Cooking with Port
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3707
- Joined: 17:45 Fri 19 Oct 2012
- Location: Somerset, UK
Re: Cooking with Port
As the forum's resident vegetarian I feel it appropriate that it has fallen to me to say thank-you for sharing this recipe. With it's combination of port, blue cheese and underdone meat I am sure it will be a great hit. They seem to eat little else around here. I can only assume they are all too busy converting vegetarians into chops for their tea to say thank you.
And a very warm welcome to the port forum, I hope you feel emboldened to continue to add to our discussions.
And a very warm welcome to the port forum, I hope you feel emboldened to continue to add to our discussions.
Re: Cooking with Port
A splendid recipe indeed, thank you for sharing and attempting to bring our vegetarian friend back from the dark side.flitcraft wrote:Here's my favorite port recipe. Start with two beef filet steaks. Smear generously with olive oil and sear on both sides till the beef is nearly done to medium rare. Leave in a warm oven while you get ready to make the port sauce. Deglaze the pan with a cup of ruby reserve or LBV Port. Reduce by about two thirds. Add 4 ounces of blue cheese and whisk till smooth and syrupy. Add the steaks back into the pan and let them marry with the sauce. Serve with plenty of crusty bread to soak up every last bit of the sauce...
...and welcome to
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
-
- Quinta do Noval LBV
- Posts: 232
- Joined: 01:11 Thu 04 Jul 2013
Re: Cooking with Port
That reminds me of the garlic wine I once tried. I suspect combining it with Port would make it only slightly more palatable.LGTrotter wrote:Not quite cooking but here goes.
I have been suffering from a cold which has lingered rather, having had the usual suggestions of toddys and an unusual one of hot ginger cider from an auld fella, I found the following recipe in 'The wine quotation book'.
Garlic Port;
Chop a pound of garlic, put it into a litre measure of old port, and let it macerate for twenty days. Begin with half a liqueur glass every evening before the soup course, then slowly increase the dose to one or two liqueur glasses. This beverage is a sovereign remedy for chronic bronchitis.
Toulouse-Lautrec; L'Art de la cuisine.
Apparently James May and Oz Clarke tried it as well: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=q47_7YvkUfo
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalkz. U
Re: Cooking with Port
Asked Rebecca for the recipe. Based (very) loosely on Rosemary Shrager's version in the Castle Cook cookbook.
Go to Scotland. Obtain a venison haunch (we obtained ours from Inveraray but no doubt forumites may wish to shoot their own) and 2 bottles of port (1 of tawny and 1 of LBV)
Drink half the bottle of LBV. Then roll and truss the haunch so it doesn't escape.
Rub with olive oil and season. Place in a suitably sized cast iron casserole and seal over moderate heat.
Add 1.5 bottles of port. Obtain more port if necessary. 2 halved red onions peeled. 2 large carrots quartered. 1 large stick of celery cut in half. 1 Tablespoon juniper berries whole. 1 Tablespoon white peppercorns whole. Bouquet garni. Put the lid on and cook 1.5 hours on low heat on hob (low simmer) until internal temperature reaches 70°C (use thermometer). Baste frequently. Place another bottle of port nearby to encourage returning to the hob to baste.
Preheat oven to 100°C (about gas mark 1 from memory). Remove haunch to plate and cover loosely with foil and place in oven. Reduce liquid until coating back of spoon. Strain into jug. Give the carrot to the dog. Return strained liquid to empty pan and add half a jar (2 heaped Tablespoons) of Duchy Original Cranberry sauce with port (or suitable homemade equivalent). Ready for serving. Best with crispy roast potatoes. Don't forget to give carrot to the dog.
Went down well with the non-vegetarians at our wedding on Islay. A repeat performance in Birmingham for a Bordeaux wine dinner sealed the deal.
cheers
Carl
Go to Scotland. Obtain a venison haunch (we obtained ours from Inveraray but no doubt forumites may wish to shoot their own) and 2 bottles of port (1 of tawny and 1 of LBV)
Drink half the bottle of LBV. Then roll and truss the haunch so it doesn't escape.
