Country liver pate is a rustic and flavorful spread that is easy to make at home. Made from a combination of chicken or pork liver, butter, and a variety of seasonings, this pâté can be served as an appetizer, spread on sandwiches, or used as a filling for savory tarts. The key to a great country liver pate is to use fresh, high-quality ingredients and to not overcook the liver.
Let's cook with our recipes!
COUNTRY STYLE PATE - AMERICAN TEST KITCHEN RECIPE
Country Style Pate - rich, incredibly flavorful pate recipe goes great with a fresh crusty baguette and a pickle. If you've never made this at home, do it at least once. Step by step pictures will be there to guide you every step of the way.
Provided by Marina | Let the Baking Begin
Categories Appetizer
Time 1h
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- In a skillet sweat the onion with the butter over medium heat until translucent, about 3 minutes .
- Combine 1 lb ground pork, 1/2 lb diced bacon, and 6 oz chopped liver until evenly distributed.
- In a separate bowl mix 1 egg, 2 Tbsp heavy whipping cream, 3-4 garlic cloves, 2 Tbsp thyme, ½ tsp ground pepper and 1½ tsp salt.
- Now bring the meat mixture, 2 Tbsp heavy cream mixture, diced carrots, cornichons and onions together and mix thoroughly.
- Place 1 bay leaf into the bottom of each 3" x 6" mini loaf pan, or 2-3 leaves if you're using one 4" x 9". Line the form with bacon, slightly overlapping, and allowing the ends to hang over the form. You will later wrap the filling with the ends that overhang. I cut each strip in half, instead of using the whole strip, which I regretted later.
- Drop the baking form against a counter several times, to bring out any bubbles that might have formed and to compact the meat mixture in. Cover the filled loaf pan with foil and wrap the ends tightly against the sides of the pan. Now put the filled loaf pans into a 3 inch rimmed baking pan. Fill the baking pan with hot boiling water until it comes halfway to the filled loaf pans. Put the baking a probe thermometer in the middle of one of the filled pans and extend the cord to the outside of the oven.
- Place in preheated to 350F oven and bake until the thermometer registers 165F.
- Remove the baking pan from the oven. Remove loaf pans, discard the liquid. Place the loaf pans back into the baking dish. Place something flat on top (like a cutting board) and put something heavy on top to compress the terrine and make it less crumbly when cutting. When the terrine has cooled to room temperature, remove the weight, clean the outside of the loaf pans and refrigerate for about 5-6 hours or overnight.
- When ready to serve, place the loaf pan into a bowl of hot water for about 20-30 seconds. Unwrap the foil from the top, place a plate or serving board on top and with one swift motion invert the terrine onto the plate. For cleaner cuts, dip a knife into hot water, wipe it and then cut the terrine into slices. Serve with pickles and fresh loaf of bread.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 253 kcal, Carbohydrate 1 g, Protein 13 g, Fat 21 g, SaturatedFat 8 g, Cholesterol 114 mg, Sodium 1138 mg, ServingSize 1 serving
CHEF JOHN'S PATE DE CAMPAGNE
I realize making this pate may seem like quite a production, but if you enjoy charcuterie, this would make for a very fun, beautiful, and quite delicious project.
Provided by Chef John
Categories Appetizers and Snacks Dips and Spreads Recipes Pate Recipes
Time 13h10m
Yield 12
Number Of Ingredients 22
Steps:
- Combine cloves, nutmeg, ginger, and cayenne pepper in a small bowl to make spice mixture.
- Place pork shoulder, duck meat, chopped bacon, chicken livers, onion, shallot, parsley, cognac, salt, garlic, pepper, 3/4 teaspoon spice mixture, and pink curing salt in a large bowl. Mix thoroughly until evenly distributed. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate about 2 hours.
- Whisk cream, bread crumbs, and eggs together in a bowl.
- Transfer pork mixture to a rimmed baking sheet lined with a silicone mat or parchment. Freeze for 15 to 20 minutes to facilitate grinding the meat.
- Grind pork mixture into a bowl using the meat-grinder attachment of a stand mixer. Add dried cherries and pistachios. Add the cream mixture; fold gently until just combined.
- Arrange bacon strips crosswise in a 9x5-inch loaf pan, letting ends hang over the edges of the pan. Trim some strips to fit the ends of the pan.
