The great 19th Century French writer and gastronome, Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin, once penned (and I’m translating), “If you take all the meatloaf recipes extant and place them end to end you would be able to circumnavigate the globe three times.”
Is it too embarrassing to admit liking meatloaf? Clearly it is a mere pawn on the culinary chessboard joining the likes of “pigs in a blanket” and a PB&J sandwich. And yet, even enjoying the more prestigious dishes (which I most certainly do), there is something compelling in a dish that probably possesses a scent of nostalgia for many of us.
In this case, let’s just attribute my interest to a change in season. For sure I had a hankering for “comfort food” and it was time to think of “indoor” cuisine. Yes, I already had a meatloaf recipe in my playbook; but while good, it was too involved. Then by chance I spotted a recipe in a food magazine. A magazine that shows recipes with an enticing photo… and also a couple of user reviews. The recipe was easy to follow (very important for me), less involved than mine; nice snapshot; and then the clincher was this comment, “Goodbye ketchup! See ya later BBQ sauce! This recipe is the ticket to great meatloaf!” I’m in!
To the wine. What about a 2004 Brunello that I have been saving? I have one 1996 Pauillac left in the rack. A Stags Leap Cab that should be ready (finally). No, No and again no! Great wines all, but misplaced against the delight of enjoying the plain fare that is the foundation of our everyday dinning.
Tonight I am going to open a “drinking” Bordeaux from the excellent 2010 vintage that has a “little time in the bottle”. Excellent vintage is a beautiful thing… it means you can enjoy the benefit of a positive weather pattern that created the excellence without having to take a “second out on the house” to pay for it! The modest wines did as well as the premier wines!
There are other wines that would also work: great country reds from Italy like a Montepulciano from Abbruzzo, Barbera from Piedmont. Or maybe something from South Africa like a Pinotage. A Mendoza Malbec would fit to a “T”. The list of potential wines just goes on and on. And conversely, this Bordeaux would work with any number of other comfort dishes… Linguine Bolognese? Shepherd’s Pie? Grilled baby lamb chops?
But for today, a perfect dance: Cru Bourgeois and new meatloaf recipe!
Château de Panigon Cru Bougeois ’10 (Medoc,Bordeaux)
The Panigon has a candied bouquet with baked red cherries, touches of dark chocolate and dried orange peel. The palate is medium-bodied with fine, lithe tannins. There is lovely purity here, whilst the finish is focused and long. This is a little gem. Cabernet, Merlot and Petit Verdot; 91pts Decanter; 90pts Wine Advocate; Gold Medal Concours General Agricole Paris
MEATLOAF W/MUSHROOM-ROSEMARY SAUCE
Ingredients
6 ounces of Tanqueray Gin
½ ounce of Noilly Pratt Dry Vermouth
A goodly amount of ice
3 