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Cook-off 1--Cassoulet

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#121 Eden

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Posted 25 January 2005 - 05:09 PM

OK took me a while to get pics uploaded, but here are the brining pictures from this weekend, which I will follow with today's sausage making.

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Salt, sugar, apple cider, fresh thyme, pepper, juniper berries, whole nutmeg, bayleaf, garlic which I forgot to put in the picture, and Tamarind paste. Bruce's original recipe called for whole tamarind pods, which I couldn't find the first time I made it but I did have tamarind paste in house, and since the result was quite happy I've just stuck with the paste ever since... [Oh and a bit of last years brine which I had stored in the freezer.]

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Brine ingredients all boiled together & cooled down ready to pour over pork

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2 days of soaking in salty flavorful liquid later and the pork is ready to roll!

the pork chops go whole into the bean pot, while most of the pork belly gets sliced into postage stamp sized pieces & distributed in the beans & the lamb ragout, but some of it gets ground into the sausage.


And speaking of the sausage:

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the dark bowl with the white lump is the casings after soaking but before final rinsing. Getting ready to be ground up & stuffed we have Juniper berries, pepper, cognac, garlic, shallots, sage, parsley, pork shoulder & the brined pork belly.


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Here's the sausage mix all ground up, and with a bit of salt added, because the test piece I fried up was SOOOO good, but it needed just a bit of salt...


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and here's the first few sausages coming out. Fortunately Bill wasn't home so there are no shots of me perched precariously up on the kitchen ladder to make the sausage because when the Kitchen-Aid is set up on the counter it's too high for me to see into the hopper without a boost :hmmm:


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And here they all are ready to hang out in the fridge with their little ducky friends.

small tragedy today: I had boiled down my duck stock, and put the pot in the sink so I could cool it down and go out for the afternoon, and as I was running the cold water to fill the sink I turned away for a moment, and the pot started floating & slipped under the faucet, adding buckets of water to my perfectly reduced stock :sad: The pot is now back on the stove & I am stuck here wallowing in self-recriminations because yes of course I know better & that just makes it worse...

Tonight the lamb ragout :wub: which will make me all happy again, but for now I need a break from the kitchen.

see link in previous post if you want additional pictures.
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#122 phifly04

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Posted 25 January 2005 - 06:38 PM

I cant wait to see the finished dish together,Very inspiring that you are keeping it as true to the region it,s from,Dat,s a lot of work!!Im sure the end product will reward you though,Nice job so far.Looking forward to the rest of the pic,s
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#123 Eden

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Posted 25 January 2005 - 11:56 PM

The Lamb ragout has been set (carefully!) in the sink in an ice bath so it can cool, but in the meanwhile, here are the few pics I took (I got wrapped up in browning & cooking so the middle part didn't get well documented I'm afraid :huh: )

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all the ingredients ready to go: duck fat for sauteeing, lamby bits (shoulder?), brined pork belly, carrots, onions, garlic, tomato paste, bay leaf & thyme. Duck stock was still re-reducing at this point...


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simmering ragout, making kitchen smell amazing!

I always make extra of the Ragout because it's so good on it's own that we have to have enough for a bowl or two on it's own beyond what goes in the cassoulet. Lamb-y tomato-y richness :biggrin:
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#124 Eden

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Posted 28 January 2005 - 07:44 PM

Almost done! I cooked the beans today. This is the only part of the Cassoulet that does not seem to be a dish on it's own (the way the lamb ragout, the sausages & the duck confit all are) I wonder why...

I use Haricots de Soissons, which absorb flavor beautifully, and are just HUGE!
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The dry bean was about 7/8" long, the soaked bean about 1-3/8" long. About 3X the original size.

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Here are all the ingredients: Brined pork chops, confit'd duck legs, brined pork belly, quartered pigs feet, Haricots de Soissons, garlic, fresh thyme, fresh bay, onion studded with whole cloves, carrot, chicken broth.

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Ingredients mounding up in the pot

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Tommorow I combine everything & bake the first batch in the cassoulet pot :rolleyes:

I have to go rummage in the wine cabinet & decide what to serve with it...
Eden

More pics: http://forums.egulle...album&album=643
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#125 fauxtarga

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Posted 29 January 2005 - 12:31 AM

Did any of you guys from NYC get to swing by Williams Sonoma when Mr. Bourdain was "demo"-ing the cassoulet? (The demo was as good as one could expect for a dish that implies a multi-day prep)

Here's some pics, for those interested:

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Explanation of the dish.

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Mise en place

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Finished.

