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VEAU ORLOFF


Veau Orloff
Recette de notre chef consultant Patrick Asfaux
Ingrédients :
Voici donc la recette d'un plat mythique la noix de veau Orloff (ou rôti de veau Orloff) !
Cette recette s'est d'abord appelée Selle de veau Orloff , voici donc son histoire :
Cette recette fut créée, proposée et préparée par le célèbre cuisinier URBAIN-DUBOIS. Celui-ci resta le chef pendant plus de 20 ans du Comte ORLOFF ministre du Tsar Nicolas 1er qui résidait plus d'ailleurs plus souvent a Paris dans qu'à son siége moscovite.
On retrouve la trace de ses nombreux passages et de ses légendaires agapes dans les archives d'un des restaurants parisiens les plus côtés de l'époque nommé « Tortoni ». Les éléments principaux de cette recette sont la purée d'oignons dite « Soubise » et les champignons de Paris fondus en Duxelles le tout lié avec une sauce Maintenon mais à l'époque il était de bon ton de rajouter quelques dés de langue écarlate et une belle quantité de truffes noires émincées qu'on finissait avec quelques languettes de vieux Parmesan. Hélas, les temps changent mais même si je vous en donne une recette un peu expurgée elle n'en sera pas moins excellente.
Rôti de Veau Orloff pour 6 personnes :
1 morceau de noix de veau de 1,4 kg environ
250 g d'oignons épluchés et émincés finement (Roscoff si vous trouvez)
250 g de champignons de Paris nettoyés et taillés en minuscules carrés (Duxelles)
2 cuillers à soupe de crème
1 ou 2 échalote(s) entière(s)
un peu de fleur de thym
1 échalote ciselée
20 g de beurre
sel et poivre du moulin
Pour la Sauce Béchamel :
40 g de beurre
40 g de farine
50 cl de lait (1/2 litre)
sel poivre du moulin et noix de muscade.
3 jaunes d'oeuf
150 g d'emmental râpé
Progression :
Cette recette à une particularité, vous devez la confectionner la veille et la finir quelques minutes avant de la déguster.
Donc la veille :
1) Allumez votre four à 180°(th 6)
2) Dans une cocotte faites chauffer un peu de beurre et d' huile puis faites rôtir de chaque côté votre rôti de veau assaisonné, ajoutez 1 ou 2 échalotes entières autour avec un peu de fleur de thym et 2 cuillers d'eau et faites cuire au four en l'arrosant pendant 50 minutes puis le sortir et le mettre a reposer sur une assiette.
3) Pendant la cuisson de votre morceau de veau, préparez vos garnitures :
a) Mettez vos oignons émincés dans une casserole, les couvrir d'eau et faites bouillir 2 minutes (blanchir) puis débarrassez dans une assiette.
b) Dans une sauteuse mettez un peu de beurre, ajoutez votre échalote ciselée puis au bout d'1 minute, versez vos champignons en duxelles, salez et poivrez puis ajoutez la crème puis laissez cuire doucement (il ne faut plus de liquide au fond).
c) Dans une casserole faire fondre un peu de beurre puis sans couleur faites confire doucement vos lamelles d'oignons blanchis et assaisonnez.
d) Préparez votre béchamel, faites fondre le beurre puis ajoutez la farine remuez au fouet et faites cuire sans couleur (roux blanc) pendant 5minutes puis ajoutez petit a petit le lait FROID remuez et assaisonnez sel poivre et noix de muscade cuisson 20 minutes à feu doux puis divisez cette sauce également dans 2 saladiers.
Lorsque tous ces éléments seront préparés :
4) Mélangez purée d'oignons et duxelles de champignons dans un des saladier de béchamel rectifiez l'assaisonnement et rentrez au frigo.
A ce moment vous avez donc le rôti cuit que vous rentrerez au frigo une fois refroidi et donc sa garniture prête à l'emploie.
