In The Charcuterie: The Fatted Calf’s Guide to Making Sausage, Salumi, Pates, Roasts, Confits, and Other Meaty Goods [A Cookbook]

30.00 JOD

Please allow 2 – 5 weeks for delivery of this item

Description

A definitive resource for the modern meat lover, with 125 recipes and fully-illustrated step-by-step instructions for making brined, smoked, cured, skewered, braised, rolled, tied, and stuffed meats at home; plus a guide to sourcing, butchering, and cooking with the finest cuts. The tradition of preserving meats is one of the oldest of all the food arts. Nevertheless, the craft charcuterie movement has captured the modern imagination, with scores of charcuteries opening across the country in recent years, and none is so well-loved and highly regarded as the San Francisco Bay Area’s Fatted Calf.In this much-anticipated debut cookbook, Fatted Calf co-owners and founders Taylor Boetticher and Toponia Miller present an unprecedented array of meaty goods, with recipes for salumi, pâtés, roasts, sausages, confits, and everything in between. A must-have for the meat-loving home cook, DIY-types in search of a new pantry project, and professionals looking to broaden their repertoire, In the Charcuterie boasts more than 125 recipes and fully-illustrated instructions for making brined, smoked, cured, skewered, braised, rolled, tied, and stuffed meats at home, plus a primer on whole animal butchery.Take your meat cooking to the next level: Start with a whole hog middle, stuff it with a piquant array of herbs and spices, then roll it, tie it, and roast it for a ridiculously succulent, gloriously porky take on porchetta called The Cuban. Or, brandy your own prunes at home to stuff a decadent, caul fat–lined Duck Terrine. If it’s sausage you crave, follow Boetticher and Miller’s step-by-step instructions for grinding, casing, linking, looping, and smoking your own homemade Hot Links or Kolbász.With its impeccably tested recipes and lush, full-color photography, this instructive and inspiring tome is destined to become the go-to reference on charcuterie—and a treasure for anyone fascinated by the art of cooking with and preserving meat.

Additional information

Weight 1.63 kg
Dimensions 3.31 × 23.75 × 26.42 cm
PubliCanadanadation City/Country

USA

by

,

Format

Hardback

Language

Pages

352

Publisher

Year Published

2013-9-17

Imprint

ISBN 10

1607743434

About The Author

TAYLOR BOETTICHER and TOPONIA MILLER are the co-owners and co-founders of the Fatted Calf Charcuterie, which opened in 2003 and now has shops in Napa and San Francisco, a stall in the San Francisco Ferry Plaza Farmers’ Market, and a mail-order store. The couple has been featured in The New York Times, Food & Wine, and Saveur, where the Fatted Calf was included in the editors’ annual list of their 100 favorite food items and trends. Visit http://www.fattedcalf.com.

“A Best Cookbook of 2013”—Sunset“No one in America makes more diverse charcuterie, more consistently, using better product than the Fatted Calf. And no American has ever written a more comprehensive book on the subject—this is a must-read.” —Patrick Martins, founder of Slow Food USA and the Heritage Radio Network, president of Heritage Foods USA   “If you love chopping, grinding, salting, stuffing, and curing—or anything deliciously handmade—then this is the book for you! Taylor and Toponia show you how to make a wide array of meaty goods, from simple gingery duck legs to a hunter-style sausage.” —April Bloomfield, chef/owner of the Spotted Pig, the Breslin, and the John Dory Oyster Bar, and author of A Girl and Her Pig   “This book is incredibly well written. The charcuterie recipes are outstanding, and Taylor and Toponia’s clear instruction make the process less intimidating and more accessible. The other recipes are very inspired—their diverse flavors and preparations will take you on a great little culinary odyssey.” —Traci Des Jardins, chef/owner of Jardinière and Mijita Cocina   “With In the Charcuterie, Taylor and Toponia have created the New American cured meat manifesto. Like a plump, overstuffed sausage, this incredible piece of work—the product of years of experience and a lifetime of passion—is brimming with useable, accessible recipes that are fit for the home cook and the professional chef alike. This book sets the bar for neotraditional charcuterie makers.” —Matt Jennings, chef/owner of Farmstead“To me, there is nothing more exhilarating than butchering, cooking, and preserving meat. Understanding the process and respecting the ingredients is key, and it’s clear from In the Charcuterie that Taylor and Toponia have devoted their lives to mastering this craft. I always emphasize the importance of butchery to my cooks…now I can just buy them this book!” —Marc Vetri, chef/owner of Vetri and author of Rustic Italian Food and Il Viaggio di Vetri"One of the best-known of the new charcutiers is the Bay Area's Fatted Calf, so it's probably only reasonable that when founders Taylor Boetticher and Toponia Miller wrote a cookbook that they should call it In the Charcuterie, despite the fact that that title sells the book short. In the Charcuterie is much more than a guide to hams and salumi. In reality, it's nothing less than a thorough overview of our growing infatuation with good meat. There are guides to choosing cuts, to parsing the differences among the heritage breeds and to DIY butchery large and small. And, of course, there's lots of good information on how to cook meat. But where the book really shines — and at least partially justifies the title — are on the kinds of quick-cooked charcuterie items that are easily approachable by any reasonably ambitious home cook: pâtés, terrines, confits and meat pickles."—LA Times

