Game pie
Game pie is a kind of meat pie made with game. It has been made since Roman times.
Type | Meat pie |
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Place of origin | Roman Empire |
Main ingredients | Game |
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Its main ingredients, then and now, are wild birds and animals such as partridge, pheasant, deer and hare. The pies became very elaborate during the 18th century in England. They developed complex recipes and special moulds and serving dishes. The versions cooked today are more simple, but they still include rabbit, venison, pigeon, pheasant, and other game meats.[1]
The Oreiller de la Belle Aurore is an elaborate game pie named after Claudine-Aurore Récamier, the mother of Brillat-Savarin. The large square pie, which was one of her son's favorite meals, contains a variety of game birds and their livers, veal, pork, truffles, aspic, and more, in puff pastry. It is described in the classic encyclopedia of gastronomy, the Larousse Gastronomique.[2] It is one of three pies named after people from Brillat-Savarin's home town of Belley (later called Bugey). They were described by Lucien Tenret.[3]
Game Pie Media
Substitutes for bread; – or – right honorables, saving the loaves, and dividing the fishes. By James Gillray
References
- ↑ Mark Hix Game pie Archived 2015-09-25 at the Wayback Machine; Serves 4–6 26 November 2005 Independent
- ↑ Prosper Montagne (1961). Charlotte Turgeon and Nina Froud (ed.). Larousse Gastronomique: The Encyclopedia of Food, Wine, and Cookery (English translation of the 1938 edition). New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 0-517-50333-6.
- ↑ La Table au pays de Brillat-Savarin. The others were ‘’chapeau de Monseigneur Cortois de Quinsey’’ and ‘’toque du Président Adolphe Clerc’’