Best Hot Game Pie Recipes

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HOT GAME PIE



Hot game pie image

Gordon Ramsay creates the ultimate game pie - wonderful autumnal vegetables with pheasant and venison, all under a crisp crust.

Provided by Gordon Ramsay

Categories     Buffet, Dinner, Lunch, Main course

Time 1h35m

Number Of Ingredients 22

2 pheasants , about 800g each
olive or sunflower oil
sprigs fresh thyme and rosemary
2 bay leaves
1 carrot , chopped
1medium onion , chopped
200ml red wine
1 tbsp tomato purée
1small celeriac , about 600g, peeled and chopped into large chunks
50g butter
bunch rosemary , thyme and parsley
3 venison sausages
oil , for frying
100g pancetta , skinned and cut in small cubes or use bacon lardons
125g shallot or baby onions
150g mixture cleaned mushroom (try shiitakes, ceps and chestnuts)
200g young parsnip , peeled and cut into 6cm sticks
2 tsp clear honey
2 tsp grain mustard
250-300g puff pastry , thawed if frozen
2 egg yolks
sprigs of thyme and sea salt, to decorate

Steps:

  • Untie the pheasants and pull out the legs. Using the tip of a very sharp knife, detach the legs where the thigh joins the body. Then slice off the breast fillets from the rib cage as neatly as possible and set aside. Discard the rest of the carcass.
  • Heat 2 tbsp oil in a large pan, brown the legs and season. Add the carrot, onion and 2-3 sprigs thyme, rosemary, bay leaves and cook for 5 mins. Pour in the wine, boil to reduce by three-quarters, then mix in the tomato purée. Cook for 1-2 mins, pour in 1.25 litres water and bring to a rapid boil. Skim off any fat and scum that rises to the top.
  • Simmer the stock until it reduces by half to around 600ml, about 15 mins. Strain the stock and pour back into the pan. Boil until reduced to around 300ml. You can make up to this point 2 days in advance or freeze the stock for up to 1 month. (The leg meat isn't used in this recipe, but you can shred
  • Make a celeriac purée. Sauté the celeriac in the butter with 2 sprigs rosemary in a covered pan for 15-20 mins until soft. Discard the rosemary. Heat the stock, put a small ladleful in a blender or food processor with the celeriac, then blitz to a purée.
  • Slice the breast fillets into large chunks and poach in the stock for 7 mins until just firm. Remove and set aside. Add the sausages, poach for 8-10 mins, then remove and slice. Take the stock off the heat.
  • Heat oil in a large frying pan and sauté the pancetta for 4-5 mins. Add the shallots or onions and some oil, then cook for another 5 mins. Tip the mixture into a large bowl. Add more oil to the pan and fry the mushrooms for 5 mins. Add to the bowl and toss together with your hands or a large spoon.
  • Tip the parsnips into the pan with the honey and the leaves of a sprig of thyme. Season and cook for 5-7 mins, discard the thyme and remove to the bowl along with the meat. Chop a sprig each of thyme, rosemary and parsley, add to the bowl and toss everything together.
  • Heat the stock and mix in 1 tbsp of the celeriac purée and the mustard. Spoon the remaining purée into the bottom of a deep rectangular 22 x 10cm pie dish. Tip the filling on top, then pour over the stock. The filled pie dish can be covered with cling film and chilled for up to a day.
  • Heat oven to 200C/fan 180C/gas 6. Roll out the pastry on a lightly floured board to the thickness of £1 coin. Beat the yolks until smooth and brush some around the rim of the pie dish. Lay the pastry on top and press down the edge to seal. Using a sharp knife, trim off the excess, then pinch the edges to crimp. Brush evenly with more glaze.
  • Cut out some small oval shapes, score leaf marks down the centre and pinch the ends. Fix onto the pastry and glaze with the egg. Fix thyme sprigs on top and crush over some sea salt flakes. Bake the pie for 10 mins, then reduce heat to 180C/fan 160C/gas 4 and bake for another 20-25 mins until golden and crisp. Leave to stand for 10 mins before serving.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 987 calories, Fat 61 grams fat, SaturatedFat 23 grams saturated fat, Carbohydrate 39 grams carbohydrates, Sugar 1.9 grams sugar, Fiber 10 grams fiber, Protein 62 grams protein, Sodium 3.14 milligram of sodium

TRADITIONAL RAISED GAME PIE...



