Serves 6
Whole beef tongue 1420g
Lardons or diced smoked pork belly 180g
Onion, roughly chopped 225g
Carrot, roughly chopped 180g
Celery, roughly chopped 100g
Garlic cloves, lightly crushed 30g
Red wine (Burgundy, Côtes du Rhône, or similar) 750ml
Beef stock 500ml
Tomato paste 30g
Plain flour 25g
Butter 40g
Neutral oil (sunflower or grapeseed) 20g
Fresh thyme sprigs 10g
Bay leaves 4
Parsley stalks (reserve leaves for serving) 20g
Black peppercorns 10g
Coarse salt (for blanching water) 30g
Flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped, to finish 15g
- Blanch and peel the tongue by placing it in a large pot, cover generously with cold water, and add the coarse salt. Bring to a boil and blanch for 15 minutes — grey scum will rise; this is normal. Drain and rinse under cold running water. While still warm enough to handle, use a small sharp knife to peel away the tough outer skin — it should come off in large pieces. Trim any excess fat or gristle from the root end.
- To marinate, place the peeled tongue in a deep bowl with the red wine, onion, carrot, celery, garlic, thyme, bay leaves, parsley stalks, and peppercorns. Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours, ideally overnight but no longer than 18 hours. When ready to braise, lift the tongue out and pat it dry. Strain the marinade and reserve both the liquid and the vegetables separately.
- Preheated the oven to 150°C and heat a heavy lidded casserole or Dutch oven large enough to hold the tongue, in it. Render the lardons over medium heat until golden and their fat has run. Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside, leaving 2 Tbsps. of fat in the pan.
- Add the oil to the lardon fat and raise the heat to medium-high. Season the tongue with salt and brown it on all sides — about 3 minutes per side. You want good colour here; it builds the foundation of the sauce. Remove the tongue and set aside.
- Reduce the heat to medium and add the butter to the pan. Add the reserved vegetables from the marinade and cook, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes until softened and beginning to colour. Add the tomato paste and stir it in, cooking for 2 minutes until it deepens in colour. Scatter over the flour and stir to coat everything — cook for a further 2 minutes.
- Pour in the reserved marinade liquid and bring to a vigorous simmer, scraping up any browned bits from the bottom of the pan. Add the beef stock and return the lardons to the pot. Nestle the tongue back in — it should be roughly half-submerged. Tuck the thyme, bay leaves, and parsley stalks around it if you have fresh ones to spare. Bring everything to a gentle simmer.
- Cover with the lid and transfer to the oven at 300°F. Braise for 3 to 3.5 hours, turning the tongue once at the halfway point. It is ready when a skewer meets no resistance at the thickest part and the meat has a slight wobble when you nudge the pot. If your tongue is on the larger side, allow up to 4 hours.
- Lift the tongue out and wrap loosely in foil to rest for 20 minutes. Strain the braising liquid through a fine sieve into a saucepan, pressing the vegetables firmly to extract every drop. Discard the solids. Skim any fat from the surface, then bring the sauce to a brisk simmer over medium-high heat. Reduce for 10–15 minutes until it coats a spoon generously and has a deep, wine-dark colour. Taste carefully and adjust salt — the sauce concentrates significantly, so hold back until the end.
- Slice the tongue across the grain into pieces about 12mm thick — the meat should be yielding and almost silky. Arrange on a warm platter or individual plates, spoon the sauce generously over and around, and scatter the chopped flat-leaf parsley over the top. Serve immediately with mashed potato, buttered egg noodles, or soft polenta, and something sharp alongside — cornichons, a good Dijon mustard, or pickled walnuts all work beautifully.
Notes
- On the wine. Use something you'd actually drink — nothing expensive, but nothing undrinkable. A young, fruity red works best. Avoid anything heavily oaked or very tannic, as it can turn bitter on reduction.
- Make ahead. This dish is genuinely better the next day. Cool the tongue in its sauce, refrigerate overnight, then skim the solidified fat from the surface, reheat gently, and slice. The meat firms up and slices more cleanly, and the sauce deepens overnight.
- On the sauce. The reduction in Step 8 is where the dish earns its keep — don't rush it. You want it thick enough to coat the back of a spoon and leave a clean line when you draw your finger through it.
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