Thursday, July 9, 2009
Rabbit with Sage and Lemon (Lapin à la sauge et au citron)
I bought a three-pound rabbit at the farmers market today. I thought I'd make 2/3 of it, but half fit better in my pan. I got the idea of making rabbit from my Venez Dîner C'est Prêt cookbook that Jessica brought me from France.
Now, I didn't read the recipe very closely and so it took me a while to realize I needed a beer, and not just any beer but a "bière blonde" (blonde beer).
The recipe suggests that one rabbit will feed four people.
Ingredients
1 rabbit cut in "morsels" (the butcher cut mine in four center sections and each leg)
1 lemon, not juiced
4 cloves of garlic, whole, in the "skin?"
8 fresh sage leaves
1 bottle of blonde beer
12 black olives
salt, pepper
Preheat oven to 410 degrees.
Arrange the rabbit (I only used half the rabbit) on a platter and salt and pepper it. Place in baking dish with the lemon in quarters (I sliced into eighths). Add the sage leaves and the cloves of garlic.
Add the beer.
Cook one hour, adding the olives at the mid-point. Cook until the meat is tender and the sauce caramelizes. If it cooks too quickly, add more beer. If it doesn't reduce enough, return to the oven.
I'm serving with broccoli sautéed in garlic and olive oil and fresh pineapple.
The rabbit disappeared. I think my daughter could eat two pounds of rabbit meat by herself. Tender, moist, but like buffalo wings-- a lot of work to get the meat off the bone.
The sauce had a lot of flavor for how simple it was.
Labels:
beer,
black olives,
Dominique Malet,
French,
fresh sage,
lemons,
meat,
rabbit,
Venez Dîner C'est Prêt
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment