
Cold Weather Comfort
Season 2 Episode 12 | 26m 32sVideo has Closed Captions
Beef Stew; Glazed Strawberries.
Beef Stew; Glazed Strawberries.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback

Cold Weather Comfort
Season 2 Episode 12 | 26m 32sVideo has Closed Captions
Beef Stew; Glazed Strawberries.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- Hi, I'm Jacques Pepin.
On a cold day in winter, there is nothing better than a rich savory stew to warm your bones.
Today we'll make what I call a daube of beef, lean meat slowly braised in red wine and herbs; a composed salad with apples and spicy pecans, light and crunchy; and glazed strawberries, a sumptuous treat.
Elegant and delicious, a heartwarming meal for all on "Today's Gourmet."
(light jazz music) (light jazz music continues) You know, in cold weather, in full winter, I like to do the very classic old French dish we call daube, a type of stew.
And this is one of those that we're going to do today, a kind of very comforting, hearty meal, you know?
A thing you do at home, you can do that ahead too.
And we do that with a piece of meat, which I have here, that we are going to marinate in red wine.
And the marination in red wine is very important.
It can be done in different ways.
In that case here, I'm going to talk to you about that piece of meat in a little while.
As you can see, it's a very lean piece of meat.
And the first thing that we want to do is to put it to brown into that pressure cooker.
And again, I will explain the use of the pressure cooker before.
When you take it out of the liquid, you know, dry it out.
You can dry it out with your hands this way, or with a paper towel.
And we want to put it in there to brown, you know?
And now what I have here, I'm going to show it to you, is a mixture of carrot, onion, black peppercorn, herb and so forth.
This is what we call the marinade, you know, in France what we call the marinade.
It's when you have enough liquid so that the whole thing is encased into liquid instead of a maceration, where you have only a little bit of liquid.
Like if you macerate fruit with a bit of Grande Marnier, or whatever, it's just moist.
This is the marinade and that will tenderize the meat.
We have all kind of vegetables.
So this, we are going to eventually put it in there, but for the time being, I wanted to show you where that piece of meat comes from.
It can come from the butcher, just as I have it here, which is called Cryovac, that is, in a plastic, where all the air has been sucked out of it.
And this is a piece of beef from the shoulder.
You know, what we call the under blade.
It's a very, very good piece of meat actually, and quite tender.
In our type of cooking, what we wanna do is to remove the fat from it.
And here, as you see, there is a layer of fat.
And under the layer of fat you have a layer of what we call the silverskin, you know?
You can even remove some of the silverskin, but it's not really necessary there because this is not fat.
It's really sinew and it gives, you see that, what we call the silverskin, and that will give some gelatin to the mixture also.
You can remove a little bit of it.
On this side also.
So that piece here is on your shoulder, where you have that big shoulder blade, you know?
That's just underneath.
And that piece is also used by the butcher as what we call the butcher's steak.
If I cut it across, you have a type of steak, which in New York and on the West Coast also is usually called the chicken steak.
So what we do, we take this, put it to marinade.
And there are different ways that it can be placed this way.
You can do it hot or cold.
And what I have here, I have onion, I have garlic, I have carrot, I have oregano, thyme, cracked pepper, cracked black pepper, and of course fresh bay leaf.
And here I have a bit of dark soy sauce, I have red wine vinegar, a bit of balsamic vinegar, and of course red wine, you know?
And I have a wine here from Cayrehours, which is the southwest of France, a very deep, rich wine, which is made with a Malbec grape, you know, M-A-L-B-E-C.
It's a different type of grape, a bit similar to the Cabernet Sauvignon.
So we're going to put all of that together.
Now, if you really are in a hurry, what you can do is to take all of those ingredients here, with the liquid, bring it to a boil, and put it boiling hot right on top of the meat.
That's what we call a hot marinade.
And the hot marinade is going to permeate right through the meat faster than the cold one.