I really liked the haricot tarbais, thought they really fit well. Will have to get some from D'Artagnan. Sorry I don't have any close-ups, this was one of those eating and standing things.

Cheers. -J

#126 Eden

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Posted 29 January 2005 - 11:18 AM

Did any of you guys from NYC get to swing by Williams Sonoma when Mr. Bourdain was "demo"-ing the cassoulet? (The demo was as good as one could expect for a dish that implies a multi-day prep)

Here's some pics, for those interested:
<snip>
I really liked the haricot tarbais, thought they really fit well. Will have to get some from D'Artagnan. Sorry I don't have any close-ups, this was one of those eating and standing things.

Cheers. -J

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cool pics!
Do you remember what was in the bowl that's on the cutting board for the mise en place? From the photo I'd have said onions, carrots & maybe toms, but his recipe only calls for sliced onions...

It's actually amazing how much you CAN demo in one day of a multi-day dish. When I learned to make it the class took 3-4 hours, and covered every single step in detail, but since it was in the chef's kitchen he could just put the new batch of brined pork into his fridge to soak for the next day's class and pull out one that was ready to go, whereas Bourdain's next demo would have been in a different kitchen, probably in a different city...
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#127 Abra

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Posted 29 January 2005 - 11:35 AM

Gorgeous, Eden! You can get a bean that looks just like your haricots de Soisson at PFI, called there Corona beans. I use them a lot now, since first having them at Salumi in a tuna salad.

#128 Eden

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Posted 31 January 2005 - 10:27 PM

Here are the pictures of the final assembly & the finished product(s):
Overall it turned out beautifully. Saturday night I noticed the pork chops were a bit dry :hmmm: sunday night I carefully broke them up into smaller pieces before cooking which seemed to help...


These are a mix of photos from Saturday & sunday night so you are seeing two different bean pots...

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layering ingreadients - it's awfully hard to fit everything into the pot (good thing those "emu" legs shrank down in cooking!)

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adding the sausages


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final product saturday. Menu: Pepper gournay cheese, olives, bread: fremont sour, Cassoulet, my friend David made salad with prosciutto roses & parmiggiano, David's Lavender/pear sorbet :wub:, chocolate truffle tart garnished with brandy soaked cherries dipped in chocolate :wub: . Plus of course, much wine, prosecco & port at various stages of the evening.


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Final product sunday. Menu: St Agur & pepper brie cheese, olives, bread: 3 sisters' rustic baguette, Cassoulet, baby greens salad with vinaigrette, more of David's Lavender/pear sorbet, miniature chocolate bundt cakes, again garnished with brandy soaked cherries dipped in chocolate (because they were SO good!). And possibly even more wine, prosecco & port :biggrin:

round 3 tomorrow (with great white northern beans instead of soisson)
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#129 offcentre

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Posted 04 February 2005 - 03:44 AM

that looks fantastic Eden and puts mine to shame last night.

I have always wanted to make this dish but have never got round to it. This thread finally got me going, although I decided to make one from what I had around. I had a bit of time on my hands yesterday as I was at home looking after a poorly wife

I made a quick, cheats version last night. Boiled the dried beans for 1 1/2 hours in chicken stock. Bought some toulouse sausages from a speciality sausage shop at the end of my road. Fried these in the fat from rillons I made a couple of days ago. Fried onions and garlic and browned rillons. Beans, meat, beans, topped up with chicken stock and a covering of breadcrumbs and baked for a couple of hours.

Unfortunately my confit duck doesn't get to sit around very long in my house, so I had no duck to put in. Next time.

I was very happy with the results and am sitting here at work dreaming about getting home, opening a nice bottle of red wine, and getting stuck in again.

#130 Daddy-A

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Posted 14 February 2005 - 12:06 AM

Okay, I know I'm really late coming to the table on this one, but I did it, and dammit, I'm gonna document it! :raz:

I used the Cassoulet recipe from Les Halles ... it was simple enough for a rookie like me, and it was the only one I had (besides Martha Stewart's recipe for Cassoulet for 100 my wife founf tonight :shock: ). I made a couple of ingredient substitutions of note: the beans were Great Nothern white beans (not the Tarbais) and I had several murgez in the freezer which I used instead of the pork sausage. I hope Tony would approve :unsure:

eGullet member peppyre & I made confit a few weeks back ... I believe she has uplaoded the pictures ... I'll provide the links if I find them.
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Beans, pork belly, onions, etc. getting ready to simmer.

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Clockwise from left: Pork belly after cooking with beans, onions, pork rind & duck confit ... ready to assemble!