Table Of Content

Introduction 1 The Charcutier’s PantryFive Spice  Herbes de Provence  Preserved Meyer Lemons  Dried Fruit in Brandy  The Charcutier’s Wild Mushroom Duxelles  Funghi Sott’olio  2 Provisioning the LarderTruffled Crema di Lardo  Flaky Leaf Lard Biscuits  Roasted Nettle Butter Chicken with Spring Vegetables  Basic Rich Broth  Basic Rich Roasted Broth  Pork and Duck Noodle Soup Broth  Crespelle and Chanterelle Mushrooms in Game Bird Broth  Creamy Semolina with Roasted Chicken Broth, Greens, and Pecorino  Sausage Confit  Whole Duck Confit  Classic Cassoulet   3 In the Butcher ShopGingery Braised Duck Legs  Chopped Chicken Liver Crostini  Chicken-Fried Quail  Rabbit Cacciatore  Five-Spice Baby Back Ribs  Chermoula-Marinated Pork Chops  Pork Bollito Misto  Fennel-Dusted Pork Shoulder Steaks  Tonno di Maiale  Pig Head Pozole  Pickled Pork Tongues  Lamb Rib Chops with Ras el Hanout  Goat Shoulder Birria  Peposo  Rib Eye for Two  Carne Cruda Rare Roast Beef   4 Skewered, Rolled,Tied & StuffedPork Brochettes with Herbes de Provence Harissa-Marinated Lamb Kebabs  Marsha’s Grilled Rabbit Spiedini with Chicories, Olives, and Almonds  Pancetta-Wrapped Pork Tenderloin  Pork Country Rib with Sherry, Garlic, Thyme, and Pimentón  Rabbit Porchetta  Brasato al Midolo  The Cuban  Fig-and-Sausage Stuffed Quail  Pork Shoulder Pot Roast Stuffed with Garlic, Greens, and Walnuts  Wild Mushroom–Stuffed Pork Rib Roast  Duck Stuffed with Farro, Figs, and Hazelnuts   5 Sausage, Salami & their CousinsThe Ugly Burger  Duck and Lemongrass Sausage Patties  Lamb and Herb Meatballs  Oaxacan-Style Chorizo  Bockwurst  Blood Sausage with Caramelized Apples and Cognac  Cotechino  Belgian Beer Sausage  Kolbász  Hot Links  Cacciatorini  Saucisse Sec aux Herbes de Provence  Pepperoni  Sbriciolona   6 Pâtés: Potted Meats, Terrines & LoavesRabbit Rillettes  Ciccioli  Oxtail Terrine  Headcheese  Meat Loaf  Forager’s Terrine  Spiced Lamb Terrine  Duck Terrine with Brandied Prunes  Veal and Chicken Galantine  Cou Farci  Duck Liver Mousse with Armagnac Cream  Foie Gras Terrine with Madeira Gelée  Foie Gras Torchon with Port and Quatre Épices   7 Brined, Cured & SmokedAll-Purpose Poultry Brine  Garlic Brine  Cider-Brined Pork Porterhouse Chops  Smoked Ham Hocks  Braised Ham Hocks  Picnic Ham  Croque Monsieur Choucroute Garni  Corned Beef Brisket  Pancetta Arrotolata  Bresaola  Guanciale  Brown Sugar–Cured Bacon  Pastrami  Pulled Pork   8 AccoutrementsBread and Butter Pickles Classic Cucumber Dills  Pickled Red Onion Rings  Loulou’s Garden Sweet-and-Savory Fruits  Marinated Olives  Root Vegetable Chowchow  Traditional Sauerkraut  Cherry Mostarda  Green Tomato Chutney  Black Coffee and Bourbon Barbecue Sauce  Chile Tomato Sauce Horseradish Salsa Verde  Céleri Rémoulade  Simple Beans  Cowboy Beans Fagioli all’Uccelletto    Butcher Shop Lingo  Sources  Acknowledgments Measurement Conversion Charts  Index

