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Individual Lamb Wellington Parcels With a Madeira Sauce
This is a different take on my more extravagant beef wellington, an elegant meal that is far more cost effective and it looks and tastes wonderful. Were I have put the pate feel free to use proper fois gras which is what I use in my beef wellington, but of course that is triple the price of getting chicken or duck liver pate. I also bought morel mushrooms to go in the sauce these are a more expensive mushroom but no where near the cost of black truffles, which I use in my wellington recipe. I could not get fresh when I made this so I bought a 20g dried packet and used about half as it was just for two, I yielded around 11/2-2 Tablespoons of chopped morels (didn’t measure exact.)

If you have been keeping up with the progress of my beautiful handcrafted camphor laurel chopping, cheese boards and Mezzaluna Boards. My official site is finally finished and live so to see my full collection please click here.

Ingredients

2 Lamb fillets
90g Chantrelle mushrooms, finely chopped
4 Swiss brown mushrooms, finely chopped
25g Butter
2 Green onions, sliced finely
1 Tablespoon fresh chives, chopped
1 Tablespoon fresh parsley, finely chopped
1 Tablespoon fresh thyme leaves
1 Tablespoon double cream
salt and pepper to taste
50g Pate (chicken or duck liver, I used duck)
1 Sheet puff pastry
2 Pancakes, large enough to cover fillets

Sauce

1/2 Cup Madeira
1 Teaspoon beef stock
1 Teaspoon Cornflour
10g Dried Morels, soaked in water and chopped (see note above)

Method

1. Melt butter in a pan add mushrooms, cook until soft, add onion, cooking stirring until onion softens, add herbs, cream and salt and pepper, cook until liquid has evapourated., set to one side.

2. Lightly flour a surface and roll out puff pastry, cut in half so you have 2 seperate sheets, enough to cover both fillets completely, depending on the size of your fillets, you will either use all or have a little left over. I usually make some jam tarts if this is the case.

3. Take a lamb fillet and spread half the pate over the top and sides of the meat, press half the mushroom onto the pate.

4. Take a pancake and place it on top of the mushroom mixture, carefully turn it over laying it, pancake, mushroom side down onto the pastry, fold up the other part of the pancake to cover underside of lamb, fold remaining pastry over the pancake to form a little parcel, brush joining ends of pastry with milk or eggs to seal. Decorate top of pastry if desired.

5. Place lamb parcels on a lightly oiled baking tray and bake in pre-heated oven of 200 degrees Celsius for 30-40 Min’s or until pastry is browned and risen.

Sauce

1. Bring Madeira and stock to the boil, mix a little water with the cornflour add to sauce and stir until it thickens slightly, add morels and stir to combine.

To Serve: I served mine over parsnip mash and vegetables and drizzled with the sauce.

All photos taken by me unless otherwise stated.

Rabbit in a White Wine, Bacon, Onion and Mushroom Sauce
This is a recipe I made for the swap I am in this month it was not from a member of my group, but a member from another group. I only tried rabbit for the first time last year and I really enjoyed it and have been experimenting with new ways to make it ever since. I came across this one and thought it sounded really good, I made a few changes to the ingredients listed below, just to suit our personal taste but if you want to view the original recipe click Here. I also bought rabbit fillet pieces as they were on special for half price instead of a whole rabbit, I served ours over wild rice and we all thought it was really good.

If you have been keeping up with the progress of my beautiful handcrafted camphor laurel chopping, cheese boards and Mezzaluna Boards. My official site is finally finished and live so to see my full collection please click here.

Ingredients

1 Rabbit, cut into 6
60g Flour
Salt & freshly ground black pepper
30g Butter
2 Tablespoons olive oil
10 Small onions, peeled but a little root still attached (I just thinly sliced a brown onion)
2 Slices bacon, diced (I had 5 sliced of pancetta to use up so I did that instead.)
1 Cup dry white wine
1/2 Cup water
1 Tablespoon tomato paste
1 Sprig thyme
1 Bay leaf
1 Garlic clove, crushed (I added 2)
500g Button mushrooms
Extra butter
Extra oil
2 Tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
3/4 Teaspoon chicken stock granules
2 Tablespoons Cream

Method

1. Lightly coat the rabbit pieces in seasoned flour.

2. Heat the butter and oil and fry the rabbit pieces until golden brown.

3. Remove from the pan and add the tiny onions and bacon to the pan and fry until the onions are coloured.

4. Add the wine, water and tomato paste, stirring to combine and lift any brown bits off the bottom of the pan; add the thyme, bay leaf, garlic and season with extra black pepper.

5. Return the rabbit to the pan.

6. Cover the pan and simmer about 1 hour or until the rabbit is tender.

7. Meanwhile, toss the mushrooms in a little extra butter and oil for a few minutes.

8. Add to the rabbit for the last few minutes of cooking.

9. Remove the thyme and bay leaf and serve the rabbit, mushrooms, onions and sauce with chopped parsley sprinkled over.

All photos taken by me unless otherwise stated.