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Layer 1 ... murgez and that yummy pork rind, onion puree!

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Layer 2 ... pork belly!

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Layer 3 ... duck confit!

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At the end of Day #2 ... cooked and ready for the fridge. The plan was to have it for an early Valentine's dinner with my wife, J ...

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Plated and ready for dinner. Thanks to Carolyn Tille et al for helping me with the veggie decision. The salad was dressed with a Dijon Mustard Vinaigrette. Our wine was a 2000 Hester Creek Cab-Merlot (sorry Carolyn! ... no pinot!).

Observations:
  • The murgez gave off a lot of fat, so if I were to use it again I'd cut back on some of the duck fat.
  • Les Halles says this recipe serves 4. Tony, please tell me this was a typo! Dear God! I'm going to be eating this for a week!
  • I used my new Le Creuset (6.9 litres / 7.25 quarts). This was the only dish I had that was close to appropriate ... would an earthenware dish have yielded different/better results?
All in all it was excellent if I do say so myself. A different sort of meal for me ... long range planning and all, which works well for my lifestyle. I'm already planning braised lamb shanks for Friday night!

A.

#131 fou de Bassan

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Posted 14 February 2005 - 08:31 AM

Very nice cassoulet! And don't worry about leftovers, they have a way of disappearing faster than you'd think possible.
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#132 Eden

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Posted 14 February 2005 - 09:19 AM

It's never too late for cassoulet :biggrin:

great photos. I have a question. with the duck confit it looks like you just pull it from the pot fat & all?

I have always brought mine up to a melting point for the fat so I could shake of the majority of the duck fat before adding the duck bits to the cassoulet.
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#133 NulloModo

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Posted 15 February 2005 - 04:45 PM

So when is the next round going to be announced? Gumbo, though wonderful, has been going on for over a week. Come on now, give us something new to cook!
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#134 Chris Amirault

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Posted 20 February 2005 - 05:06 PM

So when is the next round going to be announced?  Gumbo, though wonderful, has been going on for over a week.  Come on now, give us something new to cook!

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Why, it's being considered at this moment over at the gumbo cook-off!
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#135 Chris Amirault

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Posted 19 March 2005 - 01:08 PM

Just a note to those of you who are coming to this cook-off later than others. Thanks to the internet, remember that you're never too late for an eGullet cook-off. While all have a specific starting time, none have a end time, and there are many of us eager to see what you will do with the cook-off recipes. So don't hesitate to contribute if you're finding this thread weeks or months after its start: your posting your own ideas, questions, or results can bump activity back up on this thread in no time!

Edited by chrisamirault, 19 March 2005 - 01:08 PM.

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#136 Della

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 10:36 AM

I just made my first cassoulet last night. This thread has been helpful and inspiring and I am happy to say that I am VERY pleased with my dish. However, I do have one question.
The recipe I followed serves 12 (and I added a little extra duck just cause I had it and love it) so I currently have a 5 1/2 quart Le Crueset full of Cassoulet. There are just the two of us at home and while we will soldier on and eat it for the next few days - as it will only get better as the flavors meld - can I freeze some of it? Will it thaw and reheat well? Or will the beans get mushy and the dish lose some of its "deliciousness"?

Thoughts and opinions are most welcome.
~cheers~
Della

#137 Carolyn Tillie

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 10:55 AM

Della -- I never thought cassoulet froze well because the beans became mealy. However, I was shocked when I went to Wolfert's house and saw that she had several quarts of frozen cassoulet in her freezer. Her explanation is that by using tarbais beans, you don't get the mealy texture that I was accostomed to.

So, I guess it is a-okay to freeze, but depending on the bean you used, it might have a different consistency when you thaw it out.

#138 Eden

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 11:07 AM

Della -- I never thought cassoulet froze well because the beans became mealy. However, I was shocked when I went to Wolfert's house and saw that she had several quarts of frozen cassoulet in her freezer. Her explanation is that by using tarbais beans, you don't get the mealy texture that I was accostomed to.

So, I guess it is a-okay to freeze, but depending on the bean you used, it might have a different consistency when you thaw it out.

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My second cassoulet batch this year was a mix of soissons & great white northerns and the soissons freeze beautifully, but the GWNs did indeed do a mealy disintigrating thing that made the whole dish less appetizing. I will remember next year to use only the big hardy beans like soissons & tarbais.
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#139 Della

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 11:21 AM

I used only Great Northerns in this cassoulet so I won't freeze any of it - we will just have to enjoy it all now. But in the future - I will know to use a more hardy bean!
THANKS

#140 Wolfert

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 11:25 AM

Do you have access to a food saver? If so, you can vacuum pack portions in individual boilable pouches, then simmer the pouches for about 10 minutes before iciing them down for 30 minutes.