Excerpt From Book

INTRODUCTION: COME ON IN   WHEN YOU FIRST walk through the doors of the charcuterie, it feels as if you’ve entered an enchanted world of meaty wonders. The aroma of crispy-skinned pork roast fills the shop, inviting you to try a bite. Our cases are filled with pâtés, salumi, sausages, roasts, and terrines—and when the meat counter crew offers you a slice of the fennel-flecked sbriciolona and a piece of headcheese, it’s hard to say no. Walk back into our kitchen and you’ll smell spices toasting, bones roasting, and broths simmering. Someone is churning out coils of fresh sausage from the hand-cranked stuffer, and someone else is hanging huge, freshly-cased cotechino on hooks for fermentation. We’re hand-shredding a veritable vat of duck rillettes, seasoning it with freshly chopped thyme, then packing it into jars and sealing each with a creamy layer of duck fat. Bacon has just finished in the smoker! Go ahead and tear a hot piece off the end of the glistening slab. Peer into our curing room where row upon row of salami, guanciale, and pancetta hang quietly, patiently, enrobed in a delicate snowy bloom of mold.Our book, In the Charcuterie, has something for everyone, whether you’re a skeptical ex-vegan, scimitar-wielding novice, or seasoned old pro. When you walk into a butcher’s shop and spy a pork shoulder in the case, we want you to see more than just a hunk of meat. We want you to see all of the possibilities that the pork shoulder has to offer—from shoulder chops and stuffed roasts to picnic hams and salami. We want you, knife in hand, to experience what it is like to break a whole animal into its parts. We want to share with you not only the knowledge of butchering and cooking we have accumulated through our work, but also the respect we have for the raw ingredients, the satisfaction we derive from working in the kitchen, and the pleasure of sitting at the table with friends and family to eat what you have created. We want people to better understand the processes of charcuterie by participating in it. So we invite you to slip into our greasy clogs for just a little while. In this book, we’ll ask you to plunge your hands into a freshly ground farce to make sausage, inhale the intense perfume of a spice blend, confidently carve a roast, and more. And at the end, you get to enjoy the delicious results of your labor and passion.We cook a lot, not just in the charcuterie but at home as well. The methods and recipes in this book are based on our professional experience of working in a charcuterie for roughly a decade—but they are also written with the home cook in mind. Quite a few of the recipes and methods presented here are simple to master, and we hope that they’ll edge their way into your culinary repertoire with ease. Others are more challenging, multistepped processes that require several days or even weeks.Charcuterie is a discipline that requires patience. Allowing plenty of time and space is the key to successful smoking, curing, and terrine- or sausage-making. The gratification is far from immediate, and may seem out-of-sync with our modern way of life. But we believe that there is a place for these meaty meditations: they can teach us truths about history, community, sustainability, and self-sufficiency. With In the Charcuterie, we want you to take the same pleasure from butchering, cooking, and preserving your meat as you do savoring it at the table.——————————————————————–  Carne Cruda After a long transcontinental flight with missed connections and a jarring car ride from Nice, we finally arrived in adorable Alba too late for lunch. We found one tiny restaurant about to shut its doors for the afternoon that took pity on us. The kitchen was officially closed, but the staff fixed us a plate of carne cruda, a slightly intimidating heap of hand-cut raw beef drizzled with olive oil and accompanied with a lemon wedge. It was a love-at-first-bite moment, and to our surprise, we polished it off with gusto, then proceeded to eat our weight in various incarnations of carne cruda throughout Piedmont. Both well-trimmed sirloin and tenderloin, two cuts that are lean, flavorful, and tender, work well in this recipe. It is crucial to use fresh high-quality beef and to cut the meat by hand. To ensure a small, uniform dice, chill the beef thoroughly beforehand and use a sturdy, sharp chef’s knife. Crisp flatbreads, crostini, or halved hard-boiled eggs make excellent accompaniments. Serves 6 as an hors d’oeuvre or 4 as a first course   1 pound (450 g) lean beef sirloin or tenderloin, well chilled 1 teaspoon coarse sea salt (such as Maldon or fleur de sel) 1/4 teaspoon finely ground pepper 1 clove garlic, finely chopped Juice of 1 lemon 1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley Generous handful of arugula, cut into narrow ribbons 1/3 cup (75 ml) extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for finishing   Trim any silver skin, gristle, or large pieces of fat from the exterior of the beef, then cut into 1/4-inch (6 mm) cubes. Place the beef in a bowl. Add the salt, pepper, garlic, lemon juice, parsley, and half of the arugula and fold them into the beef to mix evenly. Stir in the olive oil and taste for seasoning.To serve, mound the beef mixture onto a large plate. Garnish with the remaining arugula and drizzle with olive oil.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.