Pigs Trotter stuffed with Lobster

Virgin hazelnut oil from nut to oilRecipe by Chef Eric Mariottat

Michelin starred Chef, French Master Restaurateur and Master Chef

Ingredients (4 people):

  • Two Gascogne black pig’s trotters
  • Two European lobsters
  • Two carrots
  • One pepper
  • One stick of celery
  • A small onion
  • Two garlic cloves
  • Mixed herbs
  • Sea salt, pepper, ‘quatre épices’

For the stuffing:

  • 2 chicken breasts
  • 1 small egg
  • 300 ml of fresh single cream
  • Salt, pepper, grated nutmeg
  • 1 pig caul fat

For the vegetables:

For the sauce:

  • 200 ml of veal stock
  • Garlic and parsley
  • Perles de Gascogne hazelnut oil

Preparation:

  1. Begin by scorching and cleaning the pig’s trotters. Place them in a large pot of hot water. Bring to the boil and skim off carefully. Add the washed vegetables, sea salt, pepper and spices and leave to simmer for 4 hours.
  2. Cook the lobster for 8 minutes in a large pan of boiling salted water or steam for 10 minutes. Shell and put to one side.
  3. To prepare the stuffing: Clean the chicken breasts, remove the nerves, dice finely and add the lobster pincers and meat. Mix in the salt, pepper and pinch of nutmeg. Add the egg and then the cream. Put to one side.
  4. Boil the vegetables for a few minutes in a large pan of boiling water, keeping them crunchy, then drain and cool immediately under very cold water.
  5. Remove and bone the pig’s trotters (careful, as there are lots of tiny bones!). Flatten the trotter onto the caul fat, spread on a layer of stuffing and then the lobster tail, cover the lobster with stuffing and roll up in the caul fat. Roll this up in foil to get a long, cylindrical shape. Cook in the oven at 170°C for 20 minutes.
  6. To prepare the sauce: heat the hazelnut oil, garlic and parsley for 1 minute, add the reduced veal stock and cook for a further 2 minutes.
  7. Prepare your vegetable salad according to taste
  8. Cut the trotter into 5cm slices and dress with the sauce. Eat the sauce and trotters very hot with the cold salad…

Chef’s tip:

Miniature Perles de Gascogne Chef's HatServe with a Côtes de Duras* white wine

*Too much alcohol can damage your health. Drink in moderation.


View the recipe on the website of the Mariottat Gourmet Restaurant in Agen.

Homemade anti-cellulite treatment

The “orange peel” or cellulite phenomenon affects nearly all women, whatever their body size and shape. 

There are two types of cellulite: 

  • stage 1 cellulite ( hardly visible and painless to the touch),
  • stage 2 cellulite (“orange peel” effect visible to the naked eye)
  • and stage 3 cellulite (very pock marked skin and painful during subdermal massage). 

There is no miracle cure to make it disappear, but a combination of massage and targeted treatment will help promote drainage and reduce the unattractive appearance on the skin surface.

Here is a cheap and easy homemade anti-cellulite treatment!

Ingredients:

  • 100 ml of Perles de Gascogne hazelnut oil
  • 4 ml of lemon grass essential oil
  • 4 ml rosemary essential oil
  • 4 ml geranium essential oil

Preparation:

  • Pour the hazelnut oil into a 100 ml bottle.
  • Add the lemon grass, geranium and rosemary essential oils.
  • Mix together carefully.
  • Massage the areas to be treated (thighs, tummy, buttocks) with this mixture every morning and evening. Discover a few anti-cellulite massage techniques in this Minute Forme video.

Hazelnut oil is a natural antioxidant, recommended for the skin for its nourishing, healing and repairing properties. Together with the essential oils and the massage movement, this homemade treatment enables you to reduce the “orange peel” effect. It must be applied twice a day for several weeks in order to obtain the desired results.

To discover all of the important properties of hazelnut oil, visit the Hazelnut Oil beauty page.

Newsletter September 2013


*|MC:SUBJECT|*

 

The Latest News from Perles de Gascogne!

