
Phil’s Carbonnades Flamandes inspired by Saveur No. 62 November 2002
Serves 6 people/ just-out-of-hibernation groundhogs
Saveur suggests using a dark Belgian beer like Chimay or Orval. To my dismay I discovered that this was not an option open to me- I cracked under the pressure of selecting a suitable alternative and chose Apple Jack instead. The hard cider out of the bottle was completely unsatisfactory, no depth or shimmer. The caramelized onions and fennel give the body needed and the resulting soft velvety stew is a potent taste sensation which will echo flavor and warmth to the most closed of the closed.
Ingredients:
1 Tbsp. oil
3 lb. boneless chuck (I used beef loin, short cut grilling steak- the butcher said it would be more tender) cut into 1 1/2” pieces
7 Tbsp. butter
2 large yellow onions, peeled and thinly sliced
1 fennel bulb ends and tops trimmed and thinly sliced
3 Tbsp. flour
1 ½ C beef stock
1 ½ C hard apple cider (Apple Jack brand)
2 bay leaves
½ tsp allspice
1 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
5 pitted prunes
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
Directions: Heat oil in a cast iron pot over medium high heat and cook meat in approximately three batches, browning pieces well on all sides. When each batch is done, put aside in a bowl. Lower temperature and add 4 Tbsp. butter to the pan. Add onion and fennel slices to the butter and mix to coat. Stir occasionally to allow the color to develop. Cook for about 35-40 minutes until the vegetables are a golden brown. Pull out the vegetables and add the rest of the butter. Once melted add the flour and stir to form a roux. Keep stirring for about 2 minutes until it turns nutty brown. Slowly add the stock and hard cider while mixing to incorporate all of the roux and cooked bits stuck to the pan. Add the bay leaves, allspice, vinegar, and prunes to the sauce. Add salt and pepper to season. Return the meat and vegetables back to the pan and stir. On medium low continue to cook the meat until soft and tender for another 1 ½ -2 hours, partially covered. Serve hot with plenty of brew on the side.
6 comments:
Well, I have a bit of bowhunted porcine paradise slumbering in the freezer and, being a wild lean bit o' Suidae, it wants a slooow moist cook. Chimay ale is available around here, but I'm thinking your Apple Jack would actually be better with my swinish foundation. A very appealing recipe - particularly with the circumspect understanding that I will have plenty of left-over unheated braising liquid to consume.
This lovely read really comes across as a recipe I need to try (rather than the evocative narrative set in a edible metaphor that I so often find in your writing).
Mmmm, meat and alcohol represent two of my favorite food groups. Add weeds and trees for numbers three and four and it slides toward bliss. Braise it all together.....heaven.
Reading this sorta made me wish it to be freezing cold and wintry here, but we're about to get wolloped by some rainy days so winter may have finally arrived here too. There is a persimmon based soup in the fridge and a post will make it up sometime tomorrow.....
Oh this is too perfect...A must try. I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE your illustration!
blatta- Pig is Perfect for Sousing! I wouldn't recommend the AppleJack- I just looked up a brand called "original Sin Hard Cider"...we could all use a little of that. Maybe a few juniper berries and don't forget to remove the arrow ;)
And follow my recipe? you know how to make a gal sweat.
D-man, Phil approves of the whole meat+alcohol+weeds+trees=heaven recipe. He suggests a few grubs and a freezer burned hachiya too.
Vivian-This is quite easy but the explosion of flavors may be too much for the kiddies.
six-pack!!! Really enjoy looking at your cute illustration =)
totally agreed on caramelizing onion (will try fennel next time too). For me Orval is highly frangant... and too strong in personality. It may be an excellent idea in the stew.
gattina- the party animal comes out of hibernation! I like Orval, but since this was flavorful enough with the weak stuff, it is hard to imagine even more.
Sher- Wow we all agree- that drinking while cooking is more than half the fun. And you may be right, Phil is quite the storyteller.
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