Sauteed Rabbit Loin with Braised Fennel & B
Sauteed rabbit loin brined then braised with fennel, balsamic vinegar, and white wine, finished with a vibrant salsa verde of parsley, capers, spinach, and fennel fronds.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
30 minREADY
2 hrsThis is a restaurant-caliber rabbit dish with three components working together: brined and seared loins, braised fennel in a balsamic-tomato sauce, and a bright, herbaceous salsa verde drizzled over the top. It’s the kind of plate that looks complex but follows a logical sequence.
The rabbit loins soak in a vinegar-salt-peppercorn brine for an hour first. Brining seasons the lean meat throughout and helps it retain moisture during the hot sear. After patting dry, the loins go into smoking-hot olive oil and get a golden crust on both sides before being set aside.
Sliced fennel bulb, onion, and fennel seeds cook in the same pan, building on the fond left by the rabbit. Tomato sauce, dry white wine, and a generous pour of balsamic vinegar create the braising liquid. The rabbit goes back in and simmers for 15 minutes, absorbing that sweet-acidic sauce.
The salsa verde blends day-old bread soaked in vinegar with parsley, capers, garlic, spinach, thyme, fennel fronds, and extra virgin olive oil into a vibrant green sauce that cuts through the richness of everything else on the plate.
Chef Tips
- Pat the rabbit completely dry after brining. Wet protein steams instead of browning, and the sear is where most of the flavor comes from.
- Get the oil smoking hot before adding the rabbit. You want golden brown in 6-7 minutes, not pale and steamed.
- Squeeze the vinegar-soaked bread thoroughly dry before adding to the food processor. Wet bread makes a runny salsa verde instead of a thick, drizzleable sauce.
- Serve immediately after plating. The salsa verde loses its bright green color if it sits too long in the heat.
Variations
- Use chicken thighs if rabbit isn’t available, adjusting the braising time to 20-25 minutes.
- Skip the salsa verde and finish with a simple gremolata of lemon zest, garlic, and parsley.
- Add pitted green olives to the braising liquid for a more Mediterranean flavor.
Ingredients
Directions
Rinse and pat dry rabbit loins.
In a mixing bowl, stir together cold water, vinegar, salt and peppercorns.
Place rabbit loins in liquid and allow to stand 1 hour.
Remove rabbit from brine and pat dry.
In a 12 to 14-inch heavy bottomed sauté pan, heat 4 tablespoons olive oil until smoking.
Season rabbit pieces with salt and pepper and sauté until golden brown on both sides, about 6 to 7 minutes.
Remove rabbit pieces and set aside.
Add fennel, onion and fennel seeds and cook until soft and lightly browned, about 10 minutes.
Add tomato sauce, wine and balsamic vinegar and bring to a boil.
Place rabbit pieces in pan and simmer 15 minutes uncovered.
Meanwhile, make salsa verde.
Soak bread in white wine vinegar about 2 minutes.
Remove bread from vinegar and squeeze dry.
Place in food processor with parsley, capers, garlic, spinach, thyme, fennel fronds and extra virgin olive oil.
Blend 30 seconds until smooth and set aside.
Remove cooked rabbit pieces from sauce and arrange on a serving platter.
Top with fennel sauce mixture, drizzle with salsa verde and serve immediately.
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