Give Chicken Liver Pâté a Chance! pistachios and duck fat edition

Ok, it’s been probably 2 weeks without posting a thing… actually what I’m posting tonight I made a few days ago but never had the chance to document it, luckily it got better spending some fridge time which tends to happen with rich complex flavors. Work has been taking up all of my time and energy, long hours and blah blah blah…I could rant forever but I won’t.  Anyways, I had some time the other night and I made something I’ve really really liked since I was a kid although I’ve never actually had it home made when growing up, chicken liver pâté.. I know… lots of “yuck” faces… maybe? It’s probably not for everyone, but those who like it, love it and this particular recipe has a couple of additions and  I’ve used my immersion circulator to set the eggs and not overcook a thing! The addition of roasted pistachios for texture plus nutty accents and the richness of duck fat makes this one a very rich and delicate product.  And yes, serving it with cranberry jelly, the balance is quite awesome. I really liked it… like I couldn’t stop eating this thing but I had to so I could blog it!

Gear:

1 roasting pan
1 immersion circulator or
1 contraption for a bain marie setup *
1 sheet of tin foil to line roasting pan
1 wooden/silicon spoon
1 food processor
1 cutting board
1 knife
1 oven at 500f

Ingredients (some mise en place):

chicken liver 500g
port wine 50 ml (about 1/4 cup)
duck fat 2 tbsp for roasting livers, 2 tbsp to process
roasted pistachios 150g, oven roasted (about 10 mins at 500f)
eggs 3 whole eggs
shallots 3 medium, medium dice (too thin will burn in oven)
heavy cream… 50ml to process
maldon salt and pepper to taste

Method:

01: line roasting pan with tin foil.
02: add 2 tbsp of duct fat, if firm, place in oven until it melts
03: wash and rinse chicken livers well, dry with paper towel
04: place livers and shallots in roasting pan, coat with duck fat, add some salt
05: roast for about 20 minutes to a nice golden finish, shallots should caramelize a bit too
06: do not overcook, livers are very easy to overcook, we want the inside a bit on the pink side
07: remove from oven and let cool
08: mix roasted livers/shallots fat and juices in a food processor
09: add roasted pistachios
10: add 2 tbsp of duck fat… more fat!
11: add heavy cream
12: add port
13: add eggs
14: process until smooth and creamy, shouldn’t be runny nor too thick
15: vacuum seal paste in plastic baggies.
16: place baggies in a preheated water bath at 66c for 20 to 30 mins, eggs will thicken
17: place baggies in fridge, refrigerate overnight
18: serve with cranberry jelly on toasted bread.

done!

* If you don’t have an immersion circulator, a simple bain marie will do the trick. place the pate in a ramekin dish, place the ramekin dish on a roasting pan, fill with water until level reaches half the height of the ramekin dish, place in oven, at 350f until set. You could monitor the temperature which I recommend, until pâté is about 66c or 150f. Should be about half hour, 45 mins.

Wanna get more sous-vide cooking guides and cool cooking how-to’s in your mailbox? You know what needs to be done!


We never spam. You should only be getting updates when new content is posted on the site. We also respect your privacy. We don’t share your email address with anyone and you can unsubscribe anytime!

These might strike your fancy!

8 comments

  1. I have had chicken liver pâté and really enjoyed it, though I never thought I could make it. Like the previous commenter, I just might give this a try. Thanks for sharing your recipe.

  2. Interesting recipe. I usually don’t care much for chicken livers, but I did enjoy them as paté on crostini in Tuscany. This sounds a bit like that. Thanks for sharing!

  3. Hi, I’m Ana from Fooduel.com. It is a site in which users vote recipes
    from 1 to 10.

    There is a ranking of the best recipes and a profile with your voted recipes. Each recipe has a link to the blog which belongs the recipe. This way you will get traffic to your blog.

    It’s easy, fast and fun. The best Photo recipes will be here.

    I invite you to enter, add your blog and upload a recipe with a nice photo.

    You are able to see your stats:

    -Number of visits to your blog from Fooduel.com.
    -Number of votes received every day
    -Number of votes received by each category
    -Number of votes for each grade (1-10)
    -Number of votes for each recipe.

    Look this example of one profile stats: http://fooduel.com/stats1.png

    We would love that you participate with some recipe.Look Amazing!

    Regards

    http://www.Fooduel.com

    1. Ana, I will be delighted! thank you so much for your invitation. I checked your site, looks wonderful, I will be posting a new recipe (im working on it) soon and I will submit it. Again, much appreciated.

  4. Heya i am for the first time here. I came across this board
    and I find It truly useful & it helped me out much.
    I hope to give something back and aid others like you
    aided me.

Leave me a comment! :)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.