Galantines
Winter time is perfect for practicing (and eating) terrines, pates, galantines, etc… I remember serving several CMC judges delicious slices of duck galantine during the Charcuterie segment of the Certified Master Chef exam. I decided to prepare a contemporary style of galantine that day where I pounded seasoned duck breasts into a flat sheet, then wrapped the breast' ‘sheet’ around the duck forcemeat and then wrapped this with duck skin. Oftentimes chefs assemble the galantine with whole breasts. (as I did with the chicken galantine in these photos)
To prepare a galantine, fabricate one whole duck and separate the bones, skin, breasts, legs and dark meat into separate containers. It’s very important to respect the food and utilize every part of the duck-and remember to keep everything very, very, very cold!
I chill the duck skin to harden the fat and then carefully shave the excess fat without cutting into the skin, creating a perfectly even wrap for the forcemeat. I usually lay the duck skin on a half sheet pan with plastic wrap and periodically freeze- shave; freeze-shave until I get the skin perfectly free of fat.
Season the duck breasts and carefully flatten two duck breasts with a mallet into one large, thin sheet to fit perfectly over the skin of the whole duck. I like to flatten with plastic wrap above and beneath the duck meat to protect it. This takes patience and time to make it perfect.
Next clean all of the excess meat from the bones, season with cognac, orange zest, pate spice, salt and glace de volaille for a few hours to develop flavor and finally grind the forcemeat. I like adding a cooled panada of diced, white bread and sweated shallots simmered in cream for texture and fat. I sometimes use pork fatback in the forcemeat as well. Always poach a taster and evaluate before assembly.
It’s important to use all of the duck so I generally poach the liver, stomach and heart until tender and dice for garnish. Since I wanted a more classic galantine during the CMC exam, I garnished with truffle macerated in cognac, blanched, peeled pistachios, diced, duck tenderloins and poached, diced smoked tongue. I remember making a delicious duck stock to poach my galantine in. During that day of the exam I made two galantines, one wrapped in cheesecloth and one wrapped in plastic. The galantine wrapped in plastic was far more delicious… the cheesecloth wrapped version lost some of the flavor into the poaching stock. Rookie mistake on my part!
The chicken galantine I made this weekend is very similar but with sautéed, wild mushrooms and pistachios-so fun to make and enjoy on a cold, winter afternoon.
Please reach out if you have any questions… I’m a huge fan or making forcemeats!