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Charcutepalooza October: Stretching: Galantine

by David Dadekian October 15, 2011
written by David Dadekian
Galantine

Galantine

Another month has passed and we’re sadly that much closer to the end of The Year of Meat. There’s no way I’m going to stop making any of these Charcutepalooza treats, but I don’t think I’ll be documenting them in quite as much detail. Usually when I’m cooking there’s fourteen other things (or just two little girls) vying for my attention and I don’t get a chance to make notes or pick up my camera—or make sure when I do pick up my camera I’m not getting schmaltz on it. However, this month’s challenge, as complicated as it was, was a huge amount of fun and I found myself constantly washing my hands (or pulling off the non-latex gloves) and taking a photo. I would go so far as to say, while I’ve enjoyed mostly all of the Charcutepalooza challenges, this one ranks up there as one of my favorites.

CharcutepaloozaWhile many of the challenges are easily recognizable to the non-meat-obsessed, I’m willing to bet the photo above and even the caption “galantine” may not be as commonly known as say bacon, corned beef or even terrine. What you’re looking at there and in the many photos below is, from the center out, a boneless, skinless chicken breast encased within a chicken thigh & liver forcemeat (remember blended ground meat and fat), wrapped in chicken skin, poached in chicken stock and then chilled.

Now, you may be thinking, as I did, I love chicken skin and all, but I like it nicely roasted or fried crispy, not poached and then served cold. But trust me, the galantine is a thing of beauty. The key is to make very thin slices when cutting the final product. Don’t just take my word for it, here’s the conversation I had with my brother Andy when I unwrapped and served the galantine last week.

Andy: What is this you’re serving?

Me: A galantine. It’s chicken breast inside ground chicken meat wrapped in chicken skin.

Andy: What?

Me: Trust me.

Andy: What the heck is this? (eyes the slice, picks it up and pops it in his mouth) Oh wow, this is goooooooood.

So there you have it, third party proof. And if there’s anyone who likes to give another person trouble and not let them think they did something right, you know it’s a little brother.

One of the reasons galantines may not be as common as a terrine or pate is because it is a bit of complex, time-consuming process to create. First you have to take the skin off a whole chicken, intact in one piece, something I had done several times in the past (did I mention I liked fried crispy chicken skin?). It’s not super difficult once you learn how to do it, it’s more a matter of time and patience. It was a plus having this challenge in October because some of the more gruesome horror movies can come to mind when doing it (Buffalo Bill in The Silence of the Lambs anyone?). Then you have to freeze the skin, scrape off the fat from the skin, butcher the chicken, sear the breasts, make the forcemeat (which is a whole Charcutepalooza challenge in itself), roll the whole thing up and tie off the ends, wrap it in cheesecloth and tie that, poach it in the stock to the proper temperature and chill it. On second thought, did I really mean this was one of my favorite challenges?

Truly it was, plus I had a good amount of forcemeat leftover that I put a delicious terrine together too. Before I close with the many photos of this process a mention should be given to Blackbird Farm (one of the many places I work with). We’ve begun raising chickens at Blackbird Farm. They’re Cornish Rocks, raised on pasture and supplemented with organic feed if they so desire. The birds are really beautiful to butcher and I couldn’t be happier cooking with them. So thank you Blackbird Farm for the chickens to do things with them that the folks at the farm never heard of, and, as usual, thank you to Cathy Barrow a.k.a. Mrs. Wheelbarrow and Kim Foster a.k.a.not The Yummy Mummy anymore for all the #charcutepalooza fun.

