home cooking recipes  
 

Cooking & Cuisine

Barbecues and Grilling
Coffees and Teas
Cooking
Desserts and Baking
Fast Cooking
Gourmet Food
Healthy Cooking
Home Cooking
Vegetarian Cuisine
World Foods


Cooking Recipes



Appetizers
Baked Goods
Barbeque
Beans and Grains
Beef
Beverages
Breads
Breakfasts
Cake
Candies
Casseroles
Cheese
Chicken
Chocolate
Condiments
Cookies
Crock Pot and Slow Cooker
Desserts
Eggs
Fruits
Holiday
Hot and Spicy
Jellies and Jams
Kids
Lamb
Liquor
Main Dish
Mexican
Nuts
Pasta
Quick and Easy
Recipes for Pets
Regional Cuisine
Rice
Salad
Sauces
Seafood
Side Dish
Snacks
Soups
Stews
Stuffings
Vegetables
Vegetarian
Wild Game

Braised Squab In a Mold Of Vegetables


 

------------------------------SQUABS AND SAUCE------------------------------ 4 ea Squabs, wings and neck

-- removed, reserved Salt Pepper 1 lb Butter, clarified

1 md Onion, chopped

4 sl Bacon, diced

4 sm Cabbages, quartered

-- cored, and sliced OR 2 lg Cabbages, quartered

-- cored, and sliced 1/2 qt Stock, veal, thickened

-- with cornstarch ----------------------------VEGETABLES AND MOLDS---------------------------- 3 lb Turnips, large, peeled

2 lb Carrots, large, peeled

1 ea Broccoli, flower, per mold

Salt Squabs and Sauce: ================= Brown pigeon wings and neck in the oven and reserve. This will tend to darken the sauce and bring out the flavor of the squab bones. Salt and pepper the squab inside and out. In a large saute pan, heat butter (do not use too much butter or birds will deep fry). Add the squabs and brown carefully on every side. Place the birds in warm spot. Discard the used butter from the pan, and add four tablespoons of fresh clarified butter. Add bacon and onions to the pan and saute to a blond color. Add cabbages. Cook over low heat for twenty minutes, stirring occasionally. Add veal stock to cover the contents of the pan and adjust the seasonings. Bring to a boil. Place the squabs on the cabbage in the saute pan then brush with clarified butter, and cook in a 450 F for 10 minutes. Remove the squabs from the pan, bone them and put the bones in the saucepan with the previously cut wings and necks. Reserve the squab meat. Into the saucepan with the necks, wings and bones, strain the juice from the cabbage mixture. Add veal stock if liquid is needed. Reserve the cabbage. Over medium heat, cook the strained cabbage juice and bones for at least one-half hour, then strain through chinois and reserve the sauce. Vegetables and Molds: ===================== Cook the carrots, turnips, and broccoli in heavily salted water until crisp. Cool the vegetables in a bowl placed in ice water. Select the largest turnip, slice it at its widest part into 4 slices, about an 1/8-inch thick and about 3 1/2 inches in diameter. In the middle of each of these turnip slices, cut a round hole about the size of a quarter or slightly larger. Cut the remaining turnips and carrots into 40 rectangular slices about 1 1/2 inch by 1 inch by 1/8 inch.

On the bottom of 4 buttered 4-inch souffle molds, place one each of the large turnip slices. Arrange the remaining vegetables slices around the inside edge of the molds, alternating carrot and turnip slices. Place a broccoli flower, stem off and head down, into the hole in the bottom of each mold. This will be the centerpiece of your mold when unmolded later. Cover the broccoli with one layer of cabbage packed well over and between the broccoli and vegetables. Top this cabbage layer with a layer of squab meat. Add more cabbage, pressing hard to form the mixture at the top of the mold. Place the molds of squab and cabbage onto a small sheet pan. Surround the molds with a little water (a 1/4-inch in depth or a little more). Put a small sheet of buttered parchment paper on each mold (butter side down). Reheat for 20 minutes in your oven at 450 F. (Note: If molds are not to be cooked until a later time, they should remain in the oven about 20 minutes on low heat before being cooled and stored away in a refrigerator.) Unmold on serving plates. Spoon warmed sauce around molds and serve. Source: Great Chefs of San Francisco, Avon Books, 1984 Chef: Jacky Robert, Ernie's, San Francisco, CA

 
 
How to Find a Fantastic Local Tea House

How To Make Kombucha Tea

Why Iced Tea is So Popular

Seven Tips For Using Your Crock Pot to Make Your Best Roast Ever

Three Simple Romantic Recipes For A French Dinner

Please a Crowd With Famous Hummingbird Cake

The Distinct Advantages Of The Ceramic Tea Kettle

Culinary Arts From Greece

Enjoy Your Cup Of Coffee With Essential Coffee Accessories

Caribbean Recipes




Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Other Resources

By using this Web site, you signify your agreement to these terms. If you do not agree to these terms, please do not use this Web site. We reserve the right, at our discretion, to change, modify, add, or remove portions of these terms at any time.

© 2003 - 2006 Symphony, Inc.