- Fill pan to the top with the ground pork mixture; smooth the top. Cover surface with strips of bacon. Fold side bacon piece edges over the top. Cover with a piece of parchment cut to fit the top of the pan; wrap tightly with heavy duty aluminum foil.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- Transfer pan to a deep pot or Dutch oven. Pour in hot tap water to reach 1/2 to 2/3 of the way up the side of the pan. Cover.
- Bake in the preheated oven until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the center reads 155 degrees F (68 degrees C), 1 3/4 to 2 hours.
- Transfer pan to a paper-towel lined surface to absorb any moisture. If mixture has risen above the top edge of the pan, press it down with a heavy pan. Remove the aluminum foil, leaving the parchment paper on top. Transfer pan to a paper-towel-lined baking dish. Cut a piece of cardboard to be slightly smaller than the top of the pan. Wrap with aluminum foil and place on the parchment paper. Press down with weights like canned food.
- Refrigerate at least 8 hours to chill and compress the pate.
- To unmold the pate, pour very hot water into a large bowl. Dip mold into hot water for 1 to 2 seconds. Turn out onto a paper-towel-lined dish; chill again before slicing.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 249.5 calories, Carbohydrate 10.6 g, Cholesterol 113.5 mg, Fat 14.7 g, Fiber 1.6 g, Protein 15 g, SaturatedFat 5.6 g, Sodium 1120.6 mg, Sugar 4 g
COUNTRY LIVER PATE
Make and share this Country Liver Pate recipe from Food.com.
Provided by red white kitchen
Categories Spreads
Time 15m
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- In 10 inch skillet over medium high heat add 1/4 cup butter.
- Add chicken liver, green onions and garlic, cook about 5 minutes, until tender yet still slightly pink inside.
- Stir in white wine and hot sauce. Cover and simmer on medium low heat 5 minutes.
- In a blender at low speed, blend cooked liver mixture until smooth, scraping sides with a spatula.
- In the same skillet over low heat melt remaining 1/2 cup butter. Add this and salt & pepper to liver mixture.
- Refrigerate at least 6 hours. Add mayonaise to liver pate strring well.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 146.7, Fat 14.8, SaturatedFat 7.8, Cholesterol 33, Sodium 370.7, Carbohydrate 2.8, Fiber 0.1, Sugar 0.8, Protein 0.3
COUNTRY PATE
Provided by Food Network
Categories appetizer
Time P1DT2h30m
Yield 1 loaf or 18 appetizers
Number Of Ingredients 20
Steps:
- Trim veal or chicken and pork of excess fat and tendons. Skin fatback. Cut into 1 inch cubes and pass through largest hole of a meat grinder. Transfer to a large bowl. Stir in salt, pepper, and applejack. Cover with plastic wrap touching the mixture and refrigerate at least 1 day or as long as 3.
- After marinating, heat oil in a medium skillet over high heat. Saute livers until well browned, about 1 minute per side. Remove from pan and set aside to cool. Add garlic and cook about 1/2 minute, being careful not to let it color. Reserve garlic with liver.
- Add brandy and bay leaves to same skillet. Scrape bottom of pan to loosen brown bits and cook over low heat until warm, about 5 minutes. Set aside to cool and remove and discard bay leaves.
- Dip white bread in warm water to soften. Squeeze out excess moisture. Add to the liver and garlic along with 2 cups marinated ground meat, allspice, nutmeg, and brandy. Stir to combine.
- Transfer to a food processor, add eggs, and puree until a smooth paste is formed. This paste will bind the pate. Place puree in a large bowl, add remaining ground meat, and combine well. (We recommend using your hands, not a spoon, to combine this dense mixture.)
- Preheat oven to 325 degrees F.
- Line a 9 by 5 by 3 inch glass or ceramic loaf pan with bacon slices so they overhang lengthwise, about 3 inches on each end. Slice ham and tongue into 4 by 1/2 by 1/2 inch julienne strips.
- Spread about a cup of pate evenly over the bacon to cover the bottom. Arrange alternating strips of ham and tongue lengthwise, over the pate. Repeat this procedure, alternating pate with strips
- of ham and tongue, until pan is filled and top layer is pate. (When the loaf is sliced you will see a regular pattern of solids and pate.) Fold overhanging bacon over the top. (The pate may rise slightly over the top of the pan. That's OK.)
- Tap pan against a counter to firmly pack. Garnish top with bay leaves and garlic cloves. Cover with 2 layers aluminum foil, tucking edges under to completely seal. Place inside a larger pan and pour in boiling water until it rises halfway up the sides of the pate. Bake 2 hours 15 minutes. Set aside to cool.
