Cookbook:Pot-au-feu

Cookbook | Ingredients | Recipes

| Cuisine of France
A typical pot-au-feu. The broth is usually served before as a soup.

Pot-au-feu is a typical and rustic French recipe made of low-cost beef pieces and vegetables. There are many variants in France and other countries. See Pot-au-feu on Wikipedia for more information.

Ingredients

Generally speaking, count approximately 2 to 2.5 kg vegetables for 1 kg meat (for 4-6 persons).[1]

Onions being burned in a frying pan protected by aluminium foil to cook a Pot-au-feu. Cloves are driven into the onions so they can be removed easily.
Result or onions burned in a frying pan protected by aluminium foil to cook a Pot-au-feu. They will bring the typical golden brown color and a slight smoked taste to the broth.

Vegetables

For celery (root or branches), turnips and cabbage, choose in-season vegetables which are also usually the cheapest. You can also use old-style vegetables (see section Variants below).

Spices

Meat

Pot-au-feu vegetables in a pressure cooker, ready to be cooked. The meat is cooked afterwards, in the broth.

Recipe

Serving

In the French tradition, the broth is served first with a bit of nutmeg and toasted french bread. If you used marrowbones, bring them on the table and ask your guests who wants some, then spread some marrow on toasts for them (and provide salt to your guests). Not only is it a friendly way to serve it, but also people who do not like marrow are not embarrassed.

Then, bring the meat and the vegetables on the table and serve your guests. The major condiments you should propose are strong mustard, horseradish sauce and, sometimes, gherkins pickled in vinegar.

Variants

Many people add potatoes to their pot-au-feu but use only potatoes which resist to cooking without falling apart (Amandine, Charlotte or Ratte varieties, for example). Use one small potato per person.

The pot-au-feu is also a great opportunity to cook old vegetables which have recently regained interest: rutabaga, parsnip, old species of carrots, etc.

Additionally

Pot-au-feu is probably the number one dish to be considered (in France) as tasting better the day after. As such, you can cook it the day before you invite your guests and warm it up when you want to serve it.

Also can you deep-freeze the broth as a base for a soup or use the meat (and possibly vegetables) for stuffing. Both are used for the making of Fleischschnacka (a specialty from Alsace).

References

  1. As of December 2014, in France, a low-cost pot-au-feu for 4-6 persons made with 2kg vegetables and 1kg meat costs ca. 10 € (1.70-2.50 €/person) ~ 13 USD ( 2.17-3.25 USD/person).
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