FRONT PAGE

In the heart of Fourcès, in the Gers region (32), l’Alamboutic, owned by Nicolas and Cécile CHEREL, reveals itself to be a culinary treasure! Open since early 2013, the boutique offers a variety of local wines and spirits and hand produced foods. Each product is all carefully selected for its unique character and quality. Hazelnut, Walnut and Prune Kernel Oils by Perles de Gascogne can be sampled in tastings and bought directly.

Location details:

L’Alamboutic, Au Village, 32250 Fourcès (32), tel: (0033) (0)5 62 29 35 04, www.lalamboutic.com

Inca Inchi Oil: a tasty treat that is good for your health!

Marketed exclusively in France and Europe by Perles de Gascogne since March 2013, Inca Inchi Oil is the richest vegetable source of omega 3 available on the food market to date.

Already used for its cosmetic qualities, it is produced from Plukenetia nuts cultivated in the Peruvian Amazonian region according to traditional and organic farming methods. This oleaginous fruit, of which there are both organic and traditional varieties, is naturally rich in Omega 3, 6 and 9 and vitamin E.

Inca Inchi Oil, also known as Sacha Inchi, is today a real alternative for food processing and nutraceutic industries that wish to develop their ranges of Omega 3-enriched products.

Learn more about:

cosmetic Inca Inchi oil,

edible Inca Inchi oil and Organic Inca Inchi oil.

Newsletter

September 2013

RECIPE BY CHEF ERIC MARIOTTAT
Michelin starred Chef

French Master Chef

Master Restaurateur

Gascogne black pig’s trotter stuffed with lobster
http://www.restaurant-mariottat.com/
2013: A YEAR OF HAZELNUTS

It’s time for harvest! Despite the unpredictable weather, our Pautet variety hazelnut trees in Pujols (47) promise this year once again to bear great fruit! Our early-blooming hazelnut trees produce small sized fruit with an excellent flavour and very rich in fatty acids.

The oil obtained from this fruit is a natural antioxidant, recommended for cosmetic use due to its nourishing, healing and restorative qualities. Its powerful fragrance of dry toasted hazelnuts is also much appreciated in culinary circles. Learn more…

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Light crêpes with prune kernel oil

Ingredients:

  • 250 g of flour
  • 4 eggs
  • 3 dessert spoons of prune kernel oil
  • 250 ml of beer
  • 250 ml of water
  • Salt
  • 100 ml, as preferred, of rum, Grand Marnier, eau-de-vie…

Preparation:

  1. In a large bowl, combine the flour, eggs, beer and water. Add the prune kernel oil.
  2. Leave to rest for 2 hours.
  3. Mix again before cooking in a frying pan or electric crêpe maker.

Chef’s tip

Miniature Perles de Gascogne Chef's HatFor the food lovers, serve your crêpes warm with fruit, a scoop of vanilla ice cream and a forest fruit coulis.

Hand and nail treatment in 10 minutes flat!

We all dream of having super soft hands with robust nails, in perfect order…However, our hands and nails are really put to the test throughout the year! They suffer the discomforts of the heat, sand, chlorine or sea salt in the summer, the cold in winter, and household detergents and other soaps the rest of the time…

Today, Perles de Gascogne offers a really easy, plum oil based recipe so you can pamper your hands at home! Renowned for its nourishing, soothing and protective qualities, this oil has the double advantage of softening and moisturising your hands whilst also strengthening your nails. It only takes a few minutes to prepare! The added pleasant fragrance of the prune kernel oil ensures that the nail treatment is a true moment of relaxation… The lemon whitens your nails and helps reduce brown spots on the skin caused by smoking, sun exposure and ageing. Give it a try!

Ingredients:

  • 100 ml of plum oil, otherwise known as prune kernel oil
  • 1 lemon

Preparation:

  1. Pour 100 ml of warm plum oil into a bowl.
  2. Add the lemon juice.
  3. Mix well and place the tips of your fingers in the mixture, so that the nails are totally covered in oil.
  4. Leave to soak for 10 minutes.
  5. Remove your hands from the bowl and massage your whole hands with the mixture until it is fully absorbed.
  6. Make a new mixture every week.

