Daube Glace
Submitted by DIGIT36
Daube glace: the classic New Orleans cold beef aspic from Louisiana Creole tradition. Shredded pot roast suspended in jellied savory consomme with celery, lemon, and Tabasco. A summer Creole appetizer.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
100 minREADY
300 minDaube glacé (literally “glazed stew” in French) is one of the great hidden gems of Louisiana Creole cooking. The dish dates back to French Provencal tradition and was carried to New Orleans by 18th-century French settlers, where it evolved into a Creole specialty.
It’s essentially leftover pot roast suspended in a savory aspic, served cold in cubes on a lettuce leaf with a dollop of mayonnaise. Once a French Quarter dinner-table staple, it has become rare enough that finding it on modern menus feels like discovering a secret.
The technique builds on the classic stock-and-aspic principle. The 90-minute simmer of beef consommé with celery, onion, green pepper, lemon, vinegar, and a generous hit of cayenne and Tabasco infuses the broth with the layered flavors that define New Orleans cooking.
Unflavored gelatin bloomed in cold water gives the daube its trademark sliceable jelly structure once chilled.
The key procedural detail is the half-set stir. Once the gelatin starts to firm but before it sets completely, mix the meat through so it stays evenly distributed instead of sinking to the bottom of the pan.
This is what gives each cube the perfect ratio of meat to jelly when sliced.
Chef Tips
- Use any leftover pot roast or braised brisket. The recipe is essentially a clever way to repurpose roast night.
- Strain the stock through cheesecloth (not just a colander) for a clearer, more elegant aspic.
- Don’t skip the Tabasco. The hit of vinegar-fermented heat is essential to the New Orleans character.
- Serve very cold straight from the fridge. Aspic that’s even slightly warm becomes unappetizing.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
In a large covered pot, simmer consomme, ½ can water, lemon, vinegar, cayenne, Worcestershire, celery, onion, green pepper, salt, Tabasco sauce and garlic for 1½ hours.
Melt the gelatin in ½ cup water in a saucepan.
Shred pot roast and add to gelatin. Strain the stock through a colander, add the meat-gelatin mixture and pour into an 8×8 inch pan.
Chill Before gelatin has completely set, mix meat through so it is evenly distributed.
Chill thoroughly. Cut into squares and serve on a lettuce leaf with a dollop of mayonnaise.
Note: This may also be served for luncheon or as a hot weather dinner with fresh fruit and rolls or French bread.
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