Venison with Bordelaise Sauce and Date

Scott Paton

Scott Paton

2nd November 2023
Scott Paton

Venison with Bordelaise Sauce and Date

200 min

Venison Bordelaise with Date by Scott Paton 

Ingredients

VENISON

  • 1 loin of venison

RED WINE SALSIFY

  • 200g shallots
  • 50g butter
  • 10g garlic
  • 5g thyme
  • 200g port
  • 200g Madeira
  • 100g brandy
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 500g salsify

VENISON SAUCE

  • 200g venison trim and fat
  • 300g shallots
  • 10g sherry vinegar
  • 100g celery
  • 100g mushrooms
  • 200g red wine
  • 500g chicken stock
  • 200g veal glace
  • 10g venison blood

DATE

  • 1 King Medjool date per person

Method

VENISON

1. For the venison, a centre cut section of the loin is best. Size will be dependent on the
number of people; we aim for about 120g per person.
2. Trim the loin into a nice barrel, keeping the shape natural but removing the silverskin and
any sinew that may toughen the meat when cooking. Leave in a fridge for an hour or so
uncovered with the aim to sightly dry it out.
3. To cook the venison, it’s important to treat it with sympathy, really keep an eye on the
pan temperature. You want to gently colour the exterior, but not a hard roast as it will
dry out very quickly and become livery in flavour.
4. In a pan on medium heat, add some oil
and let the meat cook. Once lightly coloured all around, place on an oven tray and put in
the oven set to 180°C for approx 3 minutes.
5. Once cooked, remove and keep somewhere warm to rest and finish cooking.

RED WINE SALSIFY

1. Peel and trim the salsify into 8cm sticks and leave to one side.
2. In a pan, sweat off the shallots, garlic and thyme in the butter with a pinch of salt.
3. Add the bay leaves and combined alcohol and simmer for 5 minutes.
4. Add the salsify and cover with a cartouche, allowing the salsify to poach slowly for 12
minutes until they become tender.

VENISON SAUCE

1. Fry off the venison trim on a medium heat to an even, dark colour and then add the
shallots, celery and mushrooms. Deglaze the pan with the sherry vinegar, then add the red
wine and reduce to a glace.
2. Add veal glace and bring to the boil, allowing to simmer for a few minutes before adding
the chicken stock. Bring to a simmer and leave for 3 hours to extract all the flavour.
3. Pass through a muslin cloth and set over night in a fridge.
4. In the morning, scrape the fat and
the layer of impurities leaving the clean jus and finish with the blood before serving.

DATE

1. Peel the Medjool dates by gently washing in some water as you go to stop them sticking.
2. Remove the stone by cutting half on one side and opening it out. Fill the void left by the
stone with the venison farce.
3. Roll back around to resemble a whole date and wrap
tightly in cling film. Steam for 6 minutes to set the farce, and place in the fridge to use later.

FINISH

1. Carve the venison into portion sized pieces and set on plate. Place the purée on the plate with the poached salsify to the side, finishing with the sauce.

In these challenging times…

The Staff Canteen team are taking a different approach to keeping our website independent and delivering content free from commercial influence. Our Editorial team have a critical role to play in informing and supporting our audience in a balanced way. We would never put up a paywall and restrict access – The Staff Canteen is open to all and we want to keep bringing you the content you want; more from younger chefs, more on mental health, more tips and industry knowledge, more recipes and more videos. We need your support right now, more than ever, to keep The Staff Canteen active. Without your financial contributions this would not be possible.

Over the last 12 years, The Staff Canteen has built what has become the go-to platform for chefs and hospitality professionals. As members and visitors, your daily support has made The Staff Canteen what it is today. Our features and videos from the world’s biggest name chefs are something we are proud of. We have over 500,000 followers across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and other social channels, each connecting with chefs across the world. Our editorial and social media team are creating and delivering engaging content every day, to support you and the whole sector - we want to do more for you.

A single coffee is more than £2, a beer is £4.50 and a large glass of wine can be £6 or more.

Support The Staff Canteen from as little as £1 today. Thank you.