Country Pâté with Pecans and Cranberries

This weekend I was invited to a dinner party at the home of two friends (and award-winning chefs). The clever theme for the event was elevated fifties’ American cuisine: “We’re swapping out the cans of condensed soups, processed cheese, canned black olives and Wonder Bread, and are replacing them with homemade, organic, high-quality ingredients,” the invitation read. As I typed out my RSVP, I apologized for my late response because their email had initially fallen into the clutches of my spam folder. I stopped. Did I just write, “spam”? As in the fabulously fifties-esque potted meat product loosely related to spiced ham? Something in desperate need of reinvention? And here we go…

How does one spiffy up Spam? (Certainly not the way I cooked with it for the Bodega Challenge.) I considered making a fine meatloaf, but that was too different a category of food, and recipes and restaurants have been reinventing it to great successes these days already. An instant later, it occurred to me there is a classic French gourmet dish that is, in theory, strangely similar to the notorious luncheon meat: pork pâté. Hence, this project migrated from wanting to make something Spam-like to wanting to just make a really good country pâté with a little twist.

If you plan on making pâté at home for the first time (and clean up after it), know that you’re in for an incredibly greasy, slimy, odiferous experience, which is sort of fun in its own way. Let’s start with what you’ll need: a rectangular loaf pan will substitute for the classic covered French terrine. A pan that’s large enough to hold it half-submerged in water, like a roasting pan. Then there’s the meats. After finding a myriad of methods and ingredients among the online recipes for country pâté, or pâté de campagne, I referred to the 1961 classic, Mastering the Art of French Cuisine. The authors Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle and Simone Beck begin the chapter on pâtés and terrines with the bold statement: “The memory of a good French pâté can haunt you for years.” Wow, what was I waiting for? And then, before the first recipe, “A pork and veal pâté with decorative strips of veal and ham buried in its slices is the most classic of all pâté mixtures.”

clockwise from top left: salt pork, chicken livers, pork shoulder, onion

But I don’t really want to deal with veal, even though this is purported to give pâté its “lightness.” So I used the variation on the next page that integrated liver (chicken, in my case), and added a splash of heavy cream in the hopes of creating a rich, silky base stuffing. Instead of pistachios, which is the traditional optional nut, I sprinkled in chopped pecans along with dried cranberries for texture and tartness. Would it be enough to haunt? I hoped not in the wrong way, at least.

Child/Bertholle/Beck recommended the use of blanched salt pork or bacon as an alternative to the elusive fresh pork fat, so I got a slab of salt pork while at the butcher. I’m not sure why it isn’t called “salt fat,” since that would be a more accurate name for the block of glacier-white, stiff fat sprinkled with greasy flecks of salt. This was blanched and then sliced thinly to line the bottom and sides of the mold. I had some leftover afterward, so I chopped it up to use like those “decorative strips” buried in the chunky final slices.

livers are added to a fragrant sautée of onions with bay leaves

some of the pork gets a rustic fine chop, while the rest becomes pork paste

folding in the pecans, cranberries and a little parsley

Remember to give yourself plenty of time to make a pâté, too. The most difficult challenge for me was trying to figure out how to press the thing down while it cooled and then chilled, after baking. You’re supposed to have bricks this day in age of cooking, but I have yet to come across one in kitchen stores or on the street (I guess that’s a good thing). I finally found a book with the perfect trim size to place on top of my foil-covered pâté, which I weighed down with a bunch of things, eventually.

a towering stack of stuff presses down the pâté

I had just barely enough time to let the pâté chill completely before heading out to the party. David and Shana’s apartment was decorated with photocopied pages from kitschy fifties’ cookbooks, with their commentary written about the recipes. On the table was a gleeful display of fifties’ food mockery, complete with little penguin decorations, as seen in a dated photo. (The penguins were created from hard-boiled eggs and black olives — two ingredients that proved emblematic of the spread.) A green bean casserole with fresh green beans wasn’t bad, after all. The coconut cream pie was downright delectable. And then I gorged myself on an Ambrosia salad made with mixed fruit, whipped cream, shredded coconut and a sprinkle of pecans on top. (The drink of the night, the Grasshopper, wasn’t bad either.)

a plentiful, and unpretentious, pork and beans platter

presentation is everything: an egg-and-olive penguin

I’ll revisit this coconut cream pie and Ambrosia salad (top) any day

I have no idea what this was, but it had macaroni on the outside

and just for good times’ sake, a completely unedited fifties’ molded “salad” made from condensed tomato soup, mayonnaise, gelatin and chopped hard-boiled eggs, onions and green peppers — !

Yet after sampling all these preposterously molded, mayonnaised and technicolored munchies, I’ve decided that American fifties’-esque food is just not something I very much like. Better executed versions, with better ingredients, were definitely more palatable, and in some cases fairly tasty. But I question the prevalence of mayonnaise in nearly everything involving vegetables, and shrug my shoulders to elaborate serving aesthetics that seem to look to volcanoes for inspiration — better to leave those to (elaborate) desserts. I half expected to come home with a full tray of pâté, too, since there were many vegetarians at the party, but I was pleasantly surprised when it was all gobbled up. And, by its final taste. I won’t be making this very often, haunting as it may be, since it’s simply not the most healthy, nor cost and time-efficient delicacy there was. But it was certainly worth the while this time.

Oh, and I went for the Pink Lady-but-in-turquoise look.

brunettes really do have more fun

Country Pâté with Pecans and Cranberries
(makes one loaf)

1 lb pork shoulder, chopped to 1″ pieces
1/2 lb chicken livers
1/4 lb salt pork
1 egg
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 tablespoon butter
1/3 cup dry Sherry
1/4 cup heavy cream
1/4 cup chopped roasted pecans
1/4 cup dried cranberries
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
4 bay leaves
1 clove garlic, crushed
1 teaspoon salt
pinch of nutmeg
black pepper to taste

Heat the butter in a large pan and cook onions over medium-low heat until translucent, about 8 minutes. Add the bay leaves and the livers and cook, stirring, until the livers are just firm but still reddish pink inside, about 3-5 minutes. Transfer to a large bowl. Add the Sherry and cook to reduce it by half, about 2 minutes. Pour into the bowl.

