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Daube--Cook-Off 27


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Every now and then since December 2004, a good number of us have been getting together at the eGullet Recipe Cook-Off. Click here for the Cook-Off index.

With the weather turning cold in the northern hemispere and the Cook-Off having avoided French cuisine for a little while, it's time to dabble with daubes. There are few things as restoring as a daube, the classic French braised meat stew (usually beef, though not always) that has as many recipes as adults in France. It also helps to develop several crucial braising techniques that will come in handy over the next few months for many of us, and if you develop a lovely relationship with your butcher in preparation for same, all the better.

I've found two daube recipes quite wonderful: a fairly straightforward one from Saveur Cooks Authentic French and the other, "Daube of Beef in the Style of Gascony," from our own redoubtable Paula Wolfert and her Cooking of Southwest France. That multiday recipe was the cooking highlight of my holidays last year, and the best beef that my guests had ever eaten. (click here for the link to a discussion of my experience with that recipe.) Wolfert also kindly placed this recipe for oxtail daube into RecipeGullet; you can also click here for snowangel's prep and execution of the dish.

There aren't hundreds of posts on daube around here, but there are quite a few interesting topics, such as one that considers Catalan Tuna Daube and another that asks the question, "Daube with veal?" Variationson the traditional beef daube can be found here and there, including in this topic on Daube de Gardian.

Chris Amirault

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Sir Luscious got gator belts and patty melts

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No other responses? I'm in! I have a recipe for Daube de Boeuf I've been using for several years now... don't remember which cookbook it came from. The recipe says it serves 8; I've never had it serve more than 4... everyone laps it up. Will get the ingredients and try to make it over the weekend.

SuzySushi

"She sells shiso by the seashore."

My eGullet Foodblog: A Tropical Christmas in the Suburbs

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No other responses? I'm in! I have a recipe for Daube de Boeuf I've been using for several years now... don't remember which cookbook it came from. The recipe says it serves 8; I've never had it serve more than 4... everyone laps it up. Will get the ingredients and try to make it over the weekend.

What cut of beef? I'd have a hard time justifying oxtails again -- they are really expensive!

And, does anyone have any ideas for a Venison Daube? I've got to get my freezer emptied out because I'm prepping for two more deer later this month...

Edited to add: a google search reveals two that look different and interesting -- one with coriander and cumin and one with dried cranberries.

Off to dig a package of venison out of the freezer.

And, while I'm editing, I really, really like Paula's advice to remove the meat from the liquid and fridge them both separately, and reheat gently. Repeat procedure once more.

Susan Fahning aka "snowangel"
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No other responses? I'm in! I have a recipe for Daube de Boeuf I've been using for several years now... don't remember which cookbook it came from. The recipe says it serves 8; I've never had it serve more than 4... everyone laps it up. Will get the ingredients and try to make it over the weekend.

What cut of beef? I'd have a hard time justifying oxtails again -- they are really expensive!

And, does anyone have any ideas for a Venison Daube? I've got to get my freezer emptied out because I'm prepping for two more deer later this month...

The recipe I use calls for beef bottom round roast.

SuzySushi

"She sells shiso by the seashore."

My eGullet Foodblog: A Tropical Christmas in the Suburbs

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I like the recipes in Elizabeth David's French Provincial cooking, She gives both a classic Provencal version, and a Creole version with Olives and rum instead of wine.

In modern restaurant cooking you are likely to get a travesty, with all the components cooked separately.

There are several components of the dish:

a. The meat

Traditionally, but not necessarily beef.

Ideally it should be a stewing cut, such as top rump, so that the long slow cooking converts the collagen into melting tenderness; a roasting cut would just fall apart. It can be whole or in cubes or rectangles.

In modern practice this might be cooked sous vide, and since its not cooked long enough to gelatanise, could be steak.

b) The juice: Reduced wine, and good stock, Some pork rind adds additional gelatin.

c) Aromatics: Much choice: Some of bouquet garni, Thyme, rosemary, bay, onions, carrot, celery, garlic, parsley stalk, tomatoes, olives. dry orange or lemon rind

d) Garnishes: Bacon cut into matchsticks and pearl onions browned, persillade of finely chopped garlic and parsley.

Traditional mehod: Put everything except the garnish into a pot or saucepan, and barley simmer for anything from 2 to 8 hours; remove the boquet garni and any tired veg, defat the sauce and add garnish. Eat with pasta, good bread and wine and maybe a plain salad. Even better reheated next day.

Modern restaurant way: Cook the meat sous vide with the aromatics If you are using stewing meat cook at 75C for 12 hours; for steak at 57C for an hour.

Make a sauce separately, with wine reduced to syrup and demi-glace, more aromatics

Prepare brunoise of vegetables (carrot, tomato, celery etc)

Prepare garnish (bacon, pearl onions browned, persillade)

At service hot assemble...

