Blick Recipes
Google
Web Site
Main Menu
 Home
 Appetizers
 BBQ
 Beans
 Beef
 Beverages
 Breads
 Breakfast
 Cheese
 Chicken
 Condiments
 Crockpot
 Desserts
 Eggs
 Ethnic
 Fruits
 Game
 Grains
 Holiday
 Lamb
 Nuts
 Other
 Pork
 Rice
 Sauce
 Seafood
 Seasonings
 Snacks
 Soups
 Spreads
 Stews
 Vegetables
Lou Pastis En Pott (Potted Meat) Recipe
Category: Beef
Rating: N/A
Servings: 8


Ingredients

1/2 lb lard
2 lb lean beef
2 lb lean pork
3 bay leaves
1 a few sprigs of thyme and rosemary
1 teaspoon juniper berries
1 salt and pepper
1/2 bottle red wine (the near-black win; e of cabors or a



Cooking Directions:

This is an unusual potted meat prepared only in the Languedoc.

Serves 8 - 10

Time: Start at least 2 weeks ahead; 30 minutes plus 2 hours cooking, repeated 3 times

First cooking: deep red Medoc)

Second and third cooking: the same ingredients again each time

You will need a large straight-sided earthenware pot. Scald the earthenware pot and grease it thoroughly with a little of the lard (you can line the bottom with a few fig or walnut leaves if you have them). Cut the beef and pork into slices, trimming the gristle and sinews as you do so. Put the bay leaves on the bottom of the pot. Lay in the meat slices, zseasoning with the herbs, salt, and freshly ground pepper as you do so. Pour in the wine - it should just cover the meat.

Simmer the pot uncovered over a very low heat or in a preheated 250 F oven, for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until the volume is reduced by half. Allow to cool. Seal with a layer of lard, melted and poured over the cool meat. Cover with wax paper tied down with string. Leave the pot on a refrigerator shelf for a week. Then remove the lard seal and add in another 2 lbs pork and 2 lbs beef, the whole covered with wine, seasoned and cooked as before. Repeat the operation at the end of another week. You will now have a delicious dark jelly- meat which you can either eat hot or cold. If you continue to replace the volume you have removed, the pot can go on forever.

From: THE OLD WORLD KITCHEN - THE RICH TRADITION OF EUROPEAN PEASANT COOKING" by Elisabeth Luard, ISBN 0-553-05219-5 Posted by: Karin Brewer, Cooking Echo, 7/92
beef,pork

=- Rate This Recipe -=


Very good

Good

Average

Poor

Very Poor
Related Recipes:
Beef And Green Chile Stew
Umngqusho
Summer Steak
Barbecue Beef
Corned Beef, Cabbage And Shell Salad



Home | Privacy | Feedback | News
Copyright © 2006-2008 BlickRecipes.com. All Rights Reserved.