Le lendemain, 1 heure de manger :
1) Allumez le four à 220°(th 7-8)
2) Mettez votre rôti de veau allongé devant vous et à l'aide d'un couteau fin (tranche-lard) taillez 4 tranches égales dans la longueur, c'est a dire que vous avez devant vous 4 tranches identiques. Installez la 1ere tranche dans un plat long allant au four à l'aide d'une spatule étalez un 1/3 de votre purée (oignons champignons béchamel)puis vous recouvrez d'une tranche puis vous continuez et enfin vous finissez par une jolie tranche a la fin ainsi le rôti sera complètement reconstitué.
3) Faites bouillir votre reste de béchamel puis hors du feu incorporez rapidement au fouet vos jaunes d'oeufs et la moitié de l'Emmental (75g).
4) Versez sur le rôti de manière à complètement le couvrir puis saupoudrez avec l'Emmental restant et mettez au four pour 15 minutes.
Servez à même le plat en ayant coupé 6 belles tranches épaisses.
Je sais, c'est une longue recette, mais cette préparation se situe vraiment dans les sommets de l'excellence et elle possède une autre qualité, préparée à l'avance elle vous permettra de vous occuper au mieux de vos invités !

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The 3 P.M. Brunch With the 4 A.M. Vibe By BEN DETRICKNOV. 16, 2011 Continue reading the main story Share This Page Share Tweet Pin Email More Save Photo An enthusiastic reveler parties to a performance by Roxy Cottontail, a promoter, at Eat Yo Brunch at Yotel on 10th Avenue, where the $35 brunch allows patrons to eat and drink for two hours. Credit Deidre Schoo for The New York Times BRUNCH, an occasion for flapjacks, Bloody Marys and meandering conversation, is traditionally the most sluggish of meals. But a smorgasbord of clubby New York restaurants have transformed lazy midday gatherings into orgies of overindulgence with blaring music, jiggling go-go dancers and bar tabs that mushroom into five figures. No, boozy brunches aren’t new. Inspired by the daytime debauchery on Pampelonne Beach in St.-Tropez, where jet-setters arrive by Ferrari and yacht, early iterations began at Le Bilboquet on the Upper East Side in the early ’90s, and spread to meatpacking district flashpoints like Bagatelle and Merkato 55 in 2008. But more recently, these brunches have been supersized, moving from smaller lounges to brassy nightclubs like Lavo and Ajna. The party blog Guest of a Guest has taken to calling it the “Battle of the Brunches.” “Not everyone gets to run to the beach or jump on a plane,” said Noah Tepperberg, an owner of Lavo in Midtown, which started its brunch party a year ago. “If you want to leave your house on the weekend, brunch fills that void.” On a recent Saturday, Mr. Tepperberg stood in Lavo’s basement kitchen, surrounded by meat slicers and employees readying confectionary “poison apples” for a Halloween party for a pre-split Kim Kardashian. Upstairs, patrons in costumes danced atop tables and chairs, bobbing to the carnival syncopation of Jay-Z and Kanye West’s “Paris.” Confetti and blasts of fog filled the air. Continue reading the main story Related Coverage slideshow The Brunch Party Takes Over Clubs NOV. 16, 2011 Advertisement Continue reading the main story It was 3 p.m. “People walk in and say, ‘I can’t believe this is going on right now,’ ” Mr. Tepperberg said. The brunch bacchanalia shows no sign of running dry. The Mondrian SoHo is starting Scene Sundays this month at its Imperial No. Nine restaurant. In Las Vegas, the original Lavo started a Champagne brunch a few weeks ago. Similar affairs have bubbled up in Boston, Los Angeles and Washington. For those looking to replicate the formula, here’s a guide to some of New York’s frothiest. Day and Night Ajna Bar (25 Little West 12th Street, dayandnightnyc.com); Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. This extravagant French-themed party landed in October at Ajna Bar in the meatpacking district, after dousing the Hamptons, Art Basel in Miami and the Oak Room in the Plaza Hotel with rosé. Beneath an industrial skylight and fluttering flags from the United Kingdom, France and Israel, well-heeled patrons pumped their fists and posed for purse-lipped Facebook