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I wanna play too!!!

I have never made this.....ever....I am excited to try! I will get the ingredients tomorrow (11/10) and make it. Only I don't have a camera, is one required to make a photo of your results?

"I eat fat back, because bacon is too lean"

-overheard from a 105 year old man

"The only time to eat diet food is while waiting for the steak to cook" - Julia Child

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Hi, I'm feeling a little ignorant here. Could someone explain a little more about daube? I see so many variations when I search for recipes (for instance, some sear the meat first, some don't, some marinate the meat first, some don't, etc.). Are there a set of characteristics that make a dish an authentic daube as opposed to some other style of braised meat dish (or a modernized less-authentic adaptation)? Or is it one of those terms used in so many ways that it's just hard to pin down?

(signed, day late/dollar short duckling)

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The key characteristic is long slow cooking in a wine flavoured sauce,

If the wine is Burgundy is a Bourguigonne, otherwise its a Daube. Pretty much everything else is up to the cook. Its a rustic dish originally, and I guess everything went into the pot that was available.

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The key characteristic is long slow cooking in a wine flavoured sauce,

If the wine is Burgundy is a Bourguigonne, otherwise its a Daube. Pretty much everything else is up to the cook. Its a rustic dish originally, and I guess everything went into the pot that was available.

Thanks, that's very helpful--especially the difference between Bourguignonne vs. daube.

Edited by mizducky (log)
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Only I don't have a camera, is one required to make a photo of your results?

Appreciated, but not required! All you need to participate is to cook and tell.

Oh, I'm in too.

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I'm in, as soon as the temperature drops under the 70s here. I'll either do Paula's or one of James Beard's or The Avignon lamb daube in Richard Olney's Simple French Food. The latter I can also recommend for a helpful discussion of French stews in general, including ragouts, daubes and sautes.

Here's a modern version of a daubiere the traditional clay pot used.

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I am soooooo excited to do this. I have never made a traditional french dish. I may break down and make bread and all.... :biggrin:

"I eat fat back, because bacon is too lean"

-overheard from a 105 year old man

"The only time to eat diet food is while waiting for the steak to cook" - Julia Child

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What cut of beef?  I'd have a hard time justifying oxtails again -- they are really expensive!

I've always used chuck.

And, does anyone have any ideas for a Venison Daube?  I've got to get my freezer emptied out because I'm prepping for two more deer later this month...

I mentioned to Susan that there's a good civet of venison in the Saveur book mentioned in the first post above, and, unlike a traditional civet, it lacks the blood. It's more like a daube in that way than not....

And, while I'm editing, I really, really like Paula's advice to remove the meat from the liquid and fridge them both separately, and reheat gently.  Repeat procedure once more.

The steps in that recipe are all worth doing, I must say -- and they take time. I urge those folks who are doing her recipe to carve out a good chunk of time for it. Single sentences require pretty involved procedures. So, when I read this,

I am soooooo excited to do this. I have never made a traditional french dish. I may break down and make bread and all.... :biggrin:

I thought, maybe stick to the daube first time around! :wink:

Chris Amirault

eG Ethics Signatory

Sir Luscious got gator belts and patty melts

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Aside from their being, perhaps, from different regions, is there any real difference between a daube and a pot au feu?

I'm not French but to me a pot au feu is basically soup and does not have wine as a major component, The meat is usually in one piece, and served as separate dishes, - soup and the meat, even at separate meals. The soup is the glory of the pot au feu, with the meat, the boulli, almost an afterthought and used up in various dishes, such as salads, miroton, rissoles and croquettes

A daube is a wine based braising liquid and the meat is in cubes or rectangles, say 2 inch x 2 inch x 0,5 inch, where the meat is the main point, and the liquid reduced to a sauce

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I'm in, as soon as the temperature drops under the 70s here. I'll either do Paula's or one of James Beard's or The Avignon lamb daube in Richard Olney's Simple French Food. The latter I can also recommend for a helpful discussion of French stews in general, including ragouts, daubes and sautes.

Here's a modern version of a daubiere the traditional clay pot used.

Paula Wolfert sent me this photo for us to check out of a Provencal daubiere:

gallery_8703_623_1106074077.jpg

That's the one in the link above. You too can daube in a daubiere.

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Where is the line drawn between ragout and daube?

Is one a superset or subset of the other?

I wish some real French experts would reply...

A ragout to me although a stew, is more of a thick sauce, often with the meat minced or finely chopped and strongly seasoned. For example a Bolognaise sauce is a ragout. An old term, derived from old French "ragouster", meaning to revive the appetite, in turn from the Latin for taste.

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I wonder whether a tagine could substitute for the daubiere, since it too promotes condensation and minimizes evaporation.

I have a luncheon next week, and if the weather continues stormy and cold like it is now, a daube would be the perfect thing.

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