Classic Terrine of Foie Gras
- 1 (1 1/2-lb) whole raw Grade A duck or goose foie gras at room temperature, cleaned and deveined
- 4 teaspoons kosher salt
- 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground white pepper
- 1/4 cup Sauternes or 3 tablespoons Armagnac
- Accompaniment: toasted slices of pain de mie (dense white sandwich loaf) or baguette
- Special equipment: 1 (3- to 4-cup) ceramic terrine, 2C/ 3 inches deep (preferably oval and with a lid); a piece of cardboard trimmed to fit just inside top of terrine, wrapped well in plastic wrap; and a 3-lb weight (1 or 2 large soup cans)
- Preheat oven to 200F and line a small roasting pan with a folded kitchen towel or 6 layers of paper towels (this provides insulation so bottom of foie gras won't cook too quickly).
- Sprinkle each lobe and any loose pieces of foie gras on both sides with kosher salt and white pepper.
- Sprinkle one third of Sauternes in terrine and firmly press large lobe of foie gras, smooth side down, into bottom.
- (Wedge any loose pieces of foie gras into terrine to make lobe fit snugly.)
- Sprinkle with another third of Sauternes.
- Put smaller lobe of foie gras, smooth side up, into terrine and firmly press down to create a flat surface and snug fit.
- Sprinkle with remaining Sauternes.
- Cover surface of foie gras with plastic wrap, then cover terrine with lid or foil.
- Put terrine (with plastic wrap and lid) in roasting pan and fill roasting pan with enough hot water to reach halfway up side of terrine.
- Bake in middle of oven until an instant-read thermometer inserted diagonally into center of foie gras registers 120F, 1 to 1 1/2 hours, or 160F (for USDA standards), about 3 1/2 hours.
- Remove terrine from pan.
- Discard water and remove towel.
- Return terrine to roasting pan and remove lid.
- Put wrapped cardboard directly on surface of foie gras and set weight on cardboard (this will force fat to surface; don't worry if fat overflows).
- Let stand at room temperature 20 minutes.
- Remove weight and cardboard and spoon any fat that has dripped over side of terrine back onto top (fat will seal terrine).
- Chill, covered, until solid, at least 1 day.
- Unmold foie gras by running a hot knife around edge.
- Invert onto a plate and reinvert, fat side up, onto serving dish.
- Cut into slices with a heated sharp knife.
kosher salt, freshly ground white pepper, armagnac, accompaniment, ceramic terrine
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/classic-terrine-of-foie-gras-104376 (may not work)