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Grilled Marinated Quail |
Marinated
quail in Asian Spices was part of the famous black plate that was offered at
Vong Restaurant in New York. It was
served on a salad of shredded red cabbage and watercress and topped with fried leeks. I've
made the dish many times using frozen boneless quail. However, recently, I visited a butcher where
they were selling fresh whole quail. I couldn't resist.
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Fresh Whole Quail |
Since Vong
closed several years ago and this was one of my favorite dishes, I revisited the
recipe. This time I made the quail on a
grill-pan using a grill press. This recipe is adapted from the cookbook,
Jean-Georges, Cooking at Home with a Four Star Chef.
1/2
cup low-sodium soy sauce
1/4
cup water
1/4
cup minced shallots
1
Tablespoon rice vinegar
1
Tablespoon five-spice powder
1
Tablespoon palm sugar (or brown sugar)
1
teaspoon fresh ginger, minced
1
teaspoon garlic, minced
1/8
teaspoon coarse pepper
2
Quail, whole*
Canola
or grape seed oil
Combine
the soy sauce with the water, shallots, rice vinegar, five-spice powder, brown
sugar, ginger, garlic and peppercorns. Simmer over moderately high heat for
about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Cool
to room temperature. Strain the marinade
into a bowl. Add the quail. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and
refrigerate overnight. Bring to room temperature before proceeding.
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Marinated Quail |
Remove
the quail from the marinade and pat dry.
Cut each down it's backbone to make one large flat piece.
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Quail Under Press |
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Grilled Quail |
Heat
the oil in a grill pan. Add the quail, skin-side down. Place a weight on top of the quail and cook over
high heat until the skin is browned and the meat is rare, about 4-5 minutes. Turn quail over and brown the other side for
another 2 minutes or until quail are cooked through. Serve hot, with a salad.
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On a Salad |
*If
fresh whole quail are not available, then frozen semi-boneless quail are
fine. Of course, completely thaw quail
before marinating.
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