photos, racking up huge tabs every Saturday. “I understand there’s a lot of people out there going through hard times,” said Daniel Koch, the promoter who helped start the Day and Night parties at Merkato 55. “But what you want to do with your money is your business.” SIGNAL TO DANCE ON TABLES “If you’ve been sprayed with Champagne, make some noise!” a hype man will shout between piercing dance tracks from Robyn, Calvin Harris and Oasis. Dancers in orange bathing suits will emerge; pipes will blast jets of fog. In a dangerously drunken take on a bar mitzvah ritual, a man spooning dessert out of a giant bowl will be seated on a chair and lifted high into the air by his cronies. BRUNCH SET Club-savvy guests seem piped in from Miami, Monaco and Merrill Lynch. “I’m from the South, so drinking during the day is not new to me,” said a woman who wore a Diane Von Furstenberg dress but not the necessary wristband to enter the V.I.P. area. Outside, near a black Aston Martin coupe, a young man wearing paint on his face and sunglasses delved into socioeconomics. “We’re the 1 percent,” he said to a woman, matter of factly. THE BUFFET The Nutella-stuffed croissants ($12) cater to Europeans, while a gimmicky $2,500 ostrich egg omelet (with foie gras, lobster, truffle, caviar and a magnum of Dom Perignon) is for aspiring Marie Antoinettes. Champagne bottles start at $500; packages with several bottles of liquor and mixers for mojitos or bellinis are $1,000. The check can be sobering. “You didn’t look at the price of the Dom bottle!” a man barked into his iPhone, to a friend who apparently ditched before paying. “It’s $700!” STILL-HOT ACCESSORY Slatted “shutter shades” live on at Day and Night. DID THE D.J. PLAY “WELCOME TO ST.-TROPEZ”? Yes. Lavo Champagne Brunch Lavo (39 East 58th Street, lavony.com); Saturday, 2 to 6:30 p.m. Smog guns. Confetti cannons. Piñatas. Masked masseuses. Dancers in Daisy Duke shorts (some on stilts, obviously). Since last November, this Italian restaurant has roiled with the energy and pageantry of Mardi Gras. At the recent Halloween party, Slick Rick, an old-school rapper with an eye patch and glinting ropes of jewelry, lethargically performed several ’80s hits. Some of the younger “Black Swans” in attendance were unsure of his identity. “Is he big in London?” asked an Australian woman wearing a top hat. SIGNAL TO DANCE ON TABLES Caffeinated anthems like Pitbull’s “Hey Baby” and Roscoe Dash’s “All the Way Turnt Up” are accentuated by processions of bouncers carrying women above them in tubs, like Cleopatra on a palanquin. Polenta pancakes taking up precious square footage? Just kick them aside with your stilettos. Newsletter Sign Up Continue reading the main story Open Thread Newsletter A look from across the New York Times at the forces that shape the dress codes we share, with Vanessa Friedman as your personal shopper. You agree to receive occasional updates and special offers for The New York Times's products and services. See Sample Privacy Policy Opt out or contact us anytime BRUNCH SET Share Champagne spritzers with willowy model types and inheritors of wealth. The scrum on an October afternoon included the son of a Mongolian dignitary, six scions of Mexican plutocracy wearing novelty somberos, and at least one supermodel. “She’s everywhere,” said Mr. Tepperberg, as the nymph, whose name he couldn’t remember, disappeared into the jungle of merriment. THE BUFFET With the emphasis on tabletop dancing, Italian trattoria offerings (margherita pizzas for $21, and lemon ricotta waffles for $19) are often abandoned underfoot and sprinkled with confetti. Proving alcohol reigns supreme here, ice buckets are carefully shielded with napkins. Bottle service rules: Moët Brut is $195 and liquor starts at $295. Balthazar and Nebuchadnezzar sizes surge toward the $10,000 mark. RISKY ROSé Alcohol and high-altitude dancing can be perilous: there was a brief hullabaloo in one corner when several women took a tumble. DID THE D.J. PLAY “WELCOME TO ST.