Foie
Gras Club Sandwich
Excerpted from "Foie
Gras...A Passion" by Michael Ginor. Copyright (c)1999 by
Michael Ginor. Reprinted by permission of the publisher John
Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Perhaps the culinary irony of transforming
an ordinary diner club sandwich into an elegant upscale entrée
is among the reasons why Anne Rosenzweig's delicious sandwiches
have become one of her signature dishes. Her lobster club was
so popular she even named a restaurant after it. In this decadent
version of a triple-decker sandwich, Anne layers foie gras mousse
and seared foie gras between thick rounds of toasted brioche.
Crunchy duck cracklings serve as bacon, tomato jam as mayonnaise,
and fresh pea shoots as iceberg lettuce to complete the club-sandwich
illusion.
- TOMATO JAM
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar
- 1/2 large onion, minced, about 1/2
cup
- 1 piece ginger, 1 inch long, minced
- 4 tomatoes, peeled, seeded, juiced,
and chopped
- 2 teaspoons black pepper, freshly ground
- 1 teaspoon cardamom
- 1 teaspoon coriander seeds, toasted
and ground
- DUCK CRACKLING
- 1 pound duck skin
- Coarse salt
- Black pepper, freshly ground
- 3 cups rendered duck fat or vegetable
oil
- FOIE GRAS
- 1 1/2 pounds foie gras, cut into 12
slices, each about 2 ounces and 1/3-inch thick
- Coarse salt
- Black pepper, freshly ground
- GARNISH
- 2 whole foie gras (Grade C), about
1 1/2 pounds total, cleaned (enough for 1 1/2 cups mousse)
- 18 slices brioche, cut into rounds
- Pea shoots
- Mustard oil (see Chef Notes)
YIELD: 6 entrée servings
TOMATO JAM
Combine the sugar and balsamic vinegar in a small saucepan and
bring to a boil. Let the mixture simmer until it thickens and
caramelizes, about 10 minutes, being careful not to let the mixture
burn. Add the remaining ingredients and cook until the mixture
thickens to a jamlike consistency, 50 to 60 minutes. Cool.
Adjust the seasoning to taste.
DUCK CRACKLING
Season the duck skin with salt and pepper. Heat the duck fat
or oil in a sauté pan to 375 degrees and fry the skin
until cripsy, from 10 to 20 minutes depending on the thickness
and fattiness of the skin. Remove the skin with a slotted spoon,
drain on paper towels, and allow to cool. Cut the crisp skin
into bacon-shaped strips, and season again with salt and pepper
to taste.
FOIE GRAS
Season the foie gras slices with salt and pepper. Place a medium
sauté pan over medium-high heat. In batches, sear the
foie gras on both sides and drain on paper towels.
FOIE GRAS MOUSSE
Place the two cleaned Grade C foie gras in a reseable plastic
bag. Using either a commercial steamer or a large pot of boiling
water, cook the foie gras in the sealed bag for 7 minutes. Open
the bag, drain off the fat, and reserve. Reseal the bag and
set in the refrigerator to chill.
When chilled, remove the Grade C foie
gras from the refrigerator and take it out of the bag. Clean
off any congealed fat from around the liver and reserve. Allow
the
liver to come to room temperature. Pass the cooked liver through
a vegetable mill fitted with a fine disk or through a fine mesh
strainer, pushing it through with a spatula to form a mousse.
In a bowl, whip the mousse with a wire whisk until smooth.
Beat in about half the reserved fat. The finished mousse should
have the consistency of stiff icing.
SERVICE AND GARNISH
To prepare the sandwich, spread 2 tablespoons of the foie gras
mousse on two brioche rounds. Spread 2 tablespoons of jam over
the mousse on each of the rounds. Place a small handful of pea
shoots over the jam-covered rounds. Top each with a slice of
duck crackling, and a piece of seared foie gras. Stack one round
on top of the other and place a plain brioche slice on top.
Repeat to make six sandwiches. Garnish with mustard oil.
CHEF NOTES
Mustard oil can be purchased in specialty food stores, or you
can make it by toasting 1 tablespoon of mustard seeds in a saucepan
until they pop. Add 1 1/2 cup of grapeseed oil to the pan and
cook until the mixture reaches a boil. Pass the mustard oil through
a coffee filter into a jar and store in the refrigerator. It
will keep for up to 1 month.
WINE RECOMMENDATION
Lenswood Chardonnay 1995 (Australia), or another white wine with
honey and spice flavors
- Foie Gras : A Passion
by Michael A. Ginor, Mitchell Davis, Andrew Coe,
Jane Ziegelman
John Wiley & Sons
- Publication Date: September 1999
- $49.95- Hardcover - Amazon@TKL -
Ordering Info
- ISBN: 0-471-29318-0
The Recipe
Link - http://www.recipelink.com
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