Civet – A traditional French stew associated with small wild game. Civet on French Menus.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

    

Civet de Lapin au Pommes de Terre Puree
Rabbit stew with mashed potatoes.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/73852597@N00/370295962/


The traditional civet would be a wild rabbit, wild hare, and sometimes young, wild boar.  Today the animals will mostly have been farmed, and other animals will often be prepared in a similar fashion. The traditional civet took tough, stringy, wild animals and marinated them in wine for 24 hours or more. After they were well marinated, they would be slowly cooked with lardons, bacon pieces, wine, and herbs.
  
Most French chefs prefer farm-raised rabbits, hares and young farmed wild boars for their tables. Yes, even wild boars are farmed in France.  The rabbits, hares, and wild boars are larger and meatier than those caught in the wild.  They are generally available all year round for whenever the chef decides to put them on the menu. Also, the chefs’ choices have expanded beyond rabbits, hares and young wild boars.

In the case of the wild boars, it is interesting that they do not even know they’re being farmed. They are kept in a large forested area where the always have enough food.
   
A mixed litter of a farmed wild boar. The piglets are being fostered.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/vilipix/25976851163/
    
Civet on French Menus

Civet de Chevreuil au Vin de Bourgogne A stew of roe deer made with wine from Burgundy.
     
Civet de Chevreuil
    
Civet de Lapin – Rabbit stew.

Civet de Lapin au Sang The traditional rabbit stew cooked with some of the rabbit’s blood.

Civet de Lièvre – Hare stew.
    
Freshly frozen farmed hare from the UK
on sale in a French supermarket.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/claveirole/23484699833/

Civet de Lièvre au Sang – The traditional hare stew cooked with some of the hare’s blood. 

Civet de Lièvre au Sang

https://www.flickr.com/photos/39905561@N04/4099877539/


(The most famous hare dish is Lièvre à la Royale – Hare in the Royal manner. It is a dish that outside of specialized restaurants usually has to be ordered a day or two in advance. For this dish the hare, and traditionally this was a wild hare, is marinated for two or three days with thyme, cognac, and red wine and then cooked with pork, foie gras, red wine, onions, garlic, shallots, and truffles if available.
   

Sometimes Lièvre à la Royale is mistranslated on a French menu into English as Jugged Hare. Jugged hare is a traditional English dish, and they are not the same   Jugged Hare is wild hare marinated for a few days in red wine, garlic, and herbs and, then served fried with salt pork prepared in its own wine marinade.  Alas, the jugged hare misses the cognac, foie gras, shallots, and truffles that are part of Lièvre à la Royale). 
    
Lièvre à la Royale
Photograph courtesy of Inspirational Food

Civet de Marcassin. - A stew of a young farmed wild boar. A wild young wild boar would be a marcassin sauvage.

Civet de Tripes d'Oies A stew of goose tripe, red wine, onions, shallots,  flavored with bacon pieces and garlic. On a local menu in the department of Gers, Armagnac country, I saw a listing offering Civet de Tripes d'Oies Au Armagnac.  The addition of Armagnac should not be too surprising as the old province of Gascogne includes the departments of Gers. The departments of Ger, Landes, and Lot-et-Garonne are the heart of Armagnac country.
   
Baron de Sigognac XO Platinum Armagnac
https://www.flickr.com/photos/farehamwine/10961995923/
 
The civet, your chef, will prepare today will often be marinated the night before.  Marinating, as opposed to the old days, is today done for the flavor and not because the meat is tough.  After being marinated the meat will be lightly fried together with bacon and onions along with additions for a new recipe that the chef has created. Then the meat will be slowly stewed with the wine and herbs. Shortly before serving vegetables may be added 
 
Nevertheless, during the hunting season, some restaurant will be offering Menus de Chasse;  a menu dedicated to wild animals caught during the regulated hunting season.  If the menu only offers a single wild animal the chef will add the word sauvage; for example, a  rabbit is a lapin, and a wild rabbit is a lapin sauvage.

