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Stuffed Quail
1 tablespoon butter
1/4 cup diced celery
1/4 cup diced onion
1/4 cup diced carrots
1 cup cooked wild rice
1 cup cooked couscous
1 1/2 teaspoons rubbed sage
Salt and pepper to taste
4 deboned quail
1/4 cup olive oil
Preheat oven to 450 degrees. In a medium-hot skillet, sauté
butter, celery, onion, and carrots for 3 to 4 minutes. Remove
and mix with rice, couscous, and sage; season with salt and pepper.
Stuff quail and roast, basting occasionally with olive oil, to
internal temperature of 140 degrees (about 10 minutes; 20 to 25
minutes if quail are not deboned).
Blackberry Essence
2 1/4 cups frozen blackberries
2 teaspoons orange zest
1/2 cup sugar
1 cup chicken stock
1 1/2 teaspoons cornstarch
Reserve 1/4 cup berries and 1/2 teaspoon orange zest for garnish.
In a medium saucepan, simmer remaining berries, zest, sugar and
chicken stock for 15 minutes, until berries are fully cooked.
Put cornstarch in a small bowl and add enough water to form a
thin paste. Add gradually to blackberry mixture, whisking over
low heat until mixture is consistency of maple syrup. Strain to
remove seeds from sauce.
Wilted Autumn Greens
1/2 pound spinach
1/2 pound arugula
1/2 teaspoon minced garlic
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 large head radicchio,
cut into approximately 1-inch cubes
1 pound small heads Belgian endive,
quartered lengthwise, cores removed
Rinse, dry, and destem spinach and arugula. In a large skilled
(not iron), sauté garlic in oil over medium heat until
golden. Add spinach, arugula, radicchio, and endive; cook, tossing
continually, until barely wilted.
To serve, arrange greens in center of plate, top with quail,
and surround with sauce. Garnish with whole berries and orange
zest. Serves 4. |
Anthony's
4007 Westheimer
Houston, Texas
October in Texas doesn't always mean cool weather, but it does
mean the beginning of quail season. At Anthony's in Houston, chef
Bruce McMillian stuffs the small succulent birds with seasoned
wild rice and couscous, roasts them to a turn, and finishes them
with a garnet-hued blackberry sauce. Hunters may prefer to stalk
their own wild quail; McMillian encourages shoppers to track down
the farm-raised, deboned variety at specialty meat markets and
grocery stores. Surrounded by colorful autumn greens wilted in
a garlic-tinged olive oil, the bird on your plate makes a perfect
light supper on a sultry Texas fall night.
Meat & Dairy
butter
4 deboned quail
Produce
celery
onion
carrot
orange
1/2 pound spinach
1/2 pound arugula
garlic
1 large head radicchio
1 pound small heads Belgian endive
Grocery
wild rice
couscous
sage
extra-virgin olive oil
salt
pepper
sugar
chicken stock
corn starch
Frozen
2 1/4 cups blackberries
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