-TROPEZ”? Yes. Eat Yo Brunch Yotel (570 10th Avenue, yotel.com); Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. If spending thousands of dollars makes your stomach turn, this newish party at Yotel is more easily digested. This affably cartoonish affair, held at the space-age hotel in Hell’s Kitchen with the design aesthetics of a Pokémon, draws a gay-friendly crowd lured northward by Patrick Duffy, a promoter. “There’s a lot of pressure in night life,” Mr. Duffy said. “But I feel like Sunday is a comedown. It doesn’t have to be perfect.” SIGNAL TO DANCE ON TABLES These connoisseurs of brunch wear designer shoes too stylish for tromping atop omelets. With a D.J. spinning dance tracks from LeLe and Earth, Wind & Fire, guests sip bellinis at the bar or banter at long communal tables. The performers are looser. One afternoon, Roxy Cottontail, a pink-haired promoter, vamped around the sunken dining area with a microphone. “Don’t make kitty pounce,” she rapped, before climbing atop a table. BRUNCH SET Clusters of trim men wear leather motorcycle jackets or shroud themselves in patterned scarves. “It’s an eclectic, downtown vibe,” Ms. Cottontail said. “We have the most fabulous gays in New York City.” When a platinum-blond waiter in skintight jeans pranced in front of a wall decorated with pictures of sumo wrestlers riding Japanese carp, it seemed straight from an anime cell. THE BUFFET For an egalitarian $35, patrons receive unlimited grub — options include chilaquiles, halibut sliders and seaweed salad — and a two-hour window of boozing. “It’s not bougie,” said Mr. Duffy, who bounded across the room hugging guests and hand-delivering shots. “You could be a poor, starving artist or someone that doesn’t take a client for under $20 million.” COLOR CODE Wear purple if you hope to be camouflaged by the staff outfits, chairs and ceilings. DID THE D.J. PLAY “WELCOME TO ST.-TROPEZ”? No. Sunset Saturdays PH-D Rooftop Lounge at Dream Downtown (355 West 16th Street, dreamdowntown.com); Saturday, 5:30 to 10 p.m. Despite a happy hour time slot, this sunset party atop the Dream Downtown hotel is not for pre-gaming. After funneling in brunch crowds from elsewhere, 8 p.m. has the frenzied atmosphere and intoxication of 2 a.m. The offbeat timing may deter conventional weekend warriors. “No matter how cool the place, some people feel Friday and Saturday nights are for amateurs,” said Matt Strauss, a manager of PH-D. “We’re not for amateurs.” SIGNAL TO DANCE ON TABLES The D.J. rapid-fires through tracks from C+C Music Factory, LMFAO and Rick Ross, but booze-lubricated guests scramble on couches with little hesitation. Those grappling with bursts of existential angst after six hours of brunch can gaze pensively at the spectacular views of Midtown Manhattan. BRUNCH SET Attractive women and affluent men knot around tables; hotel guests gawk from the bar. On a recent Saturday, Mark Wahlberg danced with a few friends, and David Lee, a former New York Knick, enjoyed downtime provided by the N.B.A. lockout. “We saw an angle,” said Matt Assante, a promoter. “People spend more money than at nighttime.” THE BUFFET Brunch is thankfully over, but crispy calamari ($17) and guacamole ($12) could constitute a light dinner. A bottle of Veuve Clicquot is $475. Cîroc vodka is $450. Cocktails like the Cloud Nine (Beefeater gin, Campari, grapefruit) are $18; a Bud Light is $10. WINDING DOWN After the rigors of daylong gorging, relax with the help of an on-site masseuse. DID THE D.J. PLAY “WELCOME TO ST.-TROPEZ”? Obviously.

The 3 P.M. Brunch With the 4 A.M. Vibe By BEN DETRICK NOV. 16, 2011 Continue reading the main story Share This Page Share Tweet Pin Email More Save Photo An enthusiastic reveler parties to a performance by Roxy Cottontail, a promoter, at Eat Yo Brunch at Yotel on 10th Avenue, where the $35 brunch allows patrons to eat and drink for two hours. Credit Deidre Schoo for The New York Times BRUNCH, an occasion for flapjacks, Bloody Marys and meandering conversation, is traditionally the most sluggish of meals. But a smorgasbord of clubby New York restaurants have transformed lazy midday gatherings into orgies of overindulgence with blaring music, jiggling go-go dancers and bar tabs that mushroom into fiv

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