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Montpellier Butter

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Bill Spohn

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Montpellier Butter

by Bill Spohn » Tue Mar 13, 2018 7:50 pm

Beurre Montpellier

An old recipe – Escoffier said that this was the only butter fit to be served with cold salmon. Also good with meats, or in a sandwich or on toast topped with a few anchovies.

½ cups mixed fresh leaves – chervil, watercress, flat leaf parsley, tarragon

10 cups baby spinach leaves

2 garlic cloves finely chopped

1 tablespoon or more capers

4 cornichons finely chopped

2 egg yolks

3 hard boiled egg yolks

4 ½ sticks of butter,, softened but not melted

3 - 5 tbsp olive oil.

Place all the greens in boiling water for 30 seconds then quickly remove to a bowl of water and ice to stop the cooking, drain and squeeze dry in paper towels.

Put first six ingredients in food processor with a bit of salt and lots of pepper and process to a smooth paste and then add the raw and cooked yolks and the butter and oil and spin to mix.

Cut in discs and use, or roll in 2” logs and plastic wrap and freeze.

From ‘Coastline’
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John Treder

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Re: Montpelier Butter

by John Treder » Tue Mar 13, 2018 7:59 pm

There's something missing there. Oil?
John in the wine county
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Bill Spohn » Tue Mar 13, 2018 8:25 pm

Thanks, John. Corrected.

I also like discs of these compound butter right out of the freezer, placed on freshly grilled steak so that in melting they anoint the steak and leave the herbal component on top..
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Robin Garr » Tue Mar 13, 2018 9:12 pm

Bill Spohn wrote:Beurre Montpelier

Montpelier Vermont or Montpellier France?
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Bill Spohn » Tue Mar 13, 2018 9:22 pm

Robin Garr wrote:
Bill Spohn wrote:Beurre Montpelier

Montpelier Vermont or Montpellier France?


It would be 'buttah', not 'beurre' if it were Vermont....plus I doubt Escofier knew Vermont existed! :twisted:
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Jeff Grossman » Tue Mar 13, 2018 10:17 pm

I'm having trouble envisoning what this recipe looks like at the end... a greasy spinach pattie? ravioli filling?

Recipes I know for compound butter are way, way simpler than this.
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Bill Spohn » Tue Mar 13, 2018 10:29 pm

Green soft butter that you chill (or freeze) and use on meat and fish. When it comes out of the processor it is stiff enough to be rolled up in wrap, not liquid. Pretty similar to any modern compound butter.

Old way to do it was a big mortar and pestle, but that's a whole lot of stuff so you'd need an really big M&P. But the M&P method may give you a better idea of the resulting consistency.
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Robin Garr » Wed Mar 14, 2018 8:06 am

Bill Spohn wrote:
Robin Garr wrote:
Bill Spohn wrote:Beurre Montpelier

Montpelier Vermont or Montpellier France?


It would be 'buttah', not 'beurre' if it were Vermont....plus I doubt Escofier knew Vermont existed! :twisted:

Probably. But Montpelier Vermont is a one-l Montpelier, whereas Montpellier France is a two-l Montpellier. All Ls matter. :mrgreen:
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Jenise » Wed Mar 14, 2018 2:14 pm

Bill Spohn wrote:Thanks, John. Corrected.

I also like discs of these compound butter right out of the freezer, placed on freshly grilled steak so that in melting they anoint the steak and leave the herbal component on top..


I adore it too, although, as you might suspect, I don't add egg yolks. Have a log of very herbaceous butter in the freeze right now. Hmmm...am now wondering if putting a compound butter like this on a cowboy steak (coffee/sugar/salt dredge) would up the wow factor or just be flavor overload.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov
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Re: Montpelier Butter

by Bill Spohn » Wed Mar 14, 2018 2:18 pm

Jenise wrote:I adore it too, although, as you might suspect, I don't add egg yolks. Have a log of very herbaceous butter in the freeze right now. Hmmm...am now wondering if putting a compound butter like this on a cowboy steak (coffee/sugar/salt dredge) would up the wow factor or just be flavor overload.


I'd bet it would work well as you wouldn't be adding spice to already existing spice, just adding a herbal component.

If you need someone to add the egg yolks while you aren't watching, I work for wine......
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Re: Montpellier Butter

by Jenise » Wed Mar 14, 2018 10:03 pm

Agree with your logic. In this case, the carmelization is so superb on the steak, my only fear would be the butter stealing the spotlight.
My wine shopping and I have never had a problem. Just a perpetual race between the bankruptcy court and Hell.--Rogov

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