Pacharán Navarro Pacific Oysters Pacific Rose Apple Pacific Salmon Pack Date Package Date Padang Cassia Paddy Straw Mushrooms Paella Rice Paillard of Lamb Paillards Pain -- Poutine au Pain au Froment Pain au Levain Pain au Son Pain Complet Pain d'habitant Pain de Campagne Pain de Mie Pain de mie 100 Pain de Mie Pans Pain Pavé Pain Paysan Pain Perdu Pain Poilâne Pain Rustique Pain Viennois Paint-A-Punkin Pumpkins Painted Lady Beans Pak Choi Pak Choy Pak Hung Pak Wan Pale Bacon Paletas Previous | Next | Paillards© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedPaillards are boneless cuts of meat that are pounded flat, then cooked quickly. To make your own, start with a boneless cut of meat. If it is an inch (2.5 cm) thick or more, consider cutting that in half first. Use the smooth end of a meat mallet to pound with (not the rough end -- that is for tenderizing.) You can pound the meat as is on a cutting board; some people like to place it between sheets of plastic wrap or waxed paper. The recipe you are preparing the meat for will tell you how thin to get the meat. Usually, for instance, you make pork, beef, chicken and turkey paillards about 1/4 inch (1/2 cm) thick. If you don't have a meat pounder, you can use a rolling pin, a heavy bottomed pan such as a cast iron one, etc -- anything safe that makes sense. Stomping on it with your boot probably would not. In some recipes, Paillard is used to refer to a boneless fish fillet. When fish is made into a Paillard, the pounding to make it thin is unnecessary. Cooking Tips Also called: Paillards (French)
Other entries for:MeatAffettati, Beef, Buffalo, Cap On / Cap Off, Game, Goat, Institutional Meat Purchase Specifications, Minced Meat, Offal, Paillards, Pork, Potted Meats, Poultry, Roasts, Sausages, Sheep, Steak, Veal, Venison, Yak |
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