I
sat in Italian restaurant having a plate full of delicious coratella and I
thought to myself – offal, so tasty and so underrated. I decided that when I
come back from holiday I will start to cook more offal dishes, depends on what
I will be able to get at the local butchers. As I said several times before I
thing we should use as much as possible from the animal that was killed and not
waste any single bit that is edible. I love British black pudding, it's Polish
version – kaszanka or Spanish – morcilla. I make real beef stock using beef bones
that I get from butchers for free, otherwise these would go to waste. In many
top class restaurants you will find some dishes made from cheap cuts of meat
such as pig’s head.
When I came back from holiday I came across a offal cookbook "Offal: The Fifth Quarter" , but I still wait for the price drop or at least for some more enthusiastic reviews. What made me to decide to cook some more offal dishes? First of all at the moment I am little bit fed up with any meat I eat – I have tried so many recipes and yes, they are tasty, but not surprising and offal is like unexplored planet to me. Secondly it is my ambition to learn how to cook offal – I will not learn how to do it?! And lastly I think it is not a big deal to buy beef fillet for around £20 per kilogram and cook tasty meal. It is a big deal when you buy the chicken livers for £1.29 and cook such a tasty dinner that you will not even think about beef fillet at all.
I found new issue of “Good Food” magazine very helpful as it has lovely chicken livers recipe using dry sherry – I never tried it before and have to say when I finished I was really pleased with the result – extremely tasty dinner for around a pound a head.
Chicken
livers with sherry
Serves
2
about
50g butter
2
medium onions, peeled and sliced
about
400g chicken livers
50ml
dry sherry
100ml
chicken stock
salt
freshly
ground black pepper
Melt
half of the butter in a frying pan and add the onions. Fry over a low heat
until soft, for about 15 minutes. Remove from a pan into a bowl and set aside.
Add the remaining butter to the pan and turn the heat up.
Wash
the chicken livers, dry with paper kitchen towel, season with salt and pepper
and add to the pan. Fry on both sides for about 3 minutes. Next add sherry,
bring to the boil and leave it to bubble for about 30 seconds. Add the fried
onions, stock, mix and leave it to boil for about 2 minutes, let the sauce to
reduce little bit.
This
way the bigger livers will stay pink in the middle, the smaller ones will be
cooked but still soft. I served them with wholegrain mustard mash and after I
took picture I realised that I have some Polish sour gherkins in brine left –they
went perfectly with sweetish livers.
Wholegrain
mustard mash
Serves
2
5
medium potatoes, peeled, boiled and drained
tbsp
of butter
2
tbsp of wholegrain mustard
50ml
milk
Mash
all the above until smooth and serve immediately.
I am not really a fan of liver but if somebody served it this way I suppose I wouldn't say no :) Looks fabulous!
ReplyDeleteI was not very enthusiastic about the offal until I tried some last summer in Italy, and I want more! ;) I have ordered some tripe from the butchers, hopefully will arrive this week.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by, Tanja! :)