Succulent Truffled Potato Stew
Submitted by CJ13
Truffled potato stew with new potatoes braised in white wine and vegetable consomme with leeks, garlic, and thyme. Finished with shaved fresh truffles and asparagus tips.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
30 minREADY
40 minThis is a refined potato stew that leans French bistro rather than farmhouse. New potatoes simmer gently in dry white wine and vegetable consomme with a classic mirepoix of carrots, celery, and onion, plus julienned leeks, garlic, and fresh thyme.
What makes it special is the finish. Fresh truffles get shaved directly over the hot potatoes right before serving, so the heat releases their earthy, musky aroma into every bite. Blanched asparagus tips add color and a clean, snappy contrast to the soft, starchy potatoes.
No cream, no butter, no stock reduction trickery. The stew thickens naturally as the potatoes break down slightly during the 25-30 minute braise, releasing their starch into the wine-consomme liquid. Serve it immediately for the best texture and the strongest truffle fragrance.
Pro Tips
- Use waxy new potatoes, not russets. They hold their shape better during braising and give you distinct cubes rather than mush.
- The stew should be thick but not dry. If liquid evaporates too fast, add a splash of consomme or water and keep the lid on tight.
- Shave truffles paper-thin with a mandoline or microplane. Thin shavings distribute more evenly and release more aroma per ounce.
- Fresh thyme on the stem lets you pull it out before serving. Stripped leaves work too but will be harder to fish out.
Variations
- Truffle oil substitute: No fresh truffles? A drizzle of quality truffle oil after cooking gives you some of that earthy richness at a fraction of the cost.
- Mushroom version: Add sliced cremini or porcini mushrooms to the braise for deeper umami flavor when truffles aren’t available.
Ingredients
Directions
Peel potatoes and dice into ½ inch cubes.
Transfer potatoes into a heavy saucepan and add garlic, onion, carrot, celery, leek, wine, consomme, thyme, and pepper.
If potatoes are not covered completely with liquid, add water.
Cover and gently cook until aretender and stew is thick, about 25 to 30 minutes.
(If stew becomes too dry add consomme or water) Ideally, potato stew should be served as soon as it is ready.
Serve it on a platter.
Garnish with asparagus tips, shave truffles over the potatoes, and sprinkle with chives.
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