Home/Prince Charles shares his favourite pheasant recipe – pheasant crumble pie
Prince Charles shares his favourite pheasant recipe – pheasant crumble pie
ShootingUK13 November 2018
‘I got this recipe from someone I know,’ writes HRH The Prince of Wales in this week’s issue of Country Life, which he has guest edited.
‘It is delicious. I invented a grouse one recently, Coq au Vin with Grouse, as well as Moussaka with Grouse (it doesn’t always have to be lamb), in other words Groussaka!’
The man cooking the recipe on this page is John Williams, a chef whose career began with a bag of grouse.
‘I’d just been taken on as an apprentice at The Percy Arms in Northumberland and they wanted me to pluck and gut them,’ The Ritz’s executive chef remembers, sitting in his office before the lunch service begins.
‘It was the first thing I had ever touched in a professional kitchen. I come from a seaside town, so I was much more used to fish and I’d definitely never encountered that aroma before,’ he divulges with a smile. ‘But, you know, today, it’s one of my favourite smells. Come the Glorious Twelfth, I’m outside that door anxiously waiting for the birds to arrive.’
Ingredients
For the stock
1 pheasant
1 medium onion, cut into a medium dice
1 large carrot, cut into a large dice
4 sticks of celery, cut into quarters
2 bay leaves
Large sprig of thyme
6 juniper berries
4 peppercorns
Splash of sherry
For the roux sauce
40g butter
40g plain flour
290ml pheasant stock
Dash of cream
Chopped parsley and thyme
Seasoning
For the crumble
170g butter
56g white breadcrumbs
28g finely grated Parmesan
2 smoked streaky-bacon rashers
Method
To make the stock, place the whole pheasant in a large saucepan and cover with water. Add all the other ingredients, except the sherry, and cover with a cartouche of baking paper.
Bring to the boil, then turn down to a slow simmer and cook for about 30 minutes, before checking – just inside the leg – that the bird is just cooked.
Next, make a thick roux by melting the butter in a pan, adding the sieved flour and mixing to a paste. Cook the roux for several minutes, then gradually start adding the pheasant stock, stirring all the time, until it becomes a thick sauce. Add the chopped herbs and cream, then check for seasoning.
Remove the breasts from the pheasant, shred them by pulling the meat lengthways between two forks, add to the sauce and keep warm.
Finally, to make the crumble topping, melt the butter in a frying pan, add the breadcrumbs and stir constantly until they are golden and crispy. Turn them on to kitchen paper to soak up the excess butter and add the Parmesan cheese.
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