 TBSP unsalted butter
• 1 cup onion, minced
• 2½ lbs. ground pork
• 12 oz. Imperial Red bacon (6 slices), finely chopped, plus 14 bacon slices (for lining pan)
• ½ cup roasted shelled pistachios
• 3 garlic cloves, pressed
• 2½ tsp salt
• 2½ tsp dried thyme
• 1½ tsp allspice
• 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper
• 3 TBSP stone-ground mustard
• ½ cup whipping cream
Directions
1. Set rack at lowest position in oven and preheat to 350°F
2. Gently simmer the Tripel until reduced, then add whipping cream cup, about 2 minutes
3. Melt butter in heavy medium skillet over medium heat
4. Add onion and sauté until soft and translucent but not brown, about 8 minutes
5. Combine ground pork and chopped bacon in large bowl, mix together until well blended
6. Add sautéed onion, garlic, salt, thyme, allspice, and pepper to bowl with pork mixture and stir until incorporated
7. Add eggs, cream, and reduced Tripel. Stir until well blended
8. Line 9x5x3-inch metal loaf pan with bacon slices, arranging 8 slices across width of pan and 3 slices on each short side of pan and overlapping pan on all sides
9. Lightly and evenly press the meat mixture into pan atop bacon slices
10. Fold bacon slices over, covering paté
11. Cover pan tightly with foil
12. Place pan in 13x9x2-inch metal baking pan and transfer to oven
13. Pour boiling water into baking pan to come halfway up sides of loaf pan
14. Bake paté until a thermometer inserted through foil into center registers 155°F, about 2½ hours
15. Remove loaf pan from baking pan and transfer to rimmed baking sheet
16. Place heavy skillet or 2 to 3 heavy cans atop paté to weigh down, and chill overnight
17. Place loaf pan with paté in larger pan of hot water for about 3 minutes. Invert paté onto platter
18. Cut paté crosswise into ½ inch slices.
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Julia & Jacques Cooking at Home - Charcuterie
Julia Child and Jacques Pepin with their Cooking at Home programme from the 1990s.
Country French Pate
Country French Pate:To get this complete recipe with instructions and measurements, check out my website: kcinthekitchen.com or chatndish.com
Country Pate | EASY TO LEARN | QUICK RECIPES
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