ten bird roast
   Register

[x]

ten bird roast


hermanntrude is offline hermanntrude united_kingdom
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Posts: 6,470 hermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond repute
Videos: 5
Location: Newfoundland!
hermanntrude's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 06:20 PM

The ten-bird roast

by SINEAD McINTYRE, Daily Mail

Whatever bird you serve up for Christmas, someone is sure to cry fowl.
Because it's hard to satisfy everyone's taste in poultry... until now, that is.
For one cook has come up with a spectacular solution to the seasonal dinner dilemma.
Take one 18lb turkey... and stuff it with nine other birds.
The ten-bird roast is being championed by celebrity chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, who has deemed it "one of the most spectacular and delicious roasts you can lay before your loved ones at Yuletide".
The turkey is stuffed with a goose, duck, mallard, guinea fowl, chicken, pheasant, partridge, pigeon and woodcock.
Would you eat the ten-in-one bird? Tell us using the reader comments link at the bottom of the page...
However the roast, which weighs 22lb when cooked, contains around 10,000 calories, compared to the 3,000 calories of the average turkey. It also carries a hefty £160 price tag and takes over nine hours to prepare and cook.
Yesterday Mr Fearnley-Whittingstall said: "It is the perfect dish as it has the benefit of offering the two favourite Christmas birds together.
"And once you've taken the decision to do that, you may as well take it one step further and add some others.
"This is a spectacular and celebratory dish and it's the time of year when people have a lot of time on their hands to prepare something like this.
"It is worth it because it is absolutely delicious."
Medieval banquet
Mr Fearnley-Whittingstall's huge dish is a simpler form of an early 19th century French royal feast that consisted of 17 birds - from a bustard, one of the largest species of European bird, down to a garden warbler.
He came up with it for the Christmas special of his successful Channel 4 River Cottage series - which goes out tonight and shows him cooking a medieval banquet for friends.
The roast feeds around 30 people and as well as the ten birds, also includes stuffing made from 2lb of sausage meat and half a pound of streaky bacon along with sage, port and red wine.
Back-to-basics approach
On the show, Mr Fearnley-Whittingstall is shown laying out the birds on a table. He then bones the turkey, leaving the wings and drumsticks on, and slices the breasts off the other birds.
With the turkey a hollowed-out shell, a layer of stuffing is placed around the inside and the breasts of the goose are added.
Alternative layers of stuffing and breasts from the other birds are all placed inside the turkey until no more will fit and it is then sewn up with some butcher's thread and a darning needle before being cooked for four hours.
Multi-bird roasts are not a new concept. They were popular throughout medieval times and well into the 19th century, but their popularity faltered when turkeys became fashionable in the 20th century. Gooduckens - a goose stuffed with a duck and a chicken, have recently come back into favour, with suppliers now selling more than double the amount they were two years ago.
Mr Fearnley-Whittingstall has become known for his earthy, back-to-basics approach to cooking.
Born in London, but raised in Gloucestershire, he did not train professionally as a cook, but instead studied at Oxford and did conservation work in Africa.
Back in England, he joined the River Café in London as a sous chef. In 1997, he found River Cottage in Dorset and three TV series were filmed there. He is a keen supporter of the organic movement.
Reply With Quote
selfactivated is offline selfactivated blank
Time Out
Posts: 4,276 selfactivated is a name known to allselfactivated is a name known to allselfactivated is a name known to allselfactivated is a name known to allselfactivated is a name known to allselfactivated is a name known to all
Videos: 1
Location: Richmond, Virginia
selfactivated's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 11:08 PM

Id have to try it just once!
Reply With Quote
hermanntrude is offline hermanntrude united_kingdom
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Posts: 6,470 hermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond repute
Videos: 5
Location: Newfoundland!
hermanntrude's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 11:10 PM

me too i'd love the chance. I'd just like to try some of the birds involved. I've never had woodcock, mallard, goose or guinea fowl before
Reply With Quote
L Gilbert is offline L Gilbert canada
Les
Posts: 5,726 L Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to behold
Location: 50 acres in Kootenays BC
L Gilbert's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 11:42 PM

