Blanquette de veau
Blanquette de veau (French pronunciation: [blɑ̃kɛt də vo] ) is a ⓘFrench veal stew. In the classic version of the dish the meat is simmered in a white stock and served in a sauce velouté enriched with cream and egg. It is among the most popular meat dishes in France.
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Type | Stew |
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Place of origin | France |
Region or state | Normandy |
Main ingredients | Veal, mirepoix, butter or cream, flour |
Definition
The Oxford Companion to Food describes "blanquette" as "a French and to some extent international culinary term indicating a dish of white meat (veal, poultry, also lamb) served in a white sauce".[1] In Larousse Gastronomique, Prosper Montagne's definition is "the French term for a ragout of white meat (veal, lamb or poultry) cooked in a white stock or water with aromatic flavourings".[2][n 1]
Simone Beck, Louisette Bertholle and Julia Child in their Mastering the Art of French Cooking describe blanquette de veau, as "a much-loved stew in France … veal simmered in a lightly seasoned white stock … served in a sauce velouté made from the veal cooking stock and enriched with cream and egg yolks".[3] In 2007 Anne Willan wrote that French television had recently conducted a poll of favourite meat dishes in which "Blanquette de veau was in the top five, with steak frites and gigot d'agneau".[4]
Ingredients
The name "blanquette" derives from "blanc", the French word for white, and there is a purist view that the whiteness of the dish is key, and coloured vegetables such as carrots should not be included. In the words of Anthony Bourdain:
Some cooks, such as Anne Willan, share Bourdain's view, but numerous cooks from Auguste Escoffier (1907) onwards have included carrots in their recipes for blanquette de veau.[6]
Beck, Bertholle and Child list six suitable cuts of veal for a blanquette: poitrine (breast), haute de côtes (short ribs), épaule (shoulder), côtes découvertes (middle neck) and gîte/jarret (knuckle).[7] Other cooks and food writers have differed in their recommended cuts for the dish:
Cook/writer | Recommended cut | Reference |
---|---|---|
James Beard | shoulder | [8] |
Mary Berry | shoulder | [9] |
Paul Bocuse | flank and tendron[n 2] | [10] |
Anthony Bourdain | neck or shoulder | [5] |
Eugénie Brazier | mixture of breast and collar | [11] |
Robert Carrier | shoulder or breast | [12] |
Craig Claiborne | shoulder | [13] |
Auguste Escoffier | breast, shoulder and collar ribs | [14] |
Michael Field | leg or rump | [15] |
Jane Grigson | shoulder | [16] |
Michel Guérard | shoulder | [17] |
Edouard de Pomaine | breast | [18] |
Joël Robuchon | collar, shoulder or knuckle, and either tendron or breast | [19] |
Michel Roux, Jr. | breast | [20] |
Louis Saulnier | shoulder or tendron | [21] |
Anne Willan | shoulder | [4] |
Clifford Wright | breast | [22] |

In older recipes the veal was roast and allowed to go cold before being sliced or chopped, covered in a white sauce and reheated.[23] Eliza Acton's 1858 recipe includes mushrooms gently sautéed in butter and served over the veal with Sauce Tournée (also called velouté).[24] There was at one time some question of how blanquettes were to be distinguished from fricassées. In 1960 The Times commented:
According to Montagne, blanquette de veau is usually served with rice à la créole but may also be served with celeriac, halved celery hearts, carrots, braised parsnips or leeks, braised cucumber, braised lettuce or lettuce hearts.[2] Pasta or potatoes are sometimes served instead of rice, and Escoffier recommends noodles.[14]
Notes, references and sources
Notes
- Montagne adds that blanquette, which had "a very important place in historical cuisine and became a classic of bourgeois cookery" were also made with fish (monkfish) and vegetables (chard and celery).[2]
- In French butchery the tendrons are from the middle of the underside of the animal, between the breast to the front and the flank to the rear.