This allows you to store the bags in the fridge for about a week or so. If, for any reason, a pouch begins to swell in the fridge, dump it.


B'TW: The avatar shows my cassoulet straight from the freezer to the cassole to the oven and finally in front of the fireplace for a 'photo op.'

Edited by Wolfert, 28 March 2005 - 11:32 AM.

“C’est dans les vieux pots, qu’on fait la bonne soupe!”, or ‘it is in old pots that good soup is made’.

#141 Chris Amirault

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 02:10 PM

Paula, two questions. For those of us without a food saver, do you think that freezer ziplocks with all of the air pressed out of them might work decently? Also, how do you reheat your leftovers (presuming that there are any, of course!)?
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#142 Wolfert

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 02:28 PM

I think just taking the air out of a ziploc would help keep the cassoulet OK for 2 or 3 days without the sterilizing, icing down, etc.

This season was the first time I ever froze a gallon of cassoulet . I was amazed how good it turned out.I simply reheated the defrosted beans with just a sprinkle of broth in a 225 F oven for an extra two hours.

I did use tarbais beans :frenchselections.com and chefshop.com have fresh stock right not. Mind you, these beans are not cheap.

Rancho Gordo was over the other day to taste the Tarbais beans. He said the Jacob's ladder beans came closest in flavor. .

Edited by Wolfert, 28 March 2005 - 02:29 PM.

“C’est dans les vieux pots, qu’on fait la bonne soupe!”, or ‘it is in old pots that good soup is made’.

#143 Chris Amirault

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Posted 28 March 2005 - 06:01 PM

Thanks, Paula. Can I just say that, with Rancho Gordo and Caroline Tillie coming over to your house to visit, I must say that I wish we lived in wine country! :sniff:
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#144 rancho_gordo

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Posted 02 April 2005 - 09:14 PM

He said the Jacob's ladder beans came closest in flavor. .

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Just a slight correction, the bean is Jacob's Cattle, not Ladder. Some places back east insist on this bean for baked beans. It doesn't fall apart and has a new potato taste (mild) and texture. It's not my favorite on its own but I'm not so sure I'd want a big, simple bowl of Tarbais, either. Jacob's Cattle is also much bigger than Tarbais that I have seen.

Thanks, Paula. Can I just say that, with Rancho Gordo and Caroline Tillie coming over to your house to visit, I must say that I wish we lived in wine country! :sniff:


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#145 Busboy

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Posted 03 April 2005 - 02:07 PM

Just a note to those of you who are coming to this cook-off later than others. Thanks to the internet, remember that you're never too late for an eGullet cook-off. While all have a specific starting time, none have a end time, and there are many of us eager to see what you will do with the cook-off recipes. So don't hesitate to contribute if you're finding this thread weeks or months after its start: your posting your own ideas, questions, or results can bump activity back up on this thread in no time!

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Glad I'm not too late. I did my confit last weekend and stuffed some saucisse de Toulouse (merci, Mme. Wolfert) today.

My dumb question of the day is: rind, what do they mean? The Bourdain recipe calls for lining the pot with rind as well as cooking and pureeing it. To me, rind is the inedible stuff on the outside of a pork shoulder or a slab of fatback. I can see lining the pot with it -- and saved all the rind I accumulated during sausage making -- but I'm not seeing it dissolve into luscious lipids no matter how long it cooks, and I'n not keen on biting into a sheet of desiccated pigskin during dinner. Is this a definition problem? Or am I missing something.

PS, If I can find them, I'm going with flagelots. Will I be condemned for this by purists?

Edited to spell Paula's name correctly.

Edited by Busboy, 04 April 2005 - 05:34 AM.

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#146 Wolfert

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Posted 03 April 2005 - 02:45 PM

undefinedJust a slight correction, the bean is Jacob's Cattle, not Ladder. Some places back east insist on this bean for baked beans. It doesn't fall apart and has a new potato taste (mild) and texture. It's not my favorite on its own but I'm not so sure I'd want a big, simple bowl of Tarbais, either. Jacob's Cattle is also much bigger than Tarbais that I have seen


Rancho Gordo: Sorry, I got the name wrong.
One of the great things about cassoulet is that employs ingredients that have traditionally complemented one another and that, when combined, create a flavor different and more pleasing then when served on their own.
I think the Tarbais bean is the bean of choice for a great cassoulet.
Now that I'm experimenting with your beans, I'm enthusiastic about trying the Jacob's Cattle next time I make this great classic dish of SouthWest France


Busboy:You might want to try this method:

Simmer the sheet of skin or rind in water until supple, about 20 minutes. Then roll up the sheet into a bundle, fasten with string, and cook it along with the beans and pork ragout. You should end up with a very soft rind which you can cut into pieces and line the cassoule or final baking dish for the cassoulet.

