So here we are at the final recipe for the Soup
chapter, ending on a blinder that couldn’t be more English, rich with claret
and spiced with mace and Cayenne pepper.
I don’t really know why it took me so long
to try this one; though rarely found in abundance, hare is not exactly
difficult to find in season. Maybe I just kept missing the boat every year. The
hare I used in this recipe I picked up from the excellent Northwest Game. So it’s
not just the last soup
recipe, but the last hare recipe
too.
If you want to know more about hares have a
look at this
previous post.
This recipe comes from Antonin Carême, the
legendary French chef, who worked himself from homeless child to probably the
most influential cook ever. A genius patissier, he first attracted attention
making elaborate edible sculptures to sit in the window of the patisserie.
After some proper training he set down working on sauces, coming up with the classification
of the four mother sauces, the base of all sauces in French cookery; a system
still used to today. He spent quite some time working in Britain and was briefly
chef to the Prince Regent. He’s appeared before on the blog, on recipe #317 Skuets, a dish comprised of
sweetbreads, bacon and mushrooms cooked on a skewer, served with bread sauce.
To make the soup, heat 3 ounces of clarified butter in a flameproof
casserole or large saucepan and fry until brown either a jointed young hare or the head
and forequarters of an older, tougher hare. As it fries, toss in 4 ounces
of diced unsmoked bacon or salt belly of pork.
Once everything is a delicious brown, add a heaped tablespoon of plain flour, stir to cover the meat before add ½ bottle of red wine or claret and 1 ¾ pints of beef stock or consommé. On a medium heat, let the contents come to a bare simmer. As you wait for that to happen, pop in a large onion studded with a clove, a good pinch of Cayenne pepper, and ½ teaspoon each of ground mace and black pepper. Also toss in a decent bouquet garni, embellished with extra springs of parsley, rosemary and marjoram.
Once everything is a delicious brown, add a heaped tablespoon of plain flour, stir to cover the meat before add ½ bottle of red wine or claret and 1 ¾ pints of beef stock or consommé. On a medium heat, let the contents come to a bare simmer. As you wait for that to happen, pop in a large onion studded with a clove, a good pinch of Cayenne pepper, and ½ teaspoon each of ground mace and black pepper. Also toss in a decent bouquet garni, embellished with extra springs of parsley, rosemary and marjoram.
Simmer everything together very gently
until the meat is tender and comes away from the bone easily. This can be
anywhere between 1 ½ to 3 hours, depending on the vintage of the hare. Pass the
soup through a strainer and fish out the joints, stripping the meat from the
bone and cutting it into neat pieces. Salvage any pieces of the bacon and salt
pork too. ‘Discard the remaining debris’, says Jane.
Return the strained soup to a cleaned pan,
season with salt, and add 8 ounces of small
mushrooms. Let them simmer for a few minutes before adding the hare meat
and cured pork. If you like, add a tablespoon of redcurrant jelly.
#410 English
Hare Soup. I think if I had cooked this soup at the beginning of this project,
I wouldn’t have been able to take the gaminess of this dish. However, after
eating my through several game recipes and species, I am a real convert to it
and couldn’t recommend this soup highly enough (except perhaps to the uninitiated).
It was beautifully rich – too rich as a starter – and I ate it over several
days, where it became more and more delicious with every reheating. It’s a
style of cooking game that has fallen out of favour recently, where game appears
in more familiar settings such as burgers or warm salads. There’s nothing wrong
with that of course, as it introduces a new generation of people to the wonders
of game. Anyway, I digress. A great soup for a great evening in front of a
roaring fire. 9/10.
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