Skin removed from a whole chicken in one piece

Skin removed from a whole chicken in one piece

Skinless bird

Skinless bird

Searing the breast meat

Searing the breast meat

Chicken fond, shallots, garlic & Madeira—wonderfully fragrant

Chicken fond, shallots, garlic & Madeira—wonderfully fragrant

Skin with seared breast meat inside forcemeat

Skin with seared breast meat inside forcemeat

Wrapped and tied galantine

Wrapped and tied galantine

Wrapped in cheesecloth and poaching in chicken stock (floating in photo, but submerged to poach)

Wrapped in cheesecloth and poaching in chicken stock (floating in photo, but submerged to poach)

First slices of galantine

First slices of galantine

Galantine (thick slice for photo purposes only)

Galantine (thick slice for photo purposes only)

Galantine slice 1

Galantine slice 1

Galantine slice 2

Galantine slice 2

October 15, 2011 0 comment
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Charcutepalooza September: Packing: English Meat Pie

by David Dadekian September 15, 2011
written by David Dadekian
Preparing English meat pie

Preparing English meat pie

Some of these Charcutepalooza posts have been short because of frustration (see stuffing sausage). In this case, this post is on the short side because everything worked out so well and was so darn easy. Either I’m learning to deal with meat mess much better (none in my daughter’s hair this time!) or I’m getting better at running various animal parts through both ends of my Kitchenaid mixer. Even the dough making part of this month’s challenge went smoothly, and I don’t have the best record of dealing with doughs (caused by more of my finely-tuned-lack-of-coordination—there’s been flour all over my children in the past too). I won’t go so far as to say my dough work was a huge success, but this was definitely a very smooth challenge for me. Which is good because Mrs. Wheelbarrow is already teasing us via #charcutepalooza on Twitter with a super difficult challenge for October.

CharcutepaloozaAs you can see from the photos on this page, I decided to make an English Pork Pie, and in a rare moment for me, I decided to exactly stick to the recipe in Ruhlman & Polcyn’s Charcuterie. Well, sort of. In sorting one of our freezers after a blackout (thanks, Hurricane Irene!) I noticed that I had a little over a pound of venison left from earlier this year. I grabbed a few ounces of pork fat to round it up to a pound and a half, and ground it all as a substitute for the pork in the recipe for English Pork Pie. That’s the ground venison in the photo above, along with some herbs and spices in the bowl, waiting for the addition of the sauteed onions and garlic to the right and the cup of chicken stock to the upper left. It all came together quickly and easily, and now I had the insides for English Venison Pie.

Leaving that to chill, I tackled the dough. Maybe I had just the right atmospheric conditions, or I was just plain lucky, but the dough came together as easily too. I’m not saying it was pretty, and as you can see in my four-step process photos below it could’ve used a bit more finesse, but it was good dough and I didn’t make a huge mess. Note regarding photos: powdery substances like flour and my camera & lenses do not mix. That brings us to the four-step photos below, and I know I sound like a broken record (ask your parents), but laying out the dough and the meat and sealing it all up, came together easily too.

A few notes: I made an aspic with chicken stock to pour inside. I’m not sure if it would’ve worked as it didn’t look like much space, but I was going to try. That is until I wisely asked my wife if she would eat the Venison Pie if I encased it in meat jelly. She said she’d pass so I passed on adding the aspic. Also, while I thought I was being clever baking on a Silpat for easy removal from the pan, in retrospect, I wouldn’t use it again. The bottom of the pie was rather soggy. I’m not sure the Silpat contributed to that, but I’ll try it without next time. One last note, this was not the most attractive dish once I sliced into it. I was going to get out a different lens and play around with the slices, but then I tasted it. As much as I love making photos of food, I really love eating great food better. We devoured this pie. The ground venison with pork fat was moist and very flavorful and the crust tasted fantastic. I know I strayed with the meat, but Ruhlman & Polcyn’s recipe was perfect.

It’s hard to believe another month has passed in The Year of Meat and now we’re three-quarters of the way through Charcutepalooza. As I do every month, and I will continue to do so even when Charcutepalooza is over, I send many thanks to  Cathy Barrow a.k.a. Mrs. Wheelbarrow and Kim Foster a.k.a. The Yummy Mummy. Also, the community that’s sprung up around these monthly challenges is very fun, warm and constructive. So if you’ve been reading along but not playing along, pick up the Twitter and find #charcutepalooza.

Four stages of making the pie

Four stages of making the pie

The finished English Venison Pie

The finished English Venison Pie

September 15, 2011 0 comment
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Charcutepalooza August: Binding: trotter terrine

by David Dadekian August 15, 2011
written by David Dadekian
Trotter terrine and crostini

Trotter terrine and crostini

Back to familiar ground for this month’s Charcutepalooza challenge, though it was only my second time working with pig’s feet, so it wasn’t totally familiar. You read that right, pig’s feet, as in euphemistically speaking, trotters. Yes, there are photos of said trotters further down this page. If you don’t want to see severed pig’s feet I would suggest you read a different story in that box to the upper right.

I’ll admit, working with trotters for this challenge wasn’t exactly like working with any piece of meat, there are some mental challenges to all that bone and gristle, even for someone like myself who has aided in the slaughter of animals and broken down whole carcasses. Interestingly, it became very clear that that perception is obviously learned behavior. While my wife Brenda didn’t want to be in the room with the trotters (and would probably be someone who would read a different story than this one to avoid the photos), my two daughters had no problem with the meat at all. In fact, my 18-month-old was fascinated with the process as I cleaned and prepped the trotters to go into the stock pot, even poking and sniffing one.

CharcutepaloozaSo what did I do to achieve the shiny loaf that you see in the above photo? The process is like making any type of stock from meat and bones: animal parts in a pot, cover with liquid, bring to a simmer for several hours. Except in this case you’re not making the stock in water with some aromatics, but in highly seasoned water. I used the same seasonings as outlined in Ruhlman & Polcyn’s Charcuterie recipe for headcheese, but since it’s been a very hectic summer and I just didn’t have the time or energy to acquire a pig’s head, I went a different route for the meat. Yes, I did have a pair of trotters in my freezer (don’t you?) but I didn’t think that would produce enough meat for my terrine. I was out of ham hocks (pork shanks), but I did have some beef shanks, so I decided to use those with the pig’s feet. Now because I was using beef I wanted to try something different than the traditional 2 cups of a dry white wine, and I happened to have a bottle of NV Port that had been open for a couple of months, making it past it’s prime. Turned out there was 1 1/2 cups of Port left in that bottle. Not wanting to skimp on the required liquor, I brought it to two cups with a little Patron. Why not, right?

So into the pot everything went and three hours later I had a big platter of, let’s be honest, messy animal product and about 7 cups of purplish-brown gelatinous liquid. This is not the sounds good stage. But we’re getting there. After some scrupulous separating of meat from everything else (and a little frying of the pig skin because why waste cracklins) I was ready to assemble my terrine. Instead of chopping up the meat by hand, and because I was reasonably certain Brenda wouldn’t want to eat the terrine if she saw chunks of the various meat suspended in there, I pulsed all the meat in my food processor a few times. I may have pulsed a little too much because the finish terrine, while it sliced beautifully, tended to crumble as you ate it, but it tasted great so who cares? I lined my loaf dish with plastic wrap, pressed in the meat and then very slowly added the stock so that it would get absorbed and into every tiny nook and cranny between the meat. When the stock began to pool up on top I tightly folded up the plastic wrap and put the dish in the refrigerator overnight.

Today, what more can I say but, we ate. Even though I added a good amount of salt and pepper to the meat before I pulsed it in the food processor, I still felt the final terrine needed more salt. But other than that, the seasonings, including the Port, came through very nicely. As for the lack of salt, it was nothing a sprinkling of very coarse Maldon sea salt on top couldn’t solve, which was probably even better than getting the salt right in the first place. The terrine was really a lot of fun this month, so once again I want to thank Cathy Barrow and Kim Foster for this whole wonderful Charcutepalooza experience. I can’t believe we’re 2/3rds of the way through.