TRADITIONAL RAISED GAME PIE... image

One day hubby came home with a few pigeon breasts, a couple of hares...so we thought it was the perfect time to make a raised pie. We had some wild boar and duck breasts in the freezer so added that to the mix..... For the pie I had a look on the net and did a bit of a meld of various old fashioned raised game pie recipes It...

Provided by Amanda P

Categories     Wild Game

Time 3h

Number Of Ingredients 35

21/2 lb (1 kg) game meat (weight after trimming) - i use a mix of pigeon breasts, hare, venison and wild boar
1/4 tsp ground mace
4 Tbsp sloe gin (gin steeped in sloe berries) - or red wine (didn't have red wine or sloe gin so i used red wine vinegar and it worked!!)
12 sage leaves, finely sliced
A few leaves from one thyme sprig
A few pinch seasoning - pinch of sea-salt and black pepper
FOR THE HOT WATER CRUST
10 oz 280g lard
10 fl oz (300mls)water (boiling)
1 tsp sea-salt
1 tsp ground black pepper
53/4 c 750g of plain flour
1 egg, for the pastry
1 egg, beaten, for glaze
TRADITIONAL HOME-MADE PORK JELLY FOR PIES
2 lb 900g pork bones - make sure there's a bit of meat on them
2 pigs trotter...that will fit in a saucepan
2 large carrots, roughly chopped
1 bay leaf roughly chopped
1 medium onion, peeled, roughly chopped
A few sprig(s) thyme
2 tsp whole black peppercorns (crushed lightly) 1
1 tsp sea salt
SIMPLE PORK JELLY FOR PIES
17 fl oz 500ml of pork stock (bought, or made with a pork stock cube)
1 vegetable stock cube
1/4 tsp sea salt
1/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper
1/4 tsp thyme (fresh or dried)
1/4 tsp sage (fresh or dried)
3 leaves gelatine
FOR THE PACKING MEAT
14 oz 400g lean pork shoulder (diced into small 1/2 cm cubes)
7 oz 200g belly of pork (minced)
31/2 oz 100g smoked streaky bacon rashers, finely diced

Steps:

