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Country Pate

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats Appetizers, Pork, Meats 3 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 1/2 lb Boneless pork, ground fine twice
1 lb Boneless veal, ground fine twice
3/4 c Dry white wine
2 tb Brandy
2 tb Oil
Salt
Freshly ground black pepper
2 lg Onions, sliced thin
2 sm Cloves garlic, halved
1 lb Fresh pork fatback, sliced thin
1 Cornichon pickle for garnish

INSTRUCTIONS

Servings: Makes about 3 lbs From: Sallie Krebs
DIRECTIONS: In a large bowl, combine the pork and veal. Mix the wine,
brandy and oil with salt and pepper to taste, and pour the mixture over the
meats. Scatter the onions and garlic on top. Cover the bowl tightly and
refrigerate it for at least 24 hours.
Preheat the oven to 375-F. Discard the onions, but put the garlic through a
press and knead it into the meats together with the wine mixture. Break off
a small piece of meat and fry it in a lightly oiled skillet over moderate
heat for 3 or 4 minutes, or until its juices run clear, without a trace of
pink. Taste the piece and, if you like, add more garlic, salt and pepper.
(Pork is unsafe to eat uncooked; do not taste the meats raw.)
Slightly overlapping the slices, line the bottom and sides of a 2-quart
terrine mold or a 7 1/2 x 3 1/2 x 2 1/2 inch loaf pan with the fatback.
Pack the meat mixture into the mold, and arrange the remaining slices of
fatback on top of it. Fit foil over the mold, or cover the meat mixture
with foil and a lid. To let steam escape, pierce a hole in the foil with a
skewer. If you are using a lid, insert the skewer through its hole to
puncture the foil.
Set the mold on a rack in a large pan or dish. Place them all in the oven,
and pour enough almost-boiling water into the pan to cover 2/3 of the mold.
Bake for 2 hours or until the pate shrinks slightly from the sides of the
mold and the surrounding fat and juices are a clear yellowish white with no
traces of pink. Or insert a meat thermometer; it should register 160-F when
the pate is done.
Take the pate from the oven, but leave the foil in place. Set the pate on a
rack to cool to room temperature. Then put another pan with a heavy can or
weights inside it, or even a brick, on top of the pate to compact the
meats. Chill the pate thoroughly (overnight is best) with the weights in
place. Before serving, cut the cornichon into a fan shape, slicing
lengthwise through the pickle 4 or 5 times to within 1/2 inch of one end.
Spread the slices into a fan, and garnish the pate with it.
Source: Best Recipes from Time-Life Books, ISBN# 0-517-06502-9 Originally
from: Great Dinners from Life
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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