Plum oil

Pear Gâteau Fondant

pear gâteauIngredients:

  • 4 unblemished pears
  • 150 g of flour
  • 100 g of sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 100 ml of milk
  • 3 dessert spoons of prune kernel oil
  • 2 teaspoons of baking powder
  • Salt

Preparation:

  1. In a bowl, whisk together the eggs, sugar and salt.
  2. Blend in the flour and baking powder. Mix together with the milk and prune kernel oil.
  3. Grease and flour a springform cake tin. Pour in half of the mixture. Add the peeled and finely chopped pears.
  4. Cover with the rest of the mixture.
  5. Cook at 240°C for 40 minutes.
  6. Once cooled, remove the gâteau from the tin.

Miniature Perles de Gascogne Chef's Hat

Chef’s tip

This dessert can be made using any type of fruit (peaches, apples, nectarines, apricots…). Ideally, use whatever fruit is in season! 

Agen Prune Tart

Recipe for prune tart with prune kernel oil Ingredients:

  • 250 g of flour
  • 50 g of sugar
  • 250 g of butter
  • 2 eggs
  • 125 g of ground almonds
  • 30 semi-cooked Agen prunes
  • 250 ml of Armagnac
  • 600 ml of milk
  • 1 dessert spoon of Perles de Gascogne prune kernel oil
  • 1 pinch of salt

 

Preparation:

  1. The day before: stone the prunes and leave them to swell in the Armagnac.
  2. Shortcrust pastry: combine together 250 g of flour, 25 g of sugar and 125 g of butter. Add a pinch of salt and a dash of milk and mix in well. Leave to chill in a bowl for 1 hour.
  3. Almond cream: blend together 25 g of sugar and 125 g of melted butter. Add the eggs one at a time and blend again. Add the ground almonds, 250 ml of Armagnac and 1 dessert spoon of prune kernel oil. Set to one side.
  4. Drain the prunes.
  5. Line a greased flan tin with the rolled out pastry. Spread the almond cream in the pastry and place the prunes on top.
  6. Cook for 30 minutes at 220°C.

Miniature Perles de Gascogne Chef's HatChef’s tip:

At tea time or as a dessert, this tart is best served warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

As an alternative, use both prunes and apples cut into quarters.

Line-caught sea bass, langoustines, tomato fondue, seaweed meringue and hazelnut oil

Recipe for line-caught sea bass with Perles de Gascogne hazelnut oil created by the Belgian chef Daniel AntunaRecipe by Chef Daniel Antuna
Restaurant ” ‘t Stoveke” in Belgium.
www.tstoveke.be

Line-caught sea bass and langoustines:

  • 4 x 125 g line-caught sea bass and 4 fresh langoustines.
  • 100 g seaweed
  • 50 g of salicornia.

Preparation:

  1. Cook the fish in its skin, together with the langoustines, in a frying pan with Mediterraneo Bio extra virgin olive oil.
  2. Cover and steam the seaweed briefly with a bit of oil, shallots and white wine.
  3. Blanch the salicornia and then reheat in a frying pan with a bit of extra virgin “Fiore” olive oil

Seaweed meringue

180 g oyster juice

10 g white soy sauce

20 g egg whites

200 g S° sugar

100 g dried seaweed

Preparation:

Whisk until stiff, form into meringues with a piping bag on a tray lined with baking parchment and dry in the oven for 48 hours

Tomato fondue

  • 2 shallots, garlic, rosemary, thyme
  • 6 beef tomatoes
  • 100 g chicken stock.

Preparation:

  1. Cook, reduce, liquidise and pass through a sieve.
  2. Keep warm.

Ground hazelnut oil

  • 100 g “Perles de Gascogne” hazelnut oil
  • 80 g malt
  • fleur de sel and white pepper.

Preparation:

  1. Mix together the ingredients.

Garnish

  • Cauliflower cream
  • Broccoli cream

Preparation:

Cook separately in boiling water, drain and mix in a blender until it forms a very smooth paste.

