Hasenpfeffer (Spicy Braised Rabbit)
Submitted by Lill
Hasenpfeffer is a German braised rabbit stew simmered in red wine with bacon, shallots, peppercorns, currant jelly, rosemary, and thyme. Traditional spicy hunters stew with a glossy gravy.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
150 minREADY
180 minHasenpfeffer (literally pepper hare) is a centuries-old German braise that turned wild rabbit into a feast worth celebrating. The name says it all: this is a peppery, deeply savory stew where the meat is tenderized through long, slow braising in red wine with crushed peppercorns and aromatic herbs.
Bacon is the foundation, both literally and flavor-wise. The rendered fat browns the rabbit, and the crispy bacon pieces go back into the pot for the long simmer. Together they create the smoky, salty backbone that defines the dish.
The small spoon of currant jelly is the unsung hero. It melts into the wine and balances the acidity with just a touch of fruit sweetness, the kind of medieval sweet-savory note you’ll find in many traditional German and Eastern European dishes. Don’t skip it. Apple jelly works as a substitute.
Dredging the rabbit pieces in flour before browning serves two purposes: it builds a deep crust on the meat and the residual flour thickens the gravy as it simmers. By the end of the 90-minute braise, you’ll have a rich, glossy sauce without ever making a separate roux.
Serve over buttered egg noodles, spaetzle, or with a hunk of crusty bread to soak up every drop of gravy.
Chef Tips
- Brown the rabbit in batches, not all at once. Crowding the pan steams the meat and prevents proper browning.
- Use a dry red like Pinot Noir, Burgundy, or any decent everyday red. Sweet wines throw off the balance.
- Crush the peppercorns lightly with the side of a knife. Fully ground pepper makes the gravy gritty.
- Skim the fat off the gravy before serving for a cleaner presentation, or stir it back in for richness.
Variations
- Substitute bone-in chicken thighs if rabbit is hard to find. The flavor profile still works.
- Add 1 cup of pearl onions and a handful of mushrooms in the last 30 minutes for a heartier stew.
- Stir in 1 tablespoon of grainy Dijon mustard at the end for a sharper finish.
Ingredients
Directions
Sprinkle rabbit with salt.
Coat with ⅓ cup flour; shake off excess.
Fry bacon in Dutch oven over medium heat until crisp; remove bacon and drain on paper towels.
Brown a few pieces of rabbit in hot bacon fat; remove browned pieces.
Repeat with remaining rabbit. Remove all but 2 tablespoons fat.
Cook and stir shallots and garlic in hot fat in Dutch oven until shallots are tender, about 4 minutes.
Stir in wine, 1 cup water and the instant bouillon.
Heat to boiling.
Stir in jelly, peppercorns, bay leaf, rosemary and thyme.
Return rabbit and bacon to Dutch oven.
Heat to boiling; reduce heat.
Cover and simmer until rabbit is tender, about 1½ hours.
Remove bay leaf and discard.
Place rabbit on warm platter; keep warm while preparing gravy.
Stir lemon juice into liquid in Dutch oven.
Shake 3 tablespoons water and 2 tablespoons flour in covered jar.
Stir flour mixture and ½ teaspoon dried thyme leaves in cheesecloth bag for 1 minute.
(If gravy is too thick, stir in more water until of desired consistency.)
Serve gravy with rabbit.
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