If you have time, as I have here, you take your time and you just put it cold on top of it and leave it overnight.
Actually you can even leave it a couple of days.
You know, it's fine.
We put no salt on it.
So what we do, carrot, the carrots, the onion, a head of garlic, a whole head of garlic.
You can hit it up on the side to separate your cloves.
They go all over the place of course, but you don't need to take the paper out of it.
Just put that in there.
I'll bring that in the center now.
We have this, this, and that.
You know, we do venison this way.
Venison is very good this way.
A bit more carrot, the bay leaf.
And those are fresh bay laurel here that we dry out in the microwave oven.
You know, it's very good to do your dry herbs this way.
A bit of deep balsamic vinegar.
We want a lot of acidity in there, you know?
Regular vinegar.
A bit of soy sauce, which will give me some color and a bit of intensity of taste also.
I have enough here.
And finally my red wine, you know?
We want to marinate it well.
Remember that by the time we finish cooking this, most of the alcohol will be evaporated.
So that, again, you can cover it with a piece of plastic wrap directly inside, you know?
So that you have no oxidation in between.
And that can macerate for a couple of days, you know?
So what we have here, a tough piece of meat that is browning very nicely here.
And as you can see here, I'm doing that in a pressure cooker.
The pressure cooker is a very nifty piece of equipment.
What I have here is a gauge.
The pressure will push that gauge up and you will have different colors.
It goes from yellow, light orange, dark orange.
The higher the pressure, the higher it goes.
And what it does actually it concentrates, it applies pressure directly on top of the liquid.
As you know, at atmospheric pressure at sea level there is enough pressure on the water the water will boil at a hundred degrees centigrade, or 212 Fahrenheit.
That is, there is a certain resistance from the air.
As you go in the mountains, the higher you go, the less pressure there is on it.
You lose about one degree every 500 feet.
So by the time I'm in Colorado Springs, or a place like this, 8,000 feet, I've lost 16 degrees.
That is, the water will boil 16 degrees lower than 212, which at some point, when you cook things like beets or beans, there is not enough heat, and the glucose and certain fiber in the beets doesn't cook.
So it has to cook forever.
That does the reverse.
It applies so much pressure that it has to come to about 300 degrees before the water starts to boil.
So it cooks very fast and it breaks down the fiber.
It's very good.
What we do here, after it's browned all around, we put that in.
Remember that it's a very lean piece of meat.
You have to follow the instructions, you know?
We close it here and I put it, not all of them have that little gadget.
This is a little gadget going to release the pressure in it.
And some have it.
They all work exactly the same way but in a slightly different fashion.
So look at the manufacturer's instructions.
And what I have here, of course, I have another one with the pressure going on here.
And what I'm going to do now, because this is cooked enough, I'm going to start depressurizing it.
So I move that thing and the pressure will start coming out.
And during that time we're going to work on our dessert.
I have some absolutely gorgeous strawberries here.
And it's a very, very easy recipe to do, what I have.
Those are big berries, which are dipped into a jam.
What I use, you have to use a jam with enough pectin.
That is a coagulating element in it to hold it.
And that's what I used, currant jelly.
I have currant jelly here.
If you don't have currant jelly, you can use even a strawberry or a raspberry.
But in full summer, if you have a bit of problem, if it's very hot, you're going to keep that outside, I would advise you to mix a little bit of plant gelatin in your jam, you know?
So that it coheres more around the berries.
All you do is to dip your berry so that it's coated all around.
And you have to be absolutely sure that you have a very cold plate to put it on top.
See, that plate is very cold.
I put it on top, and when I lift it up, you can now see there is a little pool of the jam, you know, which is left around.
But this is the principle.
It's easy to the see.
There is different ways of glazing berries.
You can glaze it with sugar, you know, like a caramel, and you dip it what we call a sugar to the break stage, that is, it's almost like a caramel but it's white.
At that point, it forms a shell of sugar on the outside.
