Which deer species offers the most delicious venison?
Which is the most delicious venison? Muntjac We kicked off the tasting with the smallest species. After the first bite…
For the butter:
For the steak:
Which is the most delicious venison? Muntjac We kicked off the tasting with the smallest species. After the first bite…
It is easy to believe that pasta belongs to Italy, but versions of it are found all over Europe and…
Red deer is my least favourite of the deer species, so a venison haunch recipe for pan-roasting a haunch steak is the ideal place for a tasty lump of melty seasoned butter.
I have nothing against red deer meat and I am sure that, at the right time of year, a well-handled carcass can provide excellent fare, but whenever I have had the opportunity to eat red, I have been less than overwhelmed with the result.
This leads me to ask why we call all deer meat venison when each species is so different. But we sell beef as beef when you may have Dexter or Longhorn, which will be as different in flavour as roe and red deer. Perhaps I need to accept what red deer meat is like and adapt my cookery to get the very best from it, rather than comparing it unfairly with other species.
Café de Paris, the West End London nightclub that was bombed in the Blitz and was the location for the first Charleston danced in England in 1924, has apparently closed its doors forever due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Luckily for us, the recipe for the world-famous Café de Paris butter comes from the Café de Paris in Geneva, rather than the London version.
The story goes that, in 1930, Monsieur Boubier decided that his son-in-law’s restaurant needed a new dish and came up with serving entrecôte steak, with frites and salad but with a twist — the awesomely flavoured butter known as Café de Paris butter. Over the decades, the recipe has proliferated through the folk network of cooks and chefs and is now found all over the place. No recipe notebook is complete without a version, I hope you will agree.
Once made, this butter can be stored in the fridge or freezer for use whenever that extra unctuous, super-savoury, indulgent box needs ticking. This venison haunch recipe will win me no favours with those who complain about how many ingredients us food-writing types require. But if you must, it could be pared down to the bare bones using only shallots, anchovies, herbs, pepper and sherry vinegar.