  • 1. WARNING!!! This is not a quick pie!!I used a 22 to 24cm spring-form tin (greased with butter) The day before you need to make the filling as it needs to marinate AND the jelly whether you do it using a traditional stock or if doing a simple stock version. TRADITIONAL HOME-MADE PORK STOCK Ingredients: Traditional: Home-made Pork Stock 1.5 Kg pork bones (with a little meat left on, ribs are good) 2 large carrots, roughly chopped 1 onion, peeled, roughly chopped 1 Bay leaf A few sprigs of thyme A few sage leaves 2 tsp whole black peppercorns (crushed lightly) 1 tsp sea salt Method: For the pork stock place all of the ingredients into a large saucepan and pour in enough water to just cover them (about 4 litres). Bring this slowly to the boil, then reduce the heat to a simmer. Simmer for three hours over a low heat, without a lid to aid evaporation, and skim off any impurities which rise to the surface. After 3 hours strain the stock through a fine mesh sieve into another saucepan, jug or bowl and discard the larger solids. Then sieve this liquid for a second time through an even finer sieve, or better still, through a sieve covered over with a muslin cloth to completely catch all the small particles. This traditional pork stock can now be used in soups, or simmered and reduced further to use as a base for a gravy or a sauce etc. TRADITIONAL HOME-MADE PORK JELLY FOR PORK PIES Talking to your butcher: to make things easier ask your butcher to chop up the pork bones and trotters small enough to fit into a large saucepan, it makes it a lot easier when you communicate and strike up a good rapport with your local butcher. Ingredients: Traditional: Home-made Pork Stock 900g pork bones (with a little meat left on) 2 pig's trotters (to fit in a saucepan) 2 large carrots, roughly chopped 1 onion, peeled, roughly chopped 1 Bay leaf A few sprigs of thyme A few sage leaves 2 tsp whole black peppercorns (crushed lightly) 1 tsp sea salt
  • 2. MAKE THE FILLING: First trim all the game meat from the bones and cut it into ¼-½ inch (5 mm-1 cm) cubes. Place the cubed meat in a bowl, pour in the port and brandy (I didn't have port so I used just the brandy), sprinkle with the thyme, salt and pepper, then stir well, cover and leave in a cool place to marinate overnight.
  • 3. THE DAY YOU WANT THE PIE (IF SERVING IT HOT) - MAKE THE HOT WATER CRUST PASTRY: pour 300ml of water into saucepan, bring it up to the boil, then add the lard, salt and pepper and bring down to a simmer over a medium heat. When the lard has completely melted, turn off the heat and then add the flour and beat it in thoroughly with a wooden spoon to form a dough. Add a little flour if the dough is still too sticky. Allow to cool a little. Turn the warm dough out onto a clean, floured surface, make a small well in the centre and break the egg in. Knead the egg into the dough by pulling in the sides of the pastry over the eggy surface, pushing down, turning and repeating. Add a few casts of flour if needed. Once kneaded into a stiff dough, remove a quarter of the dough, pat it into a disc and set aside to cool (this is for the pie crust) then cover it in cling film and refrigerate. Form the remaining 3/4 of dough into a large, thick disc wider than the tin. Place it into the bottom of a greased 22 to 24cm spring form tin, and then slowly and carefully work the pastry out and up the sides of the tin with your finger tips, (raising the pie) making sure there are no holes or gaps. Once the pastry has completely covered the spring-form tin (to form the pastry base) and there is a little overhang, cover this in cling film and then chill it in the fridge for an hour (60 minutes) so it can set.
  • 4. Now butter your cake tin and pre-heat the oven to gas mark 2, 300°F (150°C). FOR THE PACKING MEAT: Place the pork shoulder cubes, pork belly mince, fine diced bacon rashers, mace, sloe-gin (or red-wine), thyme and sage into a large bowl, season with a good pinch each of sea-salt and freshly ground black pepper, and mix together until all is well combined. This is the 'packing meat' which goes into the pie base and up the sides of the pie (making a well or 'nest'). Place the 'packing meat' into the pastry shell base, flatten it out, and ease it up the edges of the pie - leaving a large well in the centre for the game meats.
  • 5. Place the mixed game meats (partridge / pheasant / guinea fowl / venison / rabbit / wild boar etc.) into the well of the packing meat in the pie shell - lay them mixed up, filling the centre of pie fully along with the juices. It does not matter if the pie is 'dome' shape and full, raised pies are often deep filled. Roll out the remaining reserved pastry (the pastry lid) into a 25cm disc, and drape it over the top of the filling. Squeeze the edges together and trim down with scissors to give an edge of about ½ inch (1 cm) standing up proud. Next turn the edge firmly over inwards, pressing it down with the prongs of a fork. Make a steam hole in the top, then re-roll the pastry trimmings and cut out diamond-shaped leaves to decorate the lid. Don't egg wash yet
  • 6. Now lay a sheet of foil over the top and bake for 2½ hours, then remove from the oven. Leave the pie for 30-45 minutes to firm up, then turn up the oven temperature to gas mark 5, 375°F (190°C). Carefully remove the pie from the tin. Brush the pastry all over with egg. If the sides show any sign of bulging, encircle the pie with a band of silicone paper (parchment) and tie with string ***make sure you have this ready because you just don't know till it comes out***. Return the pie to the oven and as the pastry continues baking it will firm up (if you used the paper, you will gradually be able to peel it away, but add a little more egg to the unglazed parts) and all the pastry will brown - it will take approximately 30 minutes. As the top will brown before the sides, it will need to be protected with foil while the sides finish browning.
  • 7. IF SERVING COLD: After it comes out of the oven leave to cool, then cover and chill. Meanwhile have the jellied stock warmed slightly (by sitting it in a bowl of hot water) then cool it to the syrupy stage and pour it into the pie very gradually via the steam hole (as much as it will take). Chill again to give the jelly a chance to set and then - believe it or not - it's ready to serve....finally!

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