Cassoulet Toulousain
- Total Time
- 5 hours, plus overnight refrigeration
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½pound slab bacon
- 2pounds dried Great Northern beans, soaked in water overnight and drained
- 1carrot, peeled
- 3yellow onions, peeled
- 4cloves
- 10cloves garlic, peeled
- 2bouquets garnis
- ½teaspoon salt, plus more to taste
- 1gallon chicken or duck broth
- ¼cup duck fat (from confit de canard, recipe above)
- 1pound lamb stewing meat, cut into 2-inch chunks
- 1pound pork stewing meat, cut into 2-inch chunks
- Freshly ground pepper to taste
- 3tomatoes, peeled and seeded
- ½pound French garlic sausage (available at specialty butchers)
- 4duck confit legs (recipe above)
- 1cup bread crumbs
Preparation
- Step 1
Melt the fat from the bacon in a large, heavy-bottom pot over medium heat. Add the beans and carrot. Stud 1 onion with the 4 cloves and add, along with 5 of the garlic cloves and 1 bouquet garni. Season with ½ teaspoon of salt and add a half gallon of broth. Cover and simmer until the beans are almost tender, about 1 hour. Drain, reserving the broth and beans. Discard the onion and the bouquet garni. Cut the bacon into 1-inch cubes.
- Step 2
In a large stewing pot over medium heat, melt 1 tablespoon of the duck fat. Add the lamb and pork, season lightly with salt and pepper and sear over medium-high heat, about 3 minutes. Discard all but 1 tablespoon of the remaining fat, return the pork and lamb to the pot. Chop the remaining onions and add. Mince the remaining garlic and add, along with a bouquet garni and the tomatoes. Add 1 quart broth and simmer, uncovered, for 1 hour.
- Step 3
Add the beans, bacon and garlic sausage to the pot and simmer for ½ hour. Remove the garlic sausage and, when cool, slice in ½-inch slices. In a large, ovenproof pot, ladle in half the bean-and-meat mixture. Add a layer of sausage and the duck confit. Top with remaining beans and remaining quart of broth. Cover and refrigerate overnight.
- Step 4
Three hours before serving, remove the cassoulet from the refrigerator. Remove the top layer of fat and discard. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Sprinkle with bread crumbs. Bake for 2 hours. If it begins to dry, moisten with reserved bean broth. Serve immediately.
Private Notes
Comments
When I make cassoulet I always puree the cooked whole onion (minus the cloves that studded it) and add it to the pot.
What happens to the carrot from step 1? Is it discarded with the onion or chopped and left in the beans?
Instead of a standard bouquest garni, I used several sprigs of fresh thyme and of fresh sage. I didn't bother peeling and seeding the tomatoes. I used more carrots (4 skinny ones) and added 3 parsnips, plus pureed boiled onion. And more sausages, because why not? Also (I'm about halfway through the cooking) it makes a formidable quantity! (I AM celebrating the relaxation of our current lockdown by having 8 fully vaxed friends for dinner tomorrow eve).
When I make cassoulet I always puree the cooked whole onion (minus the cloves that studded it) and add it to the pot.
Great idea! I'm cooking it right now, and I've pureed the onion in a little of the broth, as you suggest.
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