Another way of glazing it is to put egg white.
Dip your berries into egg white and have to roll them in sugar until it's saturated.
That's another way.
And this is the third way.
This is basically, in my opinion, the best way of doing it because it's so... and the kids love that with the jam outside.
You can vary your jam.
So, you know, we can decorate this with a little bit of, with some cookie, you know, if you want, which would be very nice.
And even a little bit of edible flowers maybe nice around.
And you can really do a stunningly beautiful plate with this.
You know, to do that piece of beef well, you know, you have to have the right cut of meat.
And the right cut of meat is actually the piece of shoulder that we used today, the under blade, a piece of the chuck, again in the shoulder area, or a piece of the shank, all those are going to be very gelatinous nice piece of meat you want to add.
Don't buy a piece of top round, more expensive and is going to be dry.
Be sure again that that little button is totally down, totally depressurized, you know?
Otherwise it can be, first you cannot open it otherwise, and it can be dangerous.
All the pressure cookers work on the same principle, you know?
So what we have here, we have a very, oh, I can feel, a very tender piece of meat.
Yes, I have to remove it with this, because it can break.
So it's braised.
But I say, it does such a moist piece of meat here, you know, and of course it reduced a great deal.
What we want to do, even though we removed basically all the fat, we wanna strain this, you know?
That I would use, even put it in another stock, or to put... well.
Get all my juice out of that.
Press that a little bit, you know?
And look if there is any fat on top of this, you know?
If there is any fat, and here we have cleaned it up a lot, you press it on one side and try to remove it.
You know, as much as we can.
We want a very, very lean piece, very, very lean sauce.
But remember that was very lean to start with.
So what we do there is basically nothing on top.
I'll bring that here, and we are going to reboil that piece of meat.
We're going to reboil this in there and prepare our vegetables.
Now, I have a very concentrated juice here, quite good.
So what we have here as garnish to go with our veal, we have the pearl onions, we have tiny baby carrots, we have potato, and we have mushrooms.
Those mushrooms, I've just washed them, and I'm going to put them to cook right away because this is the only thing which is raw.
These have been blanched about 10 minutes.
So they're just slightly firm.
The carrots have been blanch a few minutes too, and the onions.
So what we want to do first is to bring that to a boil.
You want to taste it for seasoning, you know?
I think I need a bit of cracked pepper in there.
It'd be very good.
And we want to thicken the sauce slightly.
And to thicken the sauce, we're going to use a starch here.
And this is, we use a potato starch.
You can use arrowroot or potato starch, any of these.
If you use corn starch, it tends to be a bit too gooey, you know?
So that's good.
Remember that the starch has to be diluted.
You can put a bit of water, a bit of stock.
In that case, because we used wine, we want to use this.
Again, you know, the starch is what we call pure starch.
It doesn't have to cook.
It thickened almost right away.
Remember that you cannot put raw starch into a hot sauce, otherwise the proteins will coagulate and you will have nice little dumplings all over the place.
So what we want to have here, see, you pour a little bit and you look, it will thicken on contact.
If you like it here, you stop.
Maybe a dash more.
That's about it here.
Sometime at the end of a roast like that, I put a little splash of raw wine at the end, just to give it a zip, you know?
Then we put the rest of our garnish, because that we'll have with the red wine sauce.
And that basically would heat up, you know, for a while, for about four, five minutes just to get it hot.
And if you have to keep this ahead, of course, what you would want to do is to cover it or keep it in a warm oven or whatever.
You know, that type of meat in France, we used to eat that with a spoon.
There's a certain type of dish which were braised a long time like that.
And it was served, a certain type of game that's served like this, with them, with a spoon because they are so cooked, you know?
And it's very good.
This one happened to be quite cooked too.
So what we want to do here is to slice a few pieces that you have there, you know?
And you can see in the middle of that roast here, that long line is gelatin.
This is the center of that particular muscle that I say we have on the shoulder.