References
- Davidson, pp. 80–81
- Montagne, p. 125
- Beck et al, p. 383
- Willan, p. 147
- Bourdain, p. 142
- Beard, p. 276; Berry, p. 78; Bocuse, p. 77; Brazier, p. 188; Carrier, p. 196; Claiborne, p. 134; Escoffier, p. 692; Field, p. 179; Grigson, p. 205; Guérard, p. 202; Pomiane. p. 225; Robuchon, pp. 156–157; and Roux, p. 150
- Beck et al, p. 381
- Beard, p. 276
- Berry, p. 78
- Bocuse, p. 77
- Brazier, p. 188
- Carrier, p. 196
- Claiborne, p. 134
- Escoffier, p. 692
- Field, p. 179
- Grigson, p. 205
- Guérard, p. 202
- Pomiane. p. 225
- Robuchon, pp. 156–157
- Roux, p. 150
- Saulnier, p. 171
- Wright, p. 63
- Francatelli, p. 260
- Acton, p. 273
- "Cookery Glossary", The Times, 1 August 1960, p. 9
Sources
- Acton, Eliza (1858) [1845]. Modern Cookery, in All Its Branches. Philadelphia: Lea and Blanchard. OCLC 191115250.
- Beard, James (1959). The James Beard Cookbook. New York: Dell. OCLC 1035934036.
- Beck, Simone; Bertholle, Louisette; Child, Julia (2012) [1961]. Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume One. London: Particular. ISBN 978-0-241-95339-6.
- Berry, Mary (1972). Popular Freezer Cookery. London: Octopus. ISBN 978-0-7064-0159-2.
- Bocuse, Paul (2002). Les meilleures recettes des régions de France. Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-200929-4.
- Bourdain, Anthony (2004). Anthony Bourdain's Les Halles cookbook. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-7475-8012-6.
- Brazier, Eugénie; Moreau, Roger; Bocuse, Paul; Pacaud, Bernard (2015) [2004]. La Mère Brazier: The Mother of Modern French Cooking. Translated by Drew Smith. London: Modern Books. ISBN 978-1-906761-84-4.
- Carrier, Robert (1983). Great Dishes of the World. New York: A & W. ISBN 978-0-89479-134-5.
- Claiborne, Craig (1973). A Kitchen Primer. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-046172-5.
- Davidson, Alan (1999). The Oxford Companion to Food. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-211579-9.
- Escoffier, Auguste (1907). Le guide culinaire : aide-mémoire de cuisine pratique. Paris: Colin. OCLC 969508192.
- Field, Michael. Michael Field's Cooking School. New York: M. Barrows. OCLC 1036710870.
- Francatelli, Charles Elmé (1911) [1845]. The Modern Cook. London: Macmillan. OCLC 862897713.
- Grigson, Jane (1975). The Mushroom Feast. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-046273-9.
- Montagne, Prosper (2001). Larousse Gastronomique. New York: Clarkson Potter. ISBN 978-0-609-60971-2.
- Pomiane, Edouard de (1938). 365 menus, 365 recettes. Paris: A Michel. OCLC 459599801.
- Robuchon, Joël (2011). Dudemaine, Sophie (ed.). La cuisine de Robuchon par Sophie. Paris: Ducasse. ISBN 978-2-84123-334-2.
- Roux, Michel, Jr (2009). A Life in the Kitchen. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-84482-2.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Saulnier, Louis (1978) [1923]. Le répertoire de la cuisine (fourteenth ed.). London: Jaeggi. OCLC 1086737491.
- Willan, Anne (2007). The Country Cooking of France. San Francisco: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-0-8118-4646-2.
- Wright, Clifford (2003). Real stew: 300 recipes for authentic home-cooked cassoulet, gumbo, chili, curry, minestrone, bouillabaisse, stroganoff, goulash, chowder, and much more. Harvard Common Press. ISBN 9781558321991.