“Anna Del Conte, our most respected and best-loved authority on Italian food, is Milanese herself, which makes her luscious recipe for ossobuco just about as authentic as a classic dish can get” by Elisabeth Luard
When you eat ossobuco, don’t forget to scoop out the marrow inside the bone.
Serve with RISOTTO ALLA MILANESE
INGREDIENTS Serves 4
4 ossobuchi
30ml olive oil
Flour for dusting
Salt
40g butter
1 small onion, finely chopped
½ celery stick, finely chopped
150 mldry white wine
300 ml meat stock
Pepper
For the gremolada
5ml grated lemon rind
½ garlic clove, peeled and very finely chopped
15ml chopped parsley, preferably flat-leafed
METHOD
Tie the ossobuchi around and across as you would a parcel. Choose a heavy sauté pan, with a tight-fitting lid, large enough to hold the ossobuchi in a single layer. Heat the oil, and lightly coat the ossobuchi with some flour in which you have mixed a teaspoon of salt. Brown the ossobuchi on both sides and then remove to a side-dish.
Add 30g of the butter to the sauté pan together with the onion and the celery. Sprinkle with a little salt, which will help the onion to release its moisture so that it gets soft without browning. When the vegetables are soft, return the meat, and the juice that will have come out, to the pan.
Heat the wine and pour over the meat. Turn the heat up and reduce by half, while scraping the bottom of the pan with a spoon.
Heat the stock in the pan you used to heat the wine and pour about three-quarters over the ossobuchi. Turn the heat down very low and cover the pan. Cook for 1½-2 hours, until the meat has begun to come away from the bone. Carefully turn the ossobuchi every 20 minutes or so, taking care not to damage the marrow in the bones. If necessary, add more stock during the cooking. If, by the time the meat is cooked, the sauce is too thin, remove the meat from the pan and reduce the liquid by boiling briskly.
Transfer the ossobuchi to a heated serving dish and remove the string. Keep warm in a cool oven. Meanwhile, cut the remaining butter into 3 or 4 pieces and add gradually to the sauce. As soon as the butter is melted, draw off the heat, as the sauce should not boil. This addition of the butter will give the sauce a glossy shine and delicate taste.
Mix the ingredients for the gremolada together and stir into the sauce. Spoon the sauce over the ossobuchi and serve at once. You can prepare the dish in advance up to removing the string and then reheat.
The traditional accompaniment, is risotto alla Milanese.
Original Recipe Anna Del Conte
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