Ingredients
2 2 1/2-lb farm-raised ready-to-roast, pheasants
2 medium navel oranges
1 large carrot, quartered
1 medium onion, quartered
2 tbsp butter or margarine
2 1/2 cup water
1 wild and brown rice mix (opt.)
1/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup red-wine vinegar
1/4 cup dry red wine
2 tbsp cornstarch
3/4 tsp salt
Directions
1. Heat oven to 375'F. Rinse pheasants and pat dry. Remove any excess
fat from body and neck cavities. Reserve necks and giblets. Loosen
skin from the breast meat of each pheasant with your fingers, With
knife, cut peel or rind and all membrane off 1 orange; cut peeled
orange crosswise into 1/4-inch-thick slices. Reserve peel.
2. Place half of the orange slices on breast meat under the skin of
each bird. Tuck wing tips under back to hold neck skin down. Place 1
carrot quarter, 1 onion quarter, and half of the orange peel inside
each body cavity. Using kitchen string, tie the legs of each pheasant
together.
3. In 2-quart saucepan, melt butter; remove from heat. Place
pheasants, breast sides up, on rack in a large roasting pan. Brush
birds all over with melted butter. Set aside pan with any leftover
butter.
4. Roast the birds 30 minutes. Meanwhile, in saucepan with leftover
butter, brown reserved necks and giblets. Add remaining onion and
carrot quarters; saute 1 minute. Add water; heat to boiling.
Partially cover pan; simmer giblet mixture over medium heat 45
minutes or until liquid is reduced by almost a third.
5. Brush birds with pan drippings. Turn each bird on its side; cover
breasts with pieces of aluminum foil. Continue to roast birds 15
minutes. Turn birds to roast on other side; roast 15 to 20 minutes
longer orjust until juices run clear when thighs are pierced with a
fork and breast meat near wing joint cut parallel to the bone is
white with a touch of pink but no longer wet and soft.
6. While pheasants are roasting, prepare rice following package direc-
tions, if desired. Drain body-cavity juices from birds into roasting
pan; cut string off birds. Transfer birds to a serving platter;
surround with hot cooked rice blend; keep warm. Add giblet mixture to
the roasting pan; heat and stir to loosen browned-on bits from the
bottom of the pan. Strain mixture into a 4-cup measuring cup or bowl;
discard particles. Spoon off fat from top of strained liquid. You
should have 2 cups liquid; if not, add water or chicken broth.
7. In 2-quart saucepan, heat sugar and vinegar to boiling, stirring
often until sugar dissolves. Continue to boil sugar mixture or syrup
until golden brown or it caramelizes 3 to 5 minutes. Remove from
heat; set aside. In cup, combine wine and cornstarch; stir into syrup
in sauce- pan. Whisk in strained 2 C liquid and salt; return to heat
and boil, stirring constantly, until sauce thickens. Brush some sauce
over birds; pour remainder into small pitcher.
8. Peel and thinly slice remaining orange. Arrange over pheasant
breasts. To carve, using sharp knife, remove the legs and thighs from
the birds. Cut the drumsticks from the thighs. Thinly slice the
breasts off the bone. Pass sauce with the meat.
Country Living Holidays/92 Scanned & fixed by Di Pahl &
Servings: 6 servings
Pheasant A' L'orange - Country Living Holiday Recipe brought to you by Recipe Ideas
Categories: Fruit; Holiday; Pheasant; Poultry; Wild Game
The History of Recipes
We can follow the history of written recipes back into antiquity, at least as far back into recorded history as early Egypt, and maybe even further. Interesting though that is, mostly, these ancient recipes were just very basic pictorial, hieroglyphic or cunieform recipes for preparing meals.
In an interesting twist, the oldest recipe in existence, according to experts is a series of ancient tablets in Sumerian which recount the making of bread which is then used to make a drink, quite possibly a form of beer as it is recorded as having made people feel `blissful`. Continuing our culinary historical journey, we find two interesting books which date from the fourteenth century - a recipe book called `Forme of Cury`, and another, similary titled `Curye on Inglish`. Surprisingly, they are nothing to do with the spicy food that is served today, but instead accounts of the types of food served to the upper classes. Over the succeeding few hundred years, the powerful and wealthy houses competed with each other to serve the most exotic meals, and as a consequence, the best chefs and their recipes became highly prized. Nevertheless, it was during the 1800s that cooking and recipe publications rose to prominence. The Famous Mrs Beeton in the UK, and the equally famous Fannie Merritt Farmer in the USA, devoted their lives to collecting, trying out, and recording recipes of the day. When we get to the twentieth century, cook books are in high demand, mostly due to more people being able to read, people having increased spare time and disposable income. The TV revolution gave us cooking programs and the recipe books that accompanied them. And that brings us to the present day and the internet revolution, permitting us all to access thousands of recipes such as those found on sites such as the one you are reading now. |
We hope you enjoy this Pheasant A' L'orange Country Living Holiday recipe.
