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Roast Quail With Grapes (fischer)

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Grains *sent, Lowfat, Oven, Poultry 4 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 1/2 c Green seedless grapes
chopped
1/2 Onion, coarsely chopped
1/2 Leafy rib celery, chopped
1/2 Apple, cored and coarsely
chopped
1 c Herbed bread crumbs
8 Quail, tails discarded
1 T Worcestershire
1 Orange, juiced of 1 orange
1 t Canola oil
1 c Madeira
3 Shallots, minced
1/2 lb Fresh mushrooms, finely
chopped
2 T Cornstarch
1 c Orange juice
1 t Fresh lemon juice
1 t Sugar

INSTRUCTIONS

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. In a small bowl, combine 1/2 cup
grapes, onion, celery, apple, and bread crumbs and stuff each quail
with the mixture until very tightly packed, filling falling out. In
the same bowl, mix together the Worcestershire, orange juice, and oil
and rub the birds with the glaze.  Place the quail in a deep baking
dish, pouring any remaining glaze  over the birds. Reduce the heat to
325 degrees F. and roast for 20 to  25 minutes. Meanwhile, in a large
nonstick skillet over medium-high  heat, heat the wine. Add the
shallots and mushrooms and cook,  stirring, for about 10 minutes, or
until tender. Add the remaining  grapes and cook until heated through.
In a small bowl, whisk together  the cornstarch, orange juice, lemon
juice, and sugar. Add to the  skillet and cook over medium heat,
whisking continuously, for about  30 seconds, or until the sauce is
thick. Remove the quail to a  serving platter and pour some of the
sauce over the top. Serve with  the remaining sauce passed in a sauce
boat.  PER SERVING: Saturated Fat: 3 gm Total Fat: 11 gm Cholesterol:
129 mg  Sodium: 850 mg Calories: 564  NOTES : Serves: 4 - These tiny
birds can be for special occasions  such as a wedding or holiday. The
recipe can easily be halved,  doubled, tripled, or served at a banquet
for fifty or more. The  birds, all placed together on a decorated
platter, look festive and  enticing. The recipe is deceptively simple.
Quail may be skewered and  roasted on a spit, grilled, or, as in this
recipe, baked. Allow two  birds per person if domestic, four if wild.
It isn't usually  necessary to skin wild quail, but most quail marketed
today through  specialty food shops have been raised on game bird farms
and can be  fat, making skinning and defatting a must.  Recipe by: Lynn
Fischer, Healthy Indulgences (1995)  Posted to EAT-LF Digest by
PatHanneman <kitpath@earthlink.net> on Mar  30, 1999, converted by
MM_Buster v2.0l.

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Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 509
Calories From Fat: 30
Total Fat: 3.5g
Cholesterol: 0mg
Sodium: 616.6mg
Potassium: 2248.5mg
Carbohydrates: 114.7g
Fiber: 9.1g
Sugar: 46.2g
Protein: 17.8g


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