Rub with olive oil and season. Place in a suitably sized cast iron casserole and seal over moderate heat.
Add 1.5 bottles of port. Obtain more port if necessary. 2 halved red onions peeled. 2 large carrots quartered. 1 large stick of celery cut in half. 1 Tablespoon juniper berries whole. 1 Tablespoon white peppercorns whole. Bouquet garni. Put the lid on and cook 1.5 hours on low heat on hob (low simmer) until internal temperature reaches 70°C (use thermometer). Baste frequently. Place another bottle of port nearby to encourage returning to the hob to baste.
Preheat oven to 100°C (about gas mark 1 from memory). Remove haunch to plate and cover loosely with foil and place in oven. Reduce liquid until coating back of spoon. Strain into jug. Give the carrot to the dog. Return strained liquid to empty pan and add half a jar (2 heaped Tablespoons) of Duchy Original Cranberry sauce with port (or suitable homemade equivalent). Ready for serving. Best with crispy roast potatoes. Don't forget to give carrot to the dog.
Went down well with the non-vegetarians at our wedding on Islay. A repeat performance in Birmingham for a Bordeaux wine dinner sealed the deal.
cheers
Carl
Re: Cooking with Port
Excellent. I am particularly impressed with he ingenious method of dealing with the carrot.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Cooking with Port
Thats sounds just fabulous - I will have to try that one
- mosesbotbol
- Warre’s Otima 10 year old Tawny
- Posts: 598
- Joined: 19:54 Wed 18 Jul 2007
- Location: Boston, USA
Re: Cooking with Port
Our dog loves cooked carrots or carrot pulp from making a carrot juice.DRT wrote:Excellent. I am particularly impressed with he ingenious method of dealing with the carrot.
Picture of said dog and & owner in front a lovely Jag
F1 | Welsh Corgi | Did Someone Mention Port?
Re: Cooking with Port
A Corgi and a Jag?
Very Regal!
My dog does eat carrots, but only raw. I think he's trying to show support for my vegetarian wife
Very Regal!
My dog does eat carrots, but only raw. I think he's trying to show support for my vegetarian wife
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Cooking with Port
One of our cats eats broccoli. No, I don’t understand.
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3707
- Joined: 17:45 Fri 19 Oct 2012
- Location: Somerset, UK
Re: Cooking with Port
Mine too, the old 'un especially loves a bit of carrot. Possibly it may be in support of vegetarianism, but it sounds like Jo is the one in need of support, hang tough Jo! Go vegetables!DRT wrote:My dog does eat carrots, but only raw. I think he's trying to show support for my vegetarian wife
Re: Cooking with Port
An unexpected twist in this tale is that Mrs T isn't particularly keen on vegetables. No, I don't understand.LGTrotter wrote:Mine too, the old 'un especially loves a bit of carrot. Possibly it may be in support of vegetarianism, but it sounds like Jo is the one in need of support, hang tough Jo! Go vegetables!DRT wrote:My dog does eat carrots, but only raw. I think he's trying to show support for my vegetarian wife
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
-
- Dalva Golden White Colheita 1952
- Posts: 3528
- Joined: 14:22 Wed 15 Dec 2010
- Location: Near Cambridge, UK
Re: Cooking with Port
Well, many of the rest of us don't like vegetables much; no reason that just because vegetarians don't like (or don't choose to eat) meat that they should like vegetables any more than the rest of us.DRT wrote:No, I don't understand.
We don't have a dog. I will clearly have to send my carrot to Owen, unless DRT's life-coach informs me of an urgent β-carotene deficiency.
Re: Cooking with Port
Describing DRT’s dietary imperfections does not require use of the word “deficiency”.PhilW wrote:DRT's life-coach informs me of an urgent β-carotene deficiency.
Re: Cooking with Port
What happens to the celery? Two unlucky recipients?
Re: Cooking with Port
Hmmm...haven't tried celery on the canine food disposal unit. An experiment beckons.