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Alder Cone Smoked Grouse With Fern Root Glaze & Salal Sau Recipe
Serves: 4
Keywords: Game, Native, Ethnic, Sauces, recipe, recipes, Alder Cone Smoked Grouse With Fern Root Glaze & Salal Sau Recipe
Ingredients
2
tb
Licorice fern root
2
tb
Gewurztraminer icewine
¾
c
Water
3
c
Dried alder cones
2
Wild grouse breasts, bone in and skinless
Juniper & Salal Berry Sauce:
1 1/3
c
Water
1 ½
c
B. C. Pinot Blanc wine
3 ½
c
Salal Berries
1 ½
tb
Maple syrup
1 ½
tb
Black peppercorns
8
Juniper berries
1 ½
tb
Balsamic vinegar
Directions
- Recipe from Northern Bounty: A Celebration of Canadian Cuisine.
- The ISBN is 0-394-22431-0.
- Recipe by Sinclair Philip, owner of the Sooke Harbour House on Vancouver Island.
- Sinclair believes in local ingredients, freshness and learning about and using wild ingredients from the native peoples.
- His restaurant has vegetable and herb gardens full of plants transplanted from the bush for use in the kitchen.
- At Sooke, chefs prepare this dish with a salad of foraged wild greens and flowers: amaranth, chicory, chickweed, lamb's quarters, orache, shepherd's purse, and sorrel.
- Alder: a deciduous tree, member of the birch family with woody cone like fruits.
- Common in swamps and mountainous areas. [ I am going to try black spruce cones- our commonest local tree.
- If that doesn't work I can fall back on store bought fruit wood chips or do a Chinese Tea Smoke. - JW] Licorice Fern: I have no idea what it's geographic range is or what flavor it's root would impart.
- Based on it's name I am going to try diced Fennel bulb, Fennel seed or a _wee_ bit of Star Anise stewed in Port instead. -JW Salal Berries: Salal is a low [up to 2 meter] evergreen shrub of the Heath family native to California, B. and Alaska with white to pink urn shaped flowers and round purple berries which turn black. [ There are none locally so I will be experimenting with cranberries or black currants. - JW] Directions: In a small covered sauce pan, gently simmer fern root in icewine and water for 20 min.
- Pour into a glass jar, seal and let stand at room temp for 12 hours.
- Strain into a small saucepan and boil, uncovered, on high until reduced to a thick syrup.
- Set aside.
- Heat alder cones in a large aluminum foil lined sauce pan over high heat until they smoulder.
- Reduce heat to low; place grouse breasts directly on top of the smouldering cones.
- Lightly brush the breasts with the fern root glaze; cover pan tightly.
- Smoke breasts for 3 hours or until cooked but not dry.
- Remove the meat from the bone and serve with Juniper-Salal Berry Sauce.
- For the sauce: Pour 1 cup water and the wine into the bottom of a per- forated double boiler.
- Place the salal berries in the top section.
- Cover; simmer gently for two hours.
- Gently press berries with a rubber spatula to extract remaining juice.
- Discard berries; reserving syrup in the bottom of the double boiler.
- To the salal syrup, add the maple syrup, peppercorns, juniper berries, remaining water and balsamic vinegar.
- Bring to the boil and immediately remove from the heat; let stand an hour before returning to the heat.
- Cook, uncovered, until slightly thickened.
- Refrigerate until needed. posted by Jim Weller