Chop half of the pork shoulder pieces very finely with a good sharp knife. Put the rest of the 1″ pork pieces into a food processor and pulse several times, stopping to scrape down the mixture, until relatively smooth. Set pork aside. Pulse the garlic clove in the food processor until finely chopped. Remove the bay leaves from the liver mixture and discard. Add the liver mixture to the food processor and blend until to a smooth paste. In the same bowl it was once in, beat the egg with the cream. Add all the spices. Return the liver mixture to the bowl and mix together with both pork mixtures with a spatula or wooden spoon until evenly combined. Sprinkle in the pecans, cranberries and parsley and fold in.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Blanche the salt pork and let cool before slicing into thin strips. Line the bottom and sides of a rectangular loaf pan or terrine with the salt pork slices as evenly as you can (it doesn’t matter too much). Pour the pâté mixture into it and spread it evenly on top. Cover tightly with foil. Place the loaf pan/terrine inside a roasting pan or another large pan filled with enough boiling water for it to reach half the loaf pan/terrine’s height. Bake for 1 1/2 hours (or slightly less if your pan is quite long and skinny; slightly more if your pan is more bulky in shape).

Remove from the oven. Drain the roasting pan, and place the loaf pan/terrine back on top of it (to catch drips while it cools/gets squeezed). Cover with another protective layer of foil. Try to find something that fits the top of the pan, like a book — or a brick if you have one — and place it on top of the foil. Stack heavy things on top of it so that the pâté is weighted down while it cools. Cool for an hour or so at room temperature, then transfer it to the refrigerator to chill at least another three hours, still weighted down. (Can be chilled overnight.) Serve with crackers.

Cost Calculator
(for about 8-10 appetizer-sized servings)

1 lb pork shoulder: $3.50
1/2 lb chicken livers: $1.00
1 egg (at $3/dozen): $0.25
1/4 cup heavy cream (at $3.50/pint): $0.44
1/3 cup dry Sherry (at about $5/bottle): $0.50
1/4 cup chopped pecans (at $3.50/8 oz bag): $0.88
1/4 cup dried cranberries (at $2.99/8 oz bag): $0.75
1/2 cup chopped onion (at $1/lb): $0.25
2 tablespoons parsley (at $1/bunch): $0.20
1 tablespoon butter (at $4/lb): $0.13
1 clove garlic, 4 bay leaves, salt, pepper, nutmeg: $0.15

Total: $6.83

Health Factor

Ten brownie points: Disgraceful. I’m all for consuming all parts of an animal, but some parts — namely, fat — are just not good for you. Maybe it’s their secret weapon, like a killer bee, the pig smirks at us in their afterlife by clogging up our arteries with all that fat. Chicken liver won’t help you out here, either. One ounce of it alone will give you a little over 50% of your daily recommended intake of cholesterol. So, sorry.

11 Responses

  1. Kitt
    |

    Wow, you are brave. I adore pate, but I’m afraid to make it.

    Those other dishes looked pretty scary.

    Love your glasses!

  2. […] Country Pate with Pecans & Cranberries. [?] Share This […]

  3. michelle @ TNS
    |

    on one hand, all of the foods shown above terrify me, especially the molded salad; those are not words that belong together. on the other hand, i’ll be using the egg-and-olive penguins as table decor for all future dinner parties.

  4. michael
    |

    Hot photo. By the way, I just compared our authority ratings on Technorati and I’m beating you by just two points! Best step back, bitch! Just kidding… anyway, this is one of the first recipes you’ve ever posted that I’m not really craving as I read the post.

  5. Yvo
    |

    heh heh heh, brunettes have ALL the fun my dear 😉

  6. Deborah Dowd
    |

    That pate looks great, and I love the egg-olive penguin! The mold, though, creeps me out a bit!

  7. Terry B
    |

    What a fun party! And an impressive, brave effort on your part with what sounds like a delicious pâté. I recently made a much simpler pâté [no oven time or weights involved] that really wowed people at a cocktail party. More so than something so simple had aright to, in fact.

  8. We Are Never Full
    |

    This looks great w/ the crunch of pecans and the tart of the cranberries. Great combo!

    amy @ we are never full

  9. […] to triple-down, ordering the hyped Chicken Bánh Mì as well as the more traditional pork and pâté varieties.  As much as I love this particular variety of sandwich, New York City’s obsession […]

  10. J.H. Longstreet
    |

    Awaiting the arrival in Chicago of my 8-months-pregnant daughter and her husband from Des Moines, I made your Country Paté with Pecans and Cranberries this past weekend to serve on the eve of our son’s wedding. It was well and justifiably received. After some thought, I decided to use very thinly-sliced lean pancetta to line the loaf pan, which worked well, and the spirals added a somewhat decorative touch. I served this along with some Red Onion Jam, Cornichons, Dijon Mustard, and half-rounds of Semolina Bread. Also Wolfgang Puck’s Cream of Mushroom Soup, America’s Test Kitchen’s Dill Potato Salad, a relish tray of Kalamata and Green Olives, Grape Tomatoes, Sliced Cucumber, and Baby Arugula. As dessert, Mark Bittman’s unjustifiably maligned Clementine Clafoutis. But the Country Paté was the star attraction. Thanks for your efforts.

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    Country Pâté with Pecans and Cranberries » Not Eating Out in New York

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