A 16-quart stock pot, because you need the space for the trotters

A 16-quart stock pot, because you need the space for the trotters

Trotters, as you can see there is still a good amount of meat to be had

Trotters, as you can see there is still a good amount of meat to be had

The final terrine from above, those lines are the imprints from the not-quite-smooth plastic wrap

The final terrine from above, those lines are the imprints from the not-quite-smooth plastic wrap

Side view of the terrine, I went with loaf-shaped thinking it will be good for sandwiches.

Side view of the terrine, I went with loaf-shaped thinking it will be good for sandwiches.

Trotters. See, that's not so bad now, is it?

Trotters. See, that's not so bad now, is it?

August 15, 2011 0 comment
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Charcutepalooza July: Blending: mortadella

by David Dadekian July 15, 2011
written by David Dadekian
cross-section of mortadella

cross-section of mortadella

I’ve discovered an interesting ratio between my love of photography and my love of cooking, more specifically, my love of cooking all these excellent Charcutepalooza projects. The more I enjoy a project and have fun doing it, the more I think to stop and pick up my camera to make photos. When I’m as thoroughly frustrated as I was making this month’s mortadella, and last month’s sausage, making photos isn’t the first thing to come to mind—and I make photos almost every day.

To make matters just slightly more down this month, while I and my family loved the June project’s end result of duck sausage and spicy Italian sausage, none of us really liked the mortadella. It’s not that it was bad at all. It’s just that for the amount of work and mess I created, I was hoping for something that tasted a little better than just really good bologna. Especially since I don’t really enjoy bologna. I have had mortadella many times in the past and never thought much of it, but I was really hoping making it myself with good, locally raised, pastured pork would make it great. Greatness, while achieved with several other Charcutepalooza projects, was not within my grasp this time.

Instead of regaling you with more tales of my stuffing clumsiness and emulsion-making-mess woes (I’ll just say emulsified meat does wash out of children’s hair and leave it at that), I’ll move on to what I did with the final product. CharcutepaloozaAs you can see from the photo above, I chose not to use pistachios or other “mix-ins” in my mortadella. I never much cared for nuts in it in the past, and my wife Brenda doesn’t love olives. In thinking about it now, that may have been my mistake, because the only time I’ve ever really enjoyed mortadella is in a muffuletta, which of course is always loaded with an olive salad.

So I’m looking at this gigantic round of mortadella that I’ve sliced in half to take the above cross-section photo and, besides that weirdly unnatural pink color, I see a lot of fat, beautiful pork fat that I was kind of cursing myself for wasting inside this emulsion. All the while Brenda was washing and spinning greens and, after tasting the mortadella, declaring she would prefer not to have that on her salad. I thought, but what if it was a crispy lardon? Look at all that fat. It’s got to render and crisp up nicely.

Out came a frying pan and in went 1/2″ cubes of mortadella (see last photo, extremely zoomed in for effect). Fifteen minutes later and we had the below salad. Then I went the extra step of deglazing the pan with balsamic vinegar, creating a rough 3:1 ratio of rendered mortadella fat and a little olive oil to the vinegar, stirring in some Dijon and cracked black pepper, and we had a vinaigrette.

I’m going to sound like a complete downer, but I still didn’t love it. I know, perhaps there was something wrong with me. Just to be on the safe side I had a chicken skin club sandwich with homemade bacon today. It was fantastic, so thankfully my taste buds still work. I’m not about to give up of course, especially not since I already know that next month’s challenge involves terrines, which I love making, so I’ll see if my photo making ratio theory holds up.

Thank you again to Cathy Barrow and Kim Foster, and I do mean that sincerely. Maybe it wasn’t my cup of tea, or cup of emulsified meat, but it was a new experience for me to stuff a bung (did you really think I’d get through this whole month’s post without mentioning bung once?), and new experiences are always much appreciated.

salad with mortadella "lardons"

salad with mortadella "lardons"

close-up exploration of a cube of mortadella

close-up exploration of a cube of mortadella

July 15, 2011 0 comment
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