And with that, as I say, we do the steak that we call chicken steak, you know?
A very tender piece of meat and very moist, you know?
My father would love that, you know?
This is a type of dish that he was crazy about.
We're going to present this.
You know, in a type of home cooking, it's a nice idea very often to present a dish in this way, cutting some of the pieces of meat, you know, and presenting the whole thing in the dining room, with the rest of it uncut.
There, it's a classic type of high bourgeoisie, if you want, way of serving in France, you know?
That we have gotten away a bit from because of nouvelle cuisine and serving everything on the plate.
So I have my garish here, which could be of course warmed a bit longer.
Remember that we have very low fat in it because all we had was a tablespoon of fat at the beginning to make it to brown the meat, you know?
This would be your perfect Sunday dinner, you know, with a bunch of friends.
And remember, try to do that recipe with venison, you know, which would be also a classic way of handling that.
I think we need a bit more of the juice around this.
You see a nice beautiful color of the red wine sauce.
You know, the intensity of that type of wine that we have here from the Medoc.
Choose your wine, you know?
You will not eat that.
Some of the wine sometimes will lose a lot of color in the cooking and it's because the pigment in the skin sometimes disappears as it's cooked.
As you see here, I have a nice rich, dark color.
A little bit maybe of green on top to finish it up.
And here is our estouffade or daube de boeuf in red wine.
(light music) We're going to start our meal with a salad compose, that is a composed salad.
And what I want to start with is to put some pecans here in water to bring them to a boil and moisten the pecan because we want to crystallize them with a little bit of sugar and cayenne.
And when they get wet like that, it works out better.
So they have to come back to a boil.
That's about it.
But you can see the difference already in the color of the water here.
So what we do here, very simply, I put them back in there.
I put a little bit of oil there.
And I have a canola oil, like a teaspoon, you know, just a touch, a little dash of salt, and then cayenne, you know?
And you'd be surprised, you know?
That may seem like a lot of cayenne, and it is, but when you cook the cayenne dry like this, it loses a lot of the hotness.
This is the principle of the Cajun cooking.
You know, when you put your, and sugar, of course, when you put your cayenne directly on the fish and saute, you lose a lot of the hotness of the fish.
So what we want to do here is to saute until it caramelizes.
We want to have a nice crystallized caramelize.
I'm going to put that on low so it doesn't go too fast.
Then I'm going to work on the salad.
You can use any type of salad you want.
But look what we have here.
I have what we call here curly endive.
We call that frise in French.
And the frise means curly.
You know, it's the same thing.
What you wanna do is to pick up the whitest possible salad.
You know, when I was a kid, my father used to plant his salad.
When they were grown and spreading out, the more they spread, the more they get exposed to photosynthesis and turn green.
He would bring his salad together like that and attach them with a string, and the whole thing will turn white.
Or you put a flower pot on top of your salad and the whole thing turn nice and white, a bit like they do with the cauliflowers.
So what I want to do here is basically remove a little bit of the part which is a bit too green outside, you know, this way.
And then fold them and cut this in about two inches, you know, pieces like this, and put that to wash in there.
The same thing here.
Of course if there is any damaged part, remove it, you know?
Like this part here, and that's it.
I can even use the green of the salad sometimes even in soup.
You know, we do that very often.
It's a bit bitter, you know?
So certain types of soup goes well with it.
I have to saute that so it doesn't burn.
And now when you wash your salad, this is the bottom part of my salad spinner, you wash them directly in there.
It's important to have enough water so that whatever you shake in your salad, if there is any dirt, it falls to the bottom.
So don't wash your salad in that much water.
You have to have water under the salad.
After you wash it good, you have to lift it up from the salad that it don't do the mistake of pouring directly in there because if there is any dirt it goes back right into it.
So that's what we do here.
And I use the base of my salad spinner here.
So I can put that back in it and spin it.
This is a terrific invention, I tell you, because one of the biggest problems with salad people is not spin enough.