It's got duck and mallard in it? Funny, I always thought mallards were ducks. http://www.k12.de.us/warner/mallard.htm
Reply With Quote
hermanntrude is offline hermanntrude united_kingdom
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Posts: 6,470 hermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond reputehermanntrude has a reputation beyond repute
Videos: 5
Location: Newfoundland!
hermanntrude's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 11:42 PM

i'm assuming that the kind of duck we eat normally isnt a mallard but another species.
Reply With Quote
gopher is offline gopher united_states
Ponderous Intellect
Posts: 4,358 gopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to behold
Location: Minnesota: Gopher State
gopher's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 11:44 PM

ten bird roast sounds yummy!
Reply With Quote
L Gilbert is offline L Gilbert canada
Les
Posts: 5,726 L Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to behold
Location: 50 acres in Kootenays BC
L Gilbert's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 11:51 PM

Yes it does. I can do without the goose part though. Found them to be quite oily. Never had partridge or woodcock before, though. I've had emu before: tastes like chicken.
(Kidding. It tastes like emu).
Reply With Quote
karrie is offline karrie canada
Seeking Imperturbability
Posts: 11,210 karrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond repute
Videos: 21
Location: bliss
karrie's Avatar
February 27th, 2007, 11:56 PM

Emu... how many different birds could you roast in an emu do you think? 40 bird roast?
Reply With Quote
L Gilbert is offline L Gilbert canada
Les
Posts: 5,726 L Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to behold
Location: 50 acres in Kootenays BC
L Gilbert's Avatar
February 28th, 2007, 12:49 AM

lol they are quite big but not that big. probly twice as big as a good sized turkey.
Reply With Quote
gopher is offline gopher united_states
Ponderous Intellect
Posts: 4,358 gopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to beholdgopher is a splendid one to behold
Location: Minnesota: Gopher State
gopher's Avatar
February 28th, 2007, 09:35 PM

I always felt that capon was the tastiest. I first heard of it by reading Shakespeare whose fat hero Falstaff had quite a taste for it. Try it!
Reply With Quote
L Gilbert is offline L Gilbert canada
Les
Posts: 5,726 L Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to behold
Location: 50 acres in Kootenays BC
L Gilbert's Avatar
February 28th, 2007, 10:42 PM

I prefer grouse or pheasant.
Reply With Quote
karrie is offline karrie canada
Seeking Imperturbability
Posts: 11,210 karrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond reputekarrie has a reputation beyond repute
Videos: 21
Location: bliss
karrie's Avatar
February 28th, 2007, 10:45 PM

Mmmm. My dad almost never cooked, but when we'd hunt grouse, he'd make this delicious rice stuffing to roast them. yum.
Reply With Quote
L Gilbert is offline L Gilbert canada
Les
Posts: 5,726 L Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to behold
Location: 50 acres in Kootenays BC
L Gilbert's Avatar
February 28th, 2007, 10:47 PM

Oh, yeah, almost forgot about ptarmigan. They're good stuff, too.
Yeah, raosted with stuffings.
Damn, drool all over keyboard now.
Reply With Quote
RomSpaceKnight is offline RomSpaceKnight
Super Genius
Posts: 1,384 RomSpaceKnight is just really niceRomSpaceKnight is just really niceRomSpaceKnight is just really niceRomSpaceKnight is just really nice
Location: London, Ont. Canada
RomSpaceKnight's Avatar
March 1st, 2007, 02:08 AM

I do a wicked indirect grilled Cornish game hen on my barrel smoker.
Reply With Quote
smilingfish is offline smilingfish china
Just a tiny fish
Posts: 125 smilingfish will become famous soon enough
smilingfish's Avatar
March 1st, 2007, 03:08 AM

Emus are that small? Was it a baby emu?
Reply With Quote
L Gilbert is offline L Gilbert canada
Les
Posts: 5,726 L Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to beholdL Gilbert is a splendid one to behold
Location: 50 acres in Kootenays BC
L Gilbert's Avatar
March 1st, 2007, 03:16 AM

The younger ones are better eating. Besides, you don't want to eat the good breeders. Adults can go p to about 115 on the hoof (so to speak ), so ones that dress out to 40 to 80 pounds that are pretty good eating, at least according to my neighbor. Nifty place he's got over here: he also has llamas and alpacas.
Reply With Quote
Reply
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
About Canadian Content | Contact Us | Archive | Technology | Free Downloads | Top
(C) Copyright Canadian Content Interactive Media. Usage is subject to our Terms of Service at http://www.canadiancontent.net/corp/TOS.html