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Mussels Colbert: A French Family Recipe and How to Buy
and Clean Mussels
By Philippe Broad,
Cyberchef
Serves 4
PARIS, 24 JANUARY 2008Here is a delicious dish for
garlic-lovers which Gabrielle would serve to us at my grandmother's villa
in the south of France. Only to be eaten in the company of the love of
your life, otherwise she or he may flee you for a good 24 hours! As it is
served on the half-shell, and most deliciously eaten with one's fingers,
large mussels are better for this dish.
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Ingredients
12 to 15 large fresh Mussels per
person, or 2 kg (4.5 lbs) in total 4 large Shallots or 2 medium
Onions finely chopped 4 to 8 cloves of Garlic (according to taste)
finely chopped Parsley chopped (same volume as Shallots and garlic
combined) 80g un-salted Butter 2 glasses Muscadet, Gros Plant
or dry white wine 2 teaspoons Flour 1 glass cooked Juice from
the Mussels 3 to 4 Egg Yolks (depending on size) Pepper from
the mill Salt 2 Bay leaves
Buying,
cleaning and preparing the Mussels

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Preparation
- Place the mussels in a large pan with 2 Bay leaves and a generous
quantity of Pepper, and cook over a high heat. As soon as the
mussels have opened, which indicates that they are cooked, begin
removing them progressively from the pan. Discard one shell, tranfer
to a wide flat serving dish and keep warm. Continue the process
until all the mussels are cooked. Discard any mussels which do not
open spontaneously. Sieve the natural juices left in the pan and
keep warm.
- In parallel, using a shallow pan, season the shallots, garlic and
parsley with pepper and cook in the butter, without browning them,
until the shallots are soft. Pour in the white wine and cook briskly
for 2 to 3 minutes allowing the alcohol to evaporate. Blend the
flour with the juice from the mussels to produce about a glass of
liquid paste. Blend into the other ingredients and allow to cook for
a further 2 minutes, then remove from heat.
- Away from heat, add the yolks one at a time, blending them
rapidly and thoroughly with the other ingredients. This will bind
the sauce which should have a thick fluid consistency without being
runny. Check the seasoning, adding salt if necessary, but remember
that the juice from the mussels is already salty.
- Presentation.
Pour the sauce over the mussels so
as to garnish each shell. This dish is delicious both hot and warm,
or served at room temperature in the summertime. It's finger food -
so get out the finger-bowls! Serve with crispy rolls or French bread
and a chilled dry white wine.
Our Wine recommendations:
Muscadet, Gros Plant or Cassis.
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