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| 2 | tablespoons | butter | |
| 2 | tablespoons | flour, all-purpose | |
| 1 | teaspoon | salt | |
| 1 | teaspoon | black pepper | freshly ground |
| 1 | cup | wine | burgundy or beaujolais |
| 1/4 | medium | onion | minced |
| 3-4 | cups | stock | leek and mushroom |
| 1 | pound | mushrooms, wild | (chanterelles, shiitake, cepes), cleaned, trimmed |
| Leek and mushroom stock | |||
| 4 | each | carrots | cut in large pieces |
| 2 | large | leeks | well cleaned and trimmed, cut in large pieces |
| 2 | each | onions | peeled, halved |
| 1 | each | celery stalks | |
| 5 | each | cloves | whole |
| 1/4 | pound | mushrooms, wild | or 1/2 pound cultivated white or brown mushrooms, coarsely chopped |
| 2 | quarts | water | |
| 1 | teaspoon | salt | |
Melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium heat.
Remove from heat and stir in the flour, whisking as you go.
Add the salt and pepper.
Return to heat and slowly whisk in the wine. Simmer for 3 or 4 minutes, continuing to whisk until well blended and slightly thickened.
Add the onions. Simmer for about 30 minutes, stirring from time to time.
Heat the stock in a saucepan, add the mushrooms and simmer for 10 minutes over medium heat.
Combine mushroom mixture and wine mix mixture; simmer for 20 minutes.
The scent of this cooking is unbelievably fragrant! The finished stew may be served alone, or over rice, polenta or pasta, and is nice garnished with a little parsley or young arugula.
Serves 3 or 4.
| % Daily Value* | |
| Total Fat 8.0g | 12% |
| Saturated Fat 4.0g | 21% |
| Trans Fat 0.0g | |
| Cholesterol 20mg | 7% |
| Sodium 1529mg | 64% |
| Total Carbohydrate 22.0g | 7% |
| Dietary Fiber 3.0g | 13% |
| Sugars 9.0g | |
| Protein 6.0g | 13% |
| Vitamin A | 210% | Vitamin C | 15% | |
| Calcium | 5% | Iron | 6% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
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James Bond enjoys vodka martinis, quail eggs, Bollinger Champagne and Beluga caviar. A man after my own heart. An ardent connoisseur, he can...
Having grown up in a dutch home and living off of "boerenkool" on cold winter nights, I read this recipe with anticipation and then almost got sick. Who wants to eat a "slurry" of kale and water. While the ingredient list is mostly correct the method is grossly wrong. In your large pot place the potatos to cover the bottom, next layer an onion and the kale (I use frozen that came from my mothers garden) Make sure the kale is fairly finely chopped. Next layer on top the coils of a good smoked pork sausage. Put water in the bottom (to almost cover the potatos) and set on the stove to boil. Cook until the potatoes are fork tender (about 30 minutes) While this is cooking dice about 1/2 a pound of bacon and fry that until crispy. When the potatos are cooked remove the sausage from the top of the pan and cut into 3-4 inch chunks. Drain the water from the pot and add the bacon (grease and all) - no one said this was low-cal. Mash the entire mixture together so it looks like slightly lumpy mashed potatos. Use a masher - not a blender or hand mixer - you want a rustic consistency. My mother always adds some vinegar before mashing (about a tablespoon). You can also add some freshly ground black pepper but hold off on the salt as the bacon drippings are fairly salty. Serve with the sausage on the side. Some people like to serve this with some left-over gravy from last nights roast or put a pat of butter on top. Personal preference. I have been told my non-dutch people that this is an acquired touch, although my ex-husband raved about it from the moment he tried it. This is definitely Dutch comfort food. You can also do it with carrots and add 2-3 onions. A little sweeter but just a yummy.
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