The traditional civet recipe for hares was Civet de Lièvre au Sang; that meant the hare’s blood was used to both to flavor and to thicken those stews. Chefs know that the old recipe is now considered politically incorrect, and so now many chefs add the rabbit or hare’s liver and kidneys to the stew instead and by so doing so they claim the same flavor is achieved. The stew itself will be reduced, thickened further, if required, by longer cooking, that allows the sauce to thicken without any added blood or other additives. 

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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

Copyright 2010, 2017.
  

Paleron – A French cut from the center of a shoulder of beef or veal and occasionally pork

                                                                

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

   
The paleron, a French beef center shoulder fore cut.
     
Braised beef daub in red wine.
Crispy onions, green beans, horseradish and puree potatoes.
www.flickr.com/photos/fimbrethil/8019717298/
This cut, for beef, is often used for Provencal Daubs and other stews. Within the rules of French cuisine, it comes from the center of the shoulder.  This cut is full of flavor, a while a well-cooked steak is precisely that, a well-cooked stew, when not over spiced allows to you taste the full flavor or the meat that no grilled or fried dish can offer. The better restaurants will identify the origins of the beef, and the cuts they offer — their knowledgeable clientele will return again and again they see named and highly rated additions to the menu.

  
There is no exact UK OR USA cut that matches a paleron.

There is lots of confusion with the French, UK and USA cuts from the shoulder.  Many shoulder cuts make excellent steaks, and the whole shoulder area is often referred to in the UK and USA as chuck or chuck steaks, and the paleron is a center shoulder cut sometimes identified in the USA as the top blade or flat-iron.  Now steaks may be prepared from this cut, but there are others that are better. In France,  the paleron is nearly always used for slowly braised or stewed beef and veal dishes along with the occasional pork dish.
   
UK fore cuts.

Paleron on French Menus:
 
Ravioles de Paleron de Bœuf,  Toast de Moelle et Mousseline de Carottes à l’Orange, Émulsion Réglisse – Ravioli stuffed with meat from a daub or another stew served with toast with bone marrow and a moose of carrots flavored with orange and a thick licorice sauce.
 
Brochettes De Paleron De Bœuf Marinées – Skewers of marinated beef from the paleron.
   
Cuts from a paleron.
The USA top blade, or flat-iron.

Le Paleron De Bœuf Irlandais Aux Champignons Et Lard Gras, Pressé De Cèleris et Carottes Confites A stew of the paleron from Irish beef prepared with button mushrooms and fatty bacon and served with a jam (confit) made with celery and carrots.
                                                                       
Paleron de Bœuf Servi Avec son Jus, Risotto aux Truffes et Croûtons de Pain – A beef paleron served with its natural cooking juices, a risotto flavored with truffles and accompanied by bread croutons
   
Paleron de Bœuf à la Crème d’Échalotes
et Risotto aux Topinambours
A braised beef paleron prepared with cream of shallots
 and risotto with Jerusalem artichokes.
 
Paleron de Bœuf Charolais Braise Doucement au Four, Jus au Poivre de Java, Legumes Glaces, Galette de Patate Douce.  Paleron of Charolais beef slowly braised in the oven with a natural gravy flavored with the Balinese long pepper and served with glazed vegetables and a sweet potato crepe.
  
Poivre de Java  - Cubeb Pepper (also called Tailed Pepper), is a real pepper cultivated for its fruit and essential oil. It is mostly grown in Java and Sumatra and so it is often called Java pepper which is then confused with Long pepper that also comes from Java and is related.
  
Cubeb pepper
Paleron de Porc aux Légumes de Saison – A paleron cut from a pork shoulder and served with the season’s vegetables.
    
Salade de paleron de bœuf
   
Le Paleron De Veau Français Confit À Basse Température Jets De Houblon, Garniture Maraichère – A paleron of French veal confit (slowly cooked) at a low temperature and served with hop shoots and market garden vegetables.


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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

Copyright 2010, 2017, 2019.

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