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How To make Rabbit with Apricots In Cabernet Sauce
1 ea Rabbit, young
1 c Cabernet Sauvignon
1 oz Vinegar, red wine
2 ea Garlic, cloves, unpeeled
Bouquet garni ** 5 oz Apricots, dried
Salt, coarse Pepper, ground 3 tb Oil, peanut
4 tb Butter
1 c Demi-glaze, rabbit
Bone the rabbit saddle, legs, and shoulders and cut the meat into cubes of about 1 ounce each. Marinate the meat in the wine and vinegar with garlic and bouquet garni for 12 hours, covering rabbit with cheesecloth so it will not dry out. Soak apricots in cold water for 1 hour, then drain. Drain rabbit, reserving marinade and garniture. Dry rabbit well and season with salt and pepper. In a heavy casserole, heat the oil and 2 tablespoons of butter. Add the rabbit and brown on all sides (approximately 20 minutes until meat is gray). Add garlic, bouquet garni, reserved marinade, apricots, and rabbit demi-glace. Cut a circle of wax paper, butter it lightly, and place it over the rabbit. Cover the casserole and simmer for 20 - 30 minutes. Remove bouquet garni and discard. Retrieve cloves of garlic and remove the peel. Mash garlic into a paste with the remaining butter. Remove the rabbit and apricots from the sauce, set aside and keep warm. Stir the garlic paste into the sauce a little at a time. Arrange rabbit and apricots on a serving plate and cover with sauce. Source: Great Chefs of San Francisco, Avon Books, 1984 Chef: Werner Albrecht, The French Room - : Four Season's Clift Hotel, San Francisco, CA
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Trio of Suckling Pig, a Recipe from Ross Bryans of Corrigan's Mayfair
In this video Ross Bryans of Corrigan's Mayfair, shows us his Trio of Suckling Pig dish, consisting of pork chops, pork belly and pork neck. This elegant dish makes for a very hearty and delicious meal.
Recipe
Trio of suckling pig,
(Full recipe including sauces and garnish available at, thestaffcanteen.com)
2kg of suckling pig neck
2 carrots
3 sticks of celery
1 onion
½ bulb of garlic
¼ bunch of thyme
1tsp of fennel seeds
1tsp of white peppercorns
300ml of white wine
2 tbsp of tomato puree
1litre of reduced pork stock
Cut the carrots, celery and onion into 2 inch pieces,
Brown the suckling pig neck to a dark golden brown colour. Then remove from the pan.
Sweet the vegetables in the same pan taking a little colour. Once coloured add the fennel seeds, white peppercorns, garlic, bay leafs and thyme.
Now add the tomato puree and cook on a slightly lower heat for 6-8 minutes.
Deglaze the pan with the white wine and reduce to a paste.
Put the suckling pig neck back into the pan and cover with the reduced pork stock.
Bring up to a simmer and cover with baking parchment.
Place in the oven at 160 degrees for 3-3 ½ hours or until the meat is falling apart.
Allow the meat to cool in the cooking liquid.
When cool enough, remove the meat form the cooking liquid and gently break it down in a bowl.
Strain the vegetables and aromatics form the stock into a clean sauce pan and reduce on a medium heat to a thick glaze.
Once the cooking liquid has been reduced, add it to the broken down meat so that it coats it and is thick and sticky. Check the seasoning and add a few splashes of cabernet sauvignon vinegar to freshen that taste.
Divide the mix into two and put into medium sized Vac-Pac bags and seal on full.
With a rolling pin flatten out the mixture in the bag right into all the corners so that the same thickens all over.
Chill in the fridge until cooled and set.
Once chilled cut the suckling pork neck into 5x5cm squares.
To reheat place the square in a tray and gently warm under the salamander and glaze with some of the pork sauce.
For the pork belly marinade
500g fleur de sel
2 g coriander
2g pink pepper
2 g fennel seed
3 g secheun pepper
1 g long pepper
1 g star anise
Quarter freshly ground nutmeg
Grind in a spice blender all the spices and using a micro plain, grate the nutmeg and all together with the salt.
Curing and cooking the suckling pork
Using a sharp knife remove the rib cage from the belly (if not do already) and using the salt mixture cover the bottom of a gastro tray. Place the pork belly skin side down and then cover the top with the rest of the mixture, so that the belly is completely covered. Cling film and leave to cure for 2 ½ -3hours.
Brush off the excess salt mixture and gently rinse under a cold tap. The belly should be firm to touch all over.
Place the belly now into a vac-pac bag and add 2 tbsp of duck fat. Seal the bag on full and cook at 85 degrees for 6 hours. When cooked leave in the bag and press between two trays in the fridge until cold. Once cooled remove from the bag and any excess duck fat from them belly too. Cut into the same size as the pork neck 5x5 cm .
In a frying pan add a small splash of oil and place the belly skin side down. Roast gently until crispy and golden in colour.
For the Suckling pig rack
First you need to remove the chine bone. (if not done already) and proceed to French trim the bones. Once cleaned tie with butchers twine. Cover the bones with tin foil to protect them during the cooking.
Season the pork rack lightly with fine sea salt then In a large hot frying pan add a splash of oil and place the pork rack in, skin side down.
Roast the skin to a crispy crackling then seal the flesh side gently. Now add a few knobs of butter and continue cooking till a core temperature of 54-56 degrees. Allow to rest for 12-15 minutes.
Remove the butchers twine and cut of the cutlets.
Onion squash puree and balls
1 large onion squash
Few knobs of butter
2 sprigs of thyme
Using a sharp knife cut of the top and the bottom of the squash then peel it with the knife, only removing the outside skin. Cut the onion squash into quarters, remove the seeds. Take a medium sized Parisian scoop and cut out of the flesh the balls of squash and set aside, making sure they are as round as you can get them.
With the left over squash, chop in up into 2-3inch pieces. Start to sweat it down in a medium sized pot gently with no colour adding a little salt to season. Then cover with a piece of parchment paper and cook until very soft. Once cooked and no liquid left blend in a food processor until smooth and silky and pass through a strainer.
Cooking the squash balls you need too gently butter roast them in some foaming butter with some sprigs of thyme. Gently allow the squash to colour a light golden brown. But still firm to the bite.
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