Some of the rind, if it is very soft, can be set aside and finally pureed along with cooked and uncooked garlic, and other bits and pieces of seasoned pork to make an addition to the beans during the final baking.

Edited by Wolfert, 03 April 2005 - 03:00 PM.

“C’est dans les vieux pots, qu’on fait la bonne soupe!”, or ‘it is in old pots that good soup is made’.

#147 thomasrodgers

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Posted 28 April 2005 - 08:45 AM

Glad I'm not too late. I did my confit last weekend and stuffed some saucisse de Toulouse (merci, Mme. Wolfert) today. 

My dumb question of the day is: rind, what do they mean?  The Bourdain recipe calls for lining the pot with rind as well as cooking and pureeing it.  To me, rind is the inedible stuff on the outside of a pork shoulder or a slab of fatback.  I can see lining the pot with it -- and saved all the rind I accumulated during sausage making -- but I'm not seeing it dissolve into luscious lipids no matter how long it cooks, and I'n not keen on biting into a sheet of desiccated pigskin during dinner.  Is this a definition problem? Or am I missing something.

PS, If I can find them, I'm going with flagelots.  Will I be condemned for this by purists?

Edited to spell Paula's name correctly.

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As Paula's reply above indicates, rind does very definitely mean what you have understood it to mean. That's right, the same as the tough stuff on bacon. but let me tell you, transformed by the long slow cooking in the cassole it's rind, but not as we know it...

The first time I tried cassoulet I was in a similar situation to you, doubtful as to how much I would enjoy chewing on a tough bit of pig-skin. Thankfully, my fears were allayed as soon as my teeth sank into my first hunk of rind (believe me I say 'sank' advisedly - you'll understand) - the most incredible texture I've ever encountered; tender and firm, velveteen and cloying, gelatinous and melting. Certainly unrecognisable either from any part of the beast I'd eaten before, or from bacon-rind. I am glad to say that rind now occupies a special place in my heart and my kitchen. Its inclusion give great depth of consistency (and - imho - flavour) to the liquid of slow-cooked stews and daubes (whose setting properties are largely due to the gelatin in rind/trotters/cow-heel). Best of all, thouhg, it is a pleasure to eat, a real treat on a fork of melting-tender beef and pork.

A suggestion to those not yet fully convinced: try the rind not on its own, but still on big chunky (1" squareish) lardons of belly (the fattier the better). As well as 'disguising' the rind for the squeamish - whom you can enlighten when they have finished complementing you - this provides the most wonderful progression of texture in one piece of meat that it is possible to obtain.

Happy rinding! :raz:

Edited by thomasrodgers, 28 April 2005 - 08:48 AM.


#148 Kim D

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Posted 24 June 2005 - 05:40 AM

Pork belly? Last year when I asked at Paulina Market, the butcher didn't know what it was. I have never seen it at an American grocery store. Perhaps there something else I should be asking for?

I've decided to use the recipe from Les Halles and it calls for 2 pounds of pork belly and 1 pound of pork rind. I picked up three packages of salt pork (.75 pounds each = 2.25 pounds) thinking that I could use that.

Then I headed to a Mexican grocery store because I remember seeing pork rind the last time I was there. Unfortunately they were out.

I was pleasantly surprised (I never use salt pork) to find that the salt pork has the rind attached. I cut it off and started soaking both in water. I've got it in a sieve because I'm thinking I should treat it like I would salt cod. I know that with salt cod you don't want it sitting on the bottom of a bowl because it would end up soaking in the salt that falls to the bottom.

So, where am I going with this?

I remember reading somewhere that salt pork can be used as a substitute for pork belly. Will soaking it be enough to get rid of the salt? Or is there something else I should do? Should I go buy pork shoulder instead?

Thanks in advance for your help!
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#149 Kim D

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Posted 24 June 2005 - 08:33 AM

I found my answer. Soaking overnight is the way to go.

- kim

Edited by Kim D, 24 June 2005 - 08:33 AM.

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#150 little ms foodie

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Posted 24 June 2005 - 09:46 AM

Kim, I find pork rind and pork belly at my Asian markets. Pork belly is just raw uncured bacon.





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