- Place cooled pate on a baking sheet and cover with another baking sheet. Top with some 3 pounds of weights (canned goods or milk cartons are good) and refrigerate overnight or as long as 2 weeks. This compacts the pate and makes it easier to slice.
- To serve, remove and discard the bay leaf and garlic garnish. To loosen, dip pan's bottom in warm water and run a knife along inside edges. Invert onto a serving platter. Cut into 1/2 inch slices and serve on lettuce leaves.
CHICKEN LIVER PATE
Steps:
- In a skillet over medium heat, saute the onions in half of the olive oil until caramelized, about 30 minutes. Remove half of the onions from the skillet and set aside. Add the remaining olive oil and continue cooking over high heat until the onions are crispy and golden brown; add more olive oil if necessary. Drain on paper towels, season with salt and pepper and set aside for garnish.
- In a small pot of salted simmering water, poach the chicken livers for 5 minutes on low heat. Drain on paper towels.
- In a food processor, puree the livers with the carrots, 2 hard-boiled eggs and the caramelized onions until smooth. Season with salt and pepper. Add nutmeg. Push through a fine mesh sieve if desired.
- Pack the mousse into a serving dish and smooth the top. Cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours.
- Garnish with the crispy onions and grate the remaining 2 hard-boiled eggs right before serving. Serve with bread, toasts or crackers.
COUNTRY PATE
Make and share this Country Pate recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Chef Regina V. Smith
Categories Canadian
Time 2h
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- In food processor, pulse the salt pork, chicken livers and chicken meat until it forms a slightly grainy puree.
- In a bowl, combine all of the meat, spirits, herbs and spices. Season with salt and pepper.
- Spray a 9" X 5" loaf pan with cooking spray and line the pan with 6 of the prosciutto slices. Spoon the meat mixture into the pan. Cover with the remaining prosciutto slices and press lightly. Cover with aluminum foil. Refrigerate for one hour.
- With a rack in the middle position, preheat the oven to 350°F.
- Set the loaf pan in a baking dish. Pour boiling water into the dish until it reaches halfway up the side of the loaf pan.
- Bake until a thermometer inserted into the center reads 165 F, about 1 1/2 hours. Allow the pate to cool in the water. Remove from the water and refrigerate for at least 3 hours, preferably overnight.
- Served chilled or at room temperature with slices of French bread.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 228.2, Fat 17.1, SaturatedFat 6.2, Cholesterol 124.8, Sodium 289, Carbohydrate 0.1, Fiber 0.1, Protein 17.1
POULTRY LIVER PATE WITH TRUFFLES
Pâté with truffles is a French classic for New Year's Eve. It is easy to make but needs to rest for 1 day in the refrigerator so plan accordingly.
Provided by stella
Categories Pate
Time P1DT1h15m
Yield 12
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (180 degrees C).
- Combine chicken livers and ham in a food processor and process until finely chopped. Add sausage, thyme, egg, and salt. Process for 10 seconds. Stir in truffles.
- Line a terrine mould with bacon, making sure you have some overhang so you can cover the pate with it. Spoon mixture into the mould and even it out with a spatula. Scatter bay leaves on top. Fold extra bacon on top of the mixture and cover mould with a lid or aluminum foil.
- Bake in the preheated oven until pate has set, about 1 hour. Allow to cool and refrigerate for at least 24 hours before slicing.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 181.3 calories, Carbohydrate 7.4 g, Cholesterol 111.2 mg, Fat 11.7 g, Fiber 4 g, Protein 13.2 g, SaturatedFat 4 g, Sodium 555.5 mg
COUNTRY PâTé
Making homemade pâté, of course, is all about grinding. Here again, you can always buy a ready-made pâté from a specialty store, but making your own allows you total command of the quality of the ingredients and the freshness of the finished product. This recipe is for a country-style pâté, which means that it's more rustic in texture and appearance than a smoother, mousse-like pâté. Country-style pâté usually includes chicken liver as well as pork and veal. The mixture is ground coarsely, and small cubes of meat, bits of fruit, and nuts-called garnishes-are folded in before the whole thing is packed into a terrine and baked. Maintaining the desired texture depends on making sure that all the ingredients-as well as the grinding equipment itself-are well chilled before you grind. Place everything in the freezer (the grinder for a half hour, the meat for fifteen minutes or so), so it's very cold, then grind the meats according to their fat content, starting with the fattiest, as these are most likely to lose their structure and become pasty if ground when warm. After baking the terrine in a water bath (bain marie), the final, vital step is weighting the pâté to compress it, eliminating excess moisture and fat and giving it a sliceable texture. Once the terrine is compressed and well chilled, unmold it, then slice with a serrated knife, which will cut cleanly without marring the shape. Serve with its classic accompaniments: good bread, a flavorful grainy mustard, and cornichons.
