Mussels With Snail Butter ~ Moules A L'Escargot

  1. Debeard the mussels by finding the small thread that extends out of the straight side of their rounded, closed lips and pull it out. Fill the sink or a large bowl with cold salted water and soak the mussels in it for 10 minutes to help cleanse them of sand or grit. Rinse them and scrub their outer shells if they have residue on them. There may be white barnacles attached to the mussel shells and these come off easily by giving them a quick blow at their base with the edge of a knife.
  2. Melt the Tablespoon of butter in a deep pot over Medium heat. Add the onion and cook it, stirring, for a few minutes, until it softens. Add the wine, thyme, water and several grindings of black pepper and salt and bring the liquid to a boil.
  3. Add the mussels and sprinkle the parsley over them. The wine and water will not cover them. Lower the heat so that the mussels steam and simmer and put the lid on the pot. The mussels will start to open after 2 or 3 minutes. In about 5 minutes they will all have opened wide and are done.
  4. Remove the mussels from the broth formed by the wine, herbs and mussel juices and discard any that haven't opened. Cool the steamed mussels while you make the Snail Butter. (A suggested use for the broth is to reserve it for a Light Lunch for 2: reheat the broth and eat it, just as it is, with slices of baguette.)
  5. To make the Snail Butter: place the softened butter in a bowl and beat it well with a mixer or wooden spoon. Then add the finely minced parsley and garlic, and a few grinds of black pepper and salt, and mix everything together well. Set the butter aside while you prepare the mussels for broiling.
  6. Scatter the salt over a baking pan. The salt will prevent the mussels from sliding around and will absorb butter that bubbles out over the edge of the shells so that it doesn't burn and smoke on the tray.
  7. Remove the half of each shell to which the mussel is least firmly attached and discard it. Leave the mussels attached to the half-shell if they haven't come loose during steaming. Replace any mussels into half-shells that have fallen out.
  8. Spread about a teaspoonful of snail butter over each mussel and place it on the baking tray. When all the mussels have been filled, divide any remaining snail butter amongst them and sprinkle them all with the fine, dry bread crumbs. (Refrigerate the tray of mussels if you are not broiling and serving them right away.
  9. To broil and serve the mussels, place the tray of mussels under a hot broiler for about 3 minutes, or until the butter bubbles and the bread crumbs turn golden. Divide the mussels among small plates and serve them with slices of baguette.

mussels, mussels, onion, thyme, white wine, water, butter, fresh parsley, ground black pepper, butter, butter, garlic, fresh parsley, lemon juice, bread crumbs, ground black pepper, coarsegrained salt

Taken from food52.com/recipes/16892-mussels-with-snail-butter-moules-a-l-escargot (may not work)

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