Glazed wild boar with double-sided Hasselback potatoes

Glazed wild boar with double-sided Hasselback potatoes

  • Serves: 6-8
  • Prepare: 40 minutes
  • Cook Time: 3 hours
Glazed wild boar with double-sided Hasselback potatoes

Glazed wild boar with double-sided Hasselback potatoes

Diets

  • Gluten free

Ingredients

  • Meat

    • 2 1/2 kg Boar leg, wild
    • 8 thin slices Boar or pork back fat or bacon
  • Produce

    • 1 Flat-leaf parsley
    • 6 Garlic cloves
    • 1 Hasselback potatoes
    • 1 kg Potatoes, small
    • 1 Red cabbage
    • 1 Sweet and sour cabbage
  • Condiments

    • 2 tbsp Dijon mustard
    • 80 g Elderberry or redcurrant jam
    • 1 Elderberry or redcurrant jam or jelly
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 Black pepper, freshly ground
    • 2 tbsp Caraway seeds, coarsely ground
    • 1 Glaze
    • 3 tbsp Sea salt flake
    • 1 Sea salt flakes
    • 55 g Sugar
    • 110 g White sugar
  • Oils & Vinegars

    • 125 ml Apple cider vinegar
    • 50 ml Grapeseed or vegetable oil
  • Dairy

    • 150 g Butter
    • 50 g Butter, unsalted

Found on

Description

"One of my earliest food memories is of reading comic books about the Viking adventures of Asterix and Obelix and thinking how delicious the glazed wild boars looked that they would eat. Finally, I’ve fulfilled a dream in cooking a boar like that. The double-sided Hasselback potatoes use a Japanese technique to re-invent a Swedish classic – they might just change the way you make potatoes forever." Adam Liaw, Destination Flavour Scandinavia

Directions

  • Preheat the oven to 150°C. Combine the caraway seeds, mustard, garlic and salt in a bowl. Place the boar leg into a large roasting pan, then spread with the rub to coat. Lay the strips of back fat all over the top of the leg to cover and secure well with toothpicks. Roast the boar for 1 hour, then reduce the heat to 120°C and roast for a further hour or until the internal temperature reaches 49°C.
  • For the hasselback potatoes, place a thin chopping board on top of a larger chopping board (this ensures your knife doesn’t cut all the way through the potatoes). Place a potato on the bottom chopping board and with you knife resting on the top board, then slice the potato diagonally two-thirds of the way through in slices 2 mm apart. Roll the potato over so that the cuts are facing the board and repeat on the other side. If you cut on the same angle, the cuts on each side will be perpendicular to one another and the potatoes will not be divided. Repeat with the remaining potatoes, then place into a large roasting pan. Combine the butter and oil in a bowl, then generously drizzle over the potatoes and toss to coat. Season well with salt and set aside until ready to cook them.
  • For the glaze, place the sugar and 60 ml (¼ cup) water in a saucepan over medium-low heat, swirling the pan until the sugar dissolves. Increase the heat to medium, continue to swirl the pan for about 10 minutes until a golden caramel. Whisk in the butter until combined. Carefully whisk in the whisky, a pinch of salt and another 60 ml (¼ cup) water, taking care as the mixture may spit and bubble, then set aside.
  • For the sweet and sour red cabbage, melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium heat. Cook the cabbage for 5 minutes or until slightly wilted. Add the sugar, vinegar and salt and simmer, covered for 45 minutes. Uncover the pot, stir through the elderberry or redcurrant jelly, grind over the black pepper and cook for a further 5 minutes.
  • Once the boar has reached 49°C in internal temperature, increase the oven to 200°C. Carefully remove the boar from the oven and brush well with the glaze. Return to the oven together with the potatoes. Cook the boar for a further 20-30 minutes, glazing every 10 minutes or until the internal temperature reaches 53°C at the thickest part. Remove from the oven and set aside to rest for 30 minutes. Transfer the potatoes to a higher shelf in the oven and cook for a further 30 minutes or until golden and cooked through, tossing the pan halfway through.
  • Serve the boar with the potatoes, cabbage, parsley and elderberry or redcurrant jelly. 
  • Destination Flavour Scandinavia starts Thursday 31 March 2016 on SBS. Visit the program page for recipes, videos and more.
  • View recipes from past seasons: Destination Flavour Down Under, Destination Flavour Japan, Destination Flavour S1. 
  • Serves: 6-8
  • Prepare: 40 minutes
  • Cook Time: 3 hours
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Title:

Glazed wild boar with double-sided Hasselback potatoes

Descrition:

"One of my earliest food memories is of reading comic books about the Viking adventures of Asterix and Obelix and thinking how delicious the glazed wild boars looked that they would eat. Finally, I’ve fulfilled a dream in cooking a boar like that. The double-sided Hasselback potatoes use a Japanese technique to re-invent a Swedish classic – they might just change the way you make potatoes forever." Adam Liaw, Destination Flavour Scandinavia

Glazed wild boar with double-sided Hasselback potatoes

  • Meat

    • 2 1/2 kg Boar leg, wild
    • 8 thin slices Boar or pork back fat or bacon
  • Produce

    • 1 Flat-leaf parsley
    • 6 Garlic cloves
    • 1 Hasselback potatoes
    • 1 kg Potatoes, small
    • 1 Red cabbage
    • 1 Sweet and sour cabbage
  • Condiments

    • 2 tbsp Dijon mustard
    • 80 g Elderberry or redcurrant jam
    • 1 Elderberry or redcurrant jam or jelly
  • Baking & Spices

    • 1 Black pepper, freshly ground
    • 2 tbsp Caraway seeds, coarsely ground
    • 1 Glaze
    • 3 tbsp Sea salt flake
    • 1 Sea salt flakes
    • 55 g Sugar
    • 110 g White sugar
  • Oils & Vinegars

    • 125 ml Apple cider vinegar
    • 50 ml Grapeseed or vegetable oil
  • Dairy

    • 150 g Butter
    • 50 g Butter, unsalted

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Glazed wild boar with double-sided Hasselback potatoes

"One of my earliest food memories is of reading comic books about the Viking adventures of Asterix and Obelix and thinking how delicious the glazed wild boars looked that they would eat. Finally, I’ve fulfilled a dream in cooking a boar like that. The double-sided Hasselback potatoes use a Japanese technique to re-invent a Swedish classic – they might just change the way you make potatoes forever." Adam Liaw, Destination Flavour Scandinavia