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Brasato di Fesa di Vitello del Carnacottaro

It was not often,that one was plump enough in the purse to buy a kilo or so of meat from the butcher, carry it home, and cook it up into some luscious, soulful dish. When fortune placed in one’s purse a few centesimi more than were necessary for subsistence, one sought out the carnacottaro (an itinerant seller of cooked meat).

Recipe information

  • Yield

    serves 6

Ingredients

1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
3 to 4 pounds leg of veal, well trimmed and tied at 2-inch intervals with butcher’s twine
1 1/2 teaspoons fine sea salt
2 ounces sun-dried tomatoes, drained of their preserving oil, slivered
6 ounces large green and black Sicilian, Greek, or Spanish olives, lightly crushed with a wooden mallet, stones removed, and coarsely chopped
1/2 cup white raisins, plumped in warm white wine
1 1/2 cups canned tomato puree
2 1/2 cups dry white wine

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    In a large terra-cotta or enameled cast-iron casserole over a lively flame, warm the olive oil and seal the veal, crusting it well on all sides. Remove the veal to a holding plate, sprinkling on the sea salt. Add the sun-dried tomatoes, the olives, and the raisins to the casserole, stirring the ingredients together for about 1 minute before adding the tomato puree and the wine and bringing the sauce to a simmer. Turn down the flame, add the veal, cover the casserole tightly, and, over the quietest flame, permit the liquids to barely simmer around the veal for 1 1/2 hours.

    Step 2

    Remove the cover and baste the meat, adding a few tablespoonfuls more wine if the liquids seem scant. Replace the lid and braise the veal ever so slowly for an additional 1/2 hour or until the meat is fork-tender.

    Step 3

    Permit the veal to rest in its sauce, the lid in place, for 1 hour or so before reheating gently.

    Step 4

    Use a few generous spoonfuls of the good sauce for just-cooked pasta—perhaps ziti or penne cooked to al dente, drained and tossed with a generous dollop of sweet butter and handfuls of just-grated pecorino before adding the sauce.

    Step 5

    When ready to present the veal, remove it to a deep platter, spooning some of the sauce around it. Carve it into 1/3-inch-thick slices at table and offer the remaining sauce from a small bowl.

    Step 6

    One might use a loin of pork or a round of beef in place of the veal, extending the braising session a bit longer.

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