A farmhouse Burgundy braise — pig's tongue slow-cooked in red wine
Pig's tongue 410 g
Coarse salt (brine) 18 g
Cold water (brine) 1000 g
Red wine 750 g
Lardons / bacon 75 g
Pearl onions or shallots 100 g
Mushrooms 125 g
Garlic 12 g
Carrot 200 g
Onion 150 g
Celery 100 g
Unsalted butter 40 g
Plain flour 18 g
Stock 300 g
Flat-leaf parsley 8 g
Black peppercorns 3 g
Cloves 1 g
Saturday — start the brine: Dissolve 0.6 ounces coarse salt (for brining) in 35.7 ounces cold water (for brining) in a bowl or container large enough to submerge the tongue. Add 14.6 ounces pig's tongue, raw, cover and refrigerate. Leave until Wednesday evening — roughly 4 days. This extended brine will give the tongue a lightly cured, petit salé character that works beautifully in this dish.
2
Wednesday evening — first poach: Remove tongue from brine and rinse well. Place in a pot and cover generously with cold water. Add 5.4 ounces onion, roughly chopped, 7.1 ounces carrot, roughly chopped, 3.6 ounces celery stalks, roughly chopped, 3 pieces bay leaves, 0.1 ounces black peppercorns, 0 ounces cloves, and a few sprigs of 6 pieces thyme sprigs. Bring to a boil, skim any grey foam thoroughly, then reduce to a gentle simmer. The tongue is done when a skewer meets no resistance at the thickest point.
3
Wednesday evening — peel while hot: Lift the tongue out of the poaching liquid and discard the liquid. While still hot (use tongs and a cloth), peel off the thick outer skin starting from the tip — it should come away in large strips. Trim any gristly root bits. This cannot be done cold; the skin bonds back to the meat as it cools. Work quickly.
4
Wednesday evening — wine marinade overnight: Place the peeled tongue in a bowl with 26.8 ounces red wine (Pinot Noir, Gamay, or BC Okanagan red), a smashed clove of 0.4 ounces garlic cloves, smashed, a sprig of 6 pieces thyme sprigs and a bay leaf from 3 pieces bay leaves. Cover and refrigerate overnight — 12 to 780 minutes
780:00
is ideal. Do not exceed 24 hours or the wine acid will begin to degrade the surface texture.
5
Wednesday or Thursday — render the lardons: In a heavy casserole (cast iron is ideal), cook 2.7 ounces lardons or thick-cut bacon, cut into chunks over medium heat until the fat has rendered and the pieces are golden. Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside. Leave the fat in the pan.
6
Brown the tongue: Remove tongue from the wine marinade and pat thoroughly dry — reserve the wine. In the lardon fat over medium-high heat, brown the tongue on all sides until deeply coloured. Don't rush this; 6–8 minutes total. Remove and set aside.
7
Build the braise: Reduce heat to medium. Add 1.4 ounces unsalted butter to the pot. Add remaining 0.4 ounces garlic cloves, smashed and cook 1 minute. Scatter over 0.6 ounces plain flour and stir into the fat to make a rough roux. Cook 2 minutes, stirring, until it smells nutty. Pour in the reserved wine from the marinade, scraping up all the browned bits. Add 10.7 ounces pork or chicken stock. Tuck in remaining 3 pieces bay leaves, 6 pieces thyme sprigs, the browned lardons and the tongue. The liquid should come about halfway up the tongue.
8
Braise low and slow: Bring to a bare simmer, cover tightly and cook in a 150°C / 300°F oven or over the lowest possible stovetop heat. Turn the tongue once halfway through. At 410g the tongue will need slightly less time than a full-sized one — start checking at the 75 minutes
75:00
mark.
9
Cool overnight for Thursday (recommended): If braising on Wednesday, remove from oven, allow to cool, then refrigerate tongue and sauce together overnight. The sauce will tighten, the fat will solidify and lift off cleanly, and the flavour will deepen considerably. This is the ideal approach — Thursday becomes a simple reheating job.
10
Glaze the pearl onions and mushrooms: About 10 minutes
10:00
before serving on Thursday, melt a knob of extra butter in a wide pan over medium-high heat. Add 3.6 ounces pearl onions or small shallots, peeled with a pinch of sugar and cook, shaking the pan, until golden — about 10 minutes. Remove. In the same pan, turn up the heat, add another small knob of butter and sear 4.5 ounces mushrooms (cremini or wild), quartered hard until golden. Season. Set both aside.
11
Finish the sauce: Lift the solidified fat from the surface of the cold sauce and discard. Transfer sauce to a wide saucepan and reduce over high heat until it coats a spoon — about 10 minutes
10:00
. Taste for salt. Add the glazed onions and mushrooms to warm through.
12
Slice and serve: Slice the tongue cold on a slight diagonal into pieces about 1cm thick — cold slicing gives much cleaner cuts. Lay slices in the sauce and warm gently over low heat with a lid on for a few minutes. Do not boil. Arrange on warm plates, spoon sauce, onions and mushrooms generously over the top, and scatter with 0.3 ounces flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped. Serve with egg noodles, boiled potatoes, or crusty bread.
Notes
Thursday timeline: The braise happens Wednesday evening after the overnight wine marinade. Thursday is just glazing the onions and mushrooms (10 min), reducing the sauce (10 min), slicing the cold tongue and warming through (10 min). Dinner is essentially ready in 30 minutes.
The sauce volume: With a smaller piece of meat but full sauce quantities, you will have generous sauce — which is a good thing. Any leftover sauce freezes beautifully and is excellent with pasta, pork chops, or as a base for another braise.
Wine: A BC Okanagan Pinot Noir is a natural choice and would be very much in the spirit of using local ingredients throughout.
Mushrooms: If you have access to any wild mushrooms from the island, use them here — chanterelles or hedgehogs in particular would be exceptional.