Copperpots

A Brit, a Yank and a Kitchen

Wednesday, August 16

Roasted Marrow Bone & Parsley Salad


Look away dad!! Dave and I had a very carniverous moment last night.

I bought this cookbook after reading some Bourdain and hearing him rave about this restaurant in London. It is called The Whole Beast, Nose to Tail eating, by Fergus Henderson.. and is chock full of so-wrong-it-must-be-good recipes. Being a fan of the lesser loved animal bits, like liver and kidney.. even the occasional tripe... obviously this cookbook intrigues me.
So I decided to start with this recipe... simple enough, with ingredients that aren't too difficult to find (unlike many items in the cookbook).

The result was sinful. I almost felt guilty eating it, but how can you, when it is often a part that is discarded? Its a shame our society has so many hang-ups on non-standard fare, because this really was incredible, as simple as it was. If an animal has to die for me to consume it, I think we should give it the respect to not waste any of it.... there is so much more to a beast than a filet.

So, if youre an adventerous sort... and like a bit of butter on your bread.. I'm going to suggest you roast a couple of these bones and try its sublime marrow in butters place.

We had this, by the way, with my favorite pea soup. =)

INGREDIENTS
12 x 7-8cm pieces of middle veal marrowbone (I used 6 beef marrowbones)
1 bunch of flat-leafed parsley, picked from the stems and chopped
2 Shallots, very thinly sliced
1 modest handful of capers, (extra-fine if possible)
juice of 1 lemon
6 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
freshly ground salt and black pepper
toast, to serve
coarse sea salt

METHOD
1. Preheat the oven to 450ยบ. Place the bone marrow in an oven-proof frying pan. Roast the marrow for 20 minutes until the marrow is loose and giving, but not melting away.and place in a hot oven for about 20 minutes, until the marrow is loose and giving, without melting away.

2. Mix together the parsley, shallots and capers. Make the dressing by mixing together the lemon juice and olive oil.

3. Just before serving toss the parsley mixture with the dressing and season with salt and freshly ground pepper.

4. Scrape the marrow from the bone onto the toast and season with coarse sea salt . Serve with a pinch of parsley salad on top.

6 Comments:

Blogger Grey said...

AARRGG!!! BLOOD STOPPING...ARH..ARTERIES CLOGGING...

WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO ME?

11:55 AM  
Blogger Grey said...

You need a lot more parsley than that!

11:58 AM  
Blogger wheresmymind said...

I think that you are being more true to nature in that you aren't wasting a bit of the animal! Btw...I had some marrow on Sat. night at a very Swanky restaurant...ate it with my snap peas and 'taters..YUM!

1:17 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Nice to see someone else who doesn't stop at leg steaks. It's been a long while since I saw marrow bone in the shops. I should go ask for some I guess.

St John 'nose to tail' restaurant is fantastic.I think that's the one the book comes from. I want to go again!

12:20 PM  
Blogger Susan in Italy said...

Wow! You've been blogging (and cooking) up a storm. I've been away and now check out your blog to see all this cool seafood and now marrow bones. I haven't had the nerve to eat marrow yet but it really sounds delicious.

4:23 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I recently returned from a trip to NYC and had Roasted Marrow Bone in a restuarant there. YUM! YUM! YUM!... needless to say no one in Jackson, MS is serving Roasted Marrow Bone and none of the butcher shops sell it either. I've done some investigating and finally found a butcher shop on the internet that ships all over the US.... I will be having marrow soon. :-)

6:03 PM  

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