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I absolutely love cooking with game – I'm a country girl, a farmer's daughter, and it's part of my life. People often don't realize how versatile – and how healthy - game is to cook and eat. There's a huge variety available – from snipe and partridge to venison and hare, and so many ways of preparing it, from traditional old-fashioned and delicious roast pheasant wrapped in bacon to a modern-day venison
burger stuffed with blue cheese. - Rachel Green.

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Roast Partridge
Created by admin, Monday, 29 November 1999
Description
courtesy of Jeremy Hollingsworth, The Bull, Highgate - Serves 6

Ingredients
At a glance
Partridge
Methods/steps

Ingredients

1 whole partridge per person

1 carrot, chopped

1 onion, sliced

bay leaf

½ glass wine

2 streaky bacon rashers per bird

butter or olive oil

redcurrant jelly

Notes

230 deg C, Gas Mark 8
Roast Partridge

Preparation Time: (for the stock) 2 Hours & 0 Mins

Cooking Time: 0 Hours & 25 mins

Make the stock in advance if you have the time, it does make better gravy.

Roast or fry the necks, wings and giblets from the birds in a little oil for 10 minutes, until nicely browned.

Roughly chop them up and put in small pan with bay leaf, carrot and sliced onion, wine and enough water to cover by a good 5cm.

Bring to the boil and simmer gently for an hour or two, topping up if necessary.

Then strain – first through a colander, then through muslin into a clean pan.

Boil until reduced by about half so you have a cup or so of well flavoured stock for your gravy.

Prepare the birds by smearing a little soft butter or olive oil over the breasts and covering each one with 2 streaky bacon rashers.

Place in roasting tin and put in centre of very hot oven.

Remove the bacon from the birds after 8-10 minutes and take it out of the oven if its as crisp as you’d like it to be.

At this point baste the birds with any fat in the tin.

About 15 minutes in total should be enough to cook a small partridge, 20 minutes for a large bird.

Rest birds for 10-15 minutes while you prepare the gravy.

To make the gravy – skim off any excess fat from the roasting tin.

Sprinkle a teaspoon of flour over the juices in the tin and scraping up any crispy bits and mixing them with the flour and juices.

Use a splash of wine and a little of the reserved stock to loosen the gravy.

Strain all the liquid through a sieve into small saucepan.

Whisk in the rest of the stock and bring to the boil.

Taste adding a little redcurrant jelly if required.

Serving Suggestion

Put one whole bird on each plate with its bacon. Serve with game chips, vegetables, gravy and bread sauce.

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