What happen if it's not spin enough, you have like two or three tablespoons of water left in the salad and that destroys the sauce that you make with it, the seasoning, you know?
So here it's very dry, and you can see, I have quite a lot of water, that extra bit from here.
So I have that here.
And what we want to do is our dressing.
This is burning nicely here.
So what we have to do, I think they are crystallized enough.
I'll put them here.
When that happened, you know, this is the way I wanted them anyway.
I like them nice and dark, you know?
So we put our dressing, a little bit of sherry vinegar, I have here, regular vinegar, and here I have hazelnut or walnut oil.
Those are very flavored oils.
So that dressing will be done with a tablespoon and a half of walnut oil and about two teaspoons of vinegar.
A dash of salt, and some pepper in it.
I'm ready to toss my salad soon, and I can put it in there.
I mean, for four I need about four cups, which would be about this.
And then in addition to that we are putting an apple in there.
And that apple, I wanna cut it into little strips.
Remember that the same type of salad used to be done what we used to call a Waldorf salad.
So I cut three slices here, three slices on the other side.
I leave the skin, I just washed those apples.
It's a nice way of cutting it this way.
So I have the core left.
Pack that up together, and cut it into strips.
And I will have a lot of texture in that salad.
This, remember that I said that the Waldorf salad used to be binded with mayonnaise.
And here it is a much lighter example of an interpretation of old dishes in a modern way, you know?
I will have the texture of this, the texture of the salad, then the texture of the caramelized apple.
Caramelized, that is I have the sugar, the sugar turns into a caramel, a crunchy texture.
That's what we call caramelized.
If you want to do this ahead, you know, if you do it ahead, then your best bet to put that in a little bowl with a dash of citric acid, that is lemon juice, on top of it to prevent discoloration here.
So that's what I have here.
You can toss this.
That will prevent your discoloration.
And now I can toss my salad, I've my dressing in the bottom.
And we want also to put a little bit of cheese in there.
Now, you know, you don't have to put the cheese if you don't want, but it's a nice addition to it, you know, at the end of the meal.
So you have your arrangement of green, depending how much green you want.
I tend to use my fingers.
That would be more than enough for one.
And we put some apple on top of it.
You know, give it the crunch and so forth.
Of course a little bunch of our caramelized, or over-caramelized pecans.
Just put it so that the nice side shows, you know, the best.
This is a great hors d'oeuvres to do, those little pecans.
And finally, if you want, a little piece of, this is a goat cheese that you can crumble a little bit on top.
You don't need much, half an ounce of cheese or so, that you have here.
And now we have our beautiful first course, which is our salad compose.
It is not often nowadays, you know, that we do those long simmering types of dish, like that daube de boeuf we did today.
And it seems that I put so much wine in it, and I did, I put about two and a half cups, which is less than a bottle.
A bottle of wine is three cups.
And for, you know, a group of six or eight, it's not that much.
Remember that it's done in a very modern way.
The daube classically had a great deal of lard, what we call lard in France, which is really bacon.
We had pigs feet.
I mean it was very, very rich.
And here we pick up a very lean piece of meat.
We even defatted the sauce at the end.
So we have a nice lean dish, you know, with it, with a very intense taste, great for a cold winter day.
And of course our salad to start.
We have all kinds of different crunch, different taste, different color in that salad, which makes it quite interesting and exciting.
And you cannot miss with the finish of those glazed strawberries.
Year round, you know, you can do the same thing with slices of orange that you glaze with let's say an apricot sauce, and the kids love it.
And with that, we want a glass of wine, and the same wine that we used to cook our daube in it, the Cayrehours wine from the southwest of France.
A very deep, strong berry intense flavor wine, which is made from the Malbec, M-A-L-B-E-C, you know, that type of grape that we have in the southwest of France.
Enjoy that meal, just as I enjoyed making it for you, and do it for your friends.
Happy cooking!
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