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                                                    Pheasant Holstein, a flattened, crumbed breast, fried goldern, served with a fried egg on top.
                                            
                    
                    I ate a version of this pheasant supper recipe not long before Christmas last year, in what seemed like a brief outbreak of unlocked freedom. The venue was the Fox Inn at Corscombe, Dorset, a pub that has recently been taken over by the chef Mark Hix. He was born in Dorset, yet for many years has used his talents in a number of acclaimed restaurants in London. He returned to open the Oyster and Fish House in Lyme Regis, throwing himself back into Dorset coastal life. In 2012, he founded Food Rocks, a food festival that generates cash for local charities. He is a friend of mine, and I loved working at the festival — a perfect model of organised chaos.
His restaurant empire fell into administration in spring last year but, as a chef I truly admire, seeing him open a place to eat and drink was very cheering. He is pragmatic enough to realise that he knew some of the best times in London hospitality, and the charms of the Fox Inn are typically his style. In the third lockdown, he, like everyone else in the sector, will be severely tested yet again. Roll on April. Being away from the coast, Corscombe is not Hix’s natural habitat. Right in the middle of prime shooting and hunting country, on the day we ate there mud-splattered riders were loading their tired hunters into horseboxes outside.
Inside the pub, the menu is appropriately meaty — pheasant Holstein being one tempting item. The dish has its origin in Germany, named after the diplomat Baron Friedrich von Holstein. The authentic recipe is made with a veal cutlet, hammered until thin, but pheasant or free-range chicken works perfectly. The character of the dish comes from the punchy flavours of many good things: the meat, the anchovies, a rich fried egg, capers. However, German food experts say you do not need to stop there. Crayfish tails, caviar, smoked river fish or fungi belong on a plate à la Holstein, should you wish. I was perfectly happy with the Hix version — it is as perfect a pheasant supper recipe as it is a resplendent breakfast.
A flattened, crumbed pheasant breast
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