Yield Serves 6 to 12
Number Of Ingredients 23
Steps:
- Prepare ground meat Heat the oil in a medium sauté pan over medium-low heat. Add shallots and cook until translucent, stirring constantly to prevent browning, about 6 minutes. Place in a large mixing bowl to cool. Meanwhile, grind the meats on medium speed with the fine die, making sure not to put too much meat into the feed tube at once. Grind the fatback first, before it becomes too warm, followed by the chicken livers, then the raw meats. Grind the cooked ham last (it has the firmest texture and least amount of fat and will be able to grind well even though the grinder parts are no longer as cold).
- Add shallots and garnishes Stir in the shallots, along with all of the garnishes, except the bay leaves. Add 2 teaspoons salt and mix to evenly distribute. To test for seasoning, heat some oil in a small skillet and cook a small amount of pâté mixture thoroughly. Taste and adjust seasoning, if desired.
- Prepare mold Heat oven to 400°F with rack in center. Line a 1 1/2-quart, 4 by 13-inch terrine with bacon, slightly overlapping the pieces and leaving an overhang of about 4 inches on one side (most likely you will need to use one whole piece and a half piece laid end to end, in order to have a piece long enough to line mold with desired overhang).
- Fill mold Bring a medium pot of water to a boil while you fill the mold. Spoon some of the meat mixture in the bottom of the mold and press firmly into the corners. Continue with remaining meat, making sure to distribute it firmly and evenly as you work so there are no gaps or air bubbles. When all meat is in the mold, press to flatten meat evenly. Fold over bacon, beginning with the long sides first, then the short ends. Arrange bay leaves on top. Cover with terrine lid.
- Bake Place terrine in a roasting pan and add boiling water until the level reaches halfway up the sides of the terrine. Bake until an instant-read thermometer inserted near the middle registers 165°F, about 1 1/2 hours.
- Compress pâté Cut a piece of cardboard to fit the interior of the terrine mold. Wrap cardboard tightly in aluminum foil. Remove terrine from roasting pan. Remove lid, and place terrine on wire rack set on a rimmed baking sheet. Place prepared cardboard on top of the terrine. Weight with canned items or other heavy objects. (This will allow excess fat to spill over the sides of the terrine as the pâté compresses.) Refrigerate terrine for 8 hours. (Terrine can be refrigerated up to 3 days; remove cardboard and weight after 8 hours, then cover tightly with lid or plastic wrap.)
- Unmold pâté Unmold terrine by inverting onto a platter or cutting board. If necessary, dip terrine in warm water and run a paring knife around edge to loosen before inverting.
- Serve With a serrated knife, cut pâté into 1/2-inch-thick slices, and serve with toasted baguette slices, grainy mustard, and cornichons.
- You will need a 1 1/2-quart terrine that is about 4 by 13 inches. The terrine is lined with bacon in the recipe below to add another layer of flavor; be sure there is adequate overhang on one long side of the dish, so you can wrap it over the top of the mixture, covering the entire surface.
Tips:
- Choose fresh, high-quality liver. This will ensure that your pâté has a rich, flavorful taste.
- Soak the liver in milk for at least 30 minutes before cooking. This will help to remove any impurities and make the liver more tender.
- Cook the liver until it is just cooked through. Overcooked liver will be tough and dry.
- Use a food processor or blender to purée the liver until it is smooth. You can also chop the liver finely by hand, but this will take longer.
- Season the pâté to taste with salt, pepper, and other spices. You can also add herbs, vegetables, or nuts to your pâté for extra flavor.
- Chill the pâté for at least 2 hours before serving. This will allow the flavors to meld and will make the pâté easier to spread.
- Serve the pâté with crackers, bread, or vegetables. You can also use it as a filling for sandwiches or wraps.
Conclusion:
Country liver pâté is a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed as an appetizer, snack, or main course. With its rich, flavorful taste and smooth texture, pâté is sure to be a hit with your family and friends. So next time you're looking for a new and exciting way to enjoy liver, give country liver pâté a try.
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