Basil coulis

  1. Blend the basil with extra virgin “Fiore” olive oil, adding a drop of Xantiane for the consistency .

 

Recipe kindly provided by our partner www.olive-net.be.

Young Anjou pigeon with prune kernel oil, muscovado rounds, stuffed with patte confite

Recipe for young Anjou pigeon with plum kernel oil by the Belgian chef Stéphane LefebvreRecipe by Chef Stéphane Lefebvre
Restaurant Aux Petits Oignons in Belgium

Ingredients:

  • 2 young pigeon
  • Perles de Gascogne Prune Kernel Oil
  • Extra virgin “Fiore” olive oil
  • Thyme, bay leaves, brown sugar, salt
  • 4 waxy potatoes
  • Peppers, courgettes
  • 100 g of milk
  • 70 g of muscovado sugar
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 20 g of soy sauce
  • 1.6 g of agar-agar

Preparation:

  • Young pigeons: 
  1. Remove the thighs, brown them and preserve them in chicken stock with thyme, bay leaves and brown sugar.
  2. Gut and clean the rest of the pigeons and cook sous vide at 58°C with a bit of prune kernel oil for 1 hour.
  3. Roast the pigeons and remove the breasts.
  • Stuffed potato:
  1. Clean 4 waxy potatoes, remove the middles and blanch them.
  2. Bone the lower part of the pigeon thighs, chop finely and add a brunoise of peppers, courgettes and chives.
  3. Add a dash of extra virgin “Fiore” olive oil
  • Prune kernel foam:
  1. Mix 100 g milk, 20 g muscovado, 5 g prune kernel oil and 1 egg yolk.
  2. Heat to 80°C and make the foam with an electric whisk.
  • Muscovado* rounds:
  1. Mix 130 g water, 20 g soy sauce, 50 g muscovado, a pinch of salt and 1.6 g agar-agar.
  2. Bring to the boil and then pour onto a tray. Cut into circles once it has cooled.

*Muscovado : Unrefined cane sugar from Mauritius

Recipe kindly provided by our partner www.olive-net.be.

Tournedos of rabbit with tapioca pearls

Recipe by Chef Jean-Pierre Bruneau

Restaurant “Bruneau”

Recipe for tournedos of rabbit with plum oil by the Belgian chef Jean-Pierre Bruneau

Ingredients for 6 people:

  • 1 saddle of rabbit of around 500 g with its panoufles
  • 2 rabbit thighs of around 250 g, 1 crépinette (sausage parcel)
  • 125 g of champignon mushrooms – 125 g of smoked bacon
  • 1 shallot – Mixed herbs
  • 1 teaspoon of Marc de Bourgogne
  • 100 ml of virgin Perles de Gascogne Plum Kernel Oil
  • 0.075 g of Agar-Agar – salt and pepper
  • 3 baby carrots, 6 green asparagus, 12 mange-tout,
  • 1 red curly endive, 100 g of basil cress

 

Preparation: 

  1. Bone the raw rabbit saddle and put to one side. Dice the rabbit thighs, smoked bacon and champignons into small pieces. Finely slice the shallot.
  2. In a frying pan, brown the shallot in 50 ml of Plum Kernel oil with 50 ml of Méditerranéo Bio extra virgin olive oil in a frying pan. Add the diced meat and mushrooms, season with pepper and cook for 5 minutes. Then add the Marc de Bourgogne and leave for a further 5 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
  3. When cooled, place this stuffing on the saddle and roll it up with a crépinette around it. Cook in the oven at 180°C for approx. 40 minutes.
  4. For the tapioca pearl decoration, cook 50 g of tapioca pearls in salted water for 30 minutes. Strain and cool.
  5. Boil 125 g of meat broth with 0.075 g of Agar-Agar. Mix in the tapioca pearls and cast into a mould the shape of the tournedos.
  6. Chop and mix your vegetables and salad, season and mix with the rest of the Plum Kernel Oil with a touch of «Vintage Collection» balsamic vinegar.
  7. Use your creativity to decorate the dish, bearing in mind that the tapioca pearls will be placed around the tournedos.

 

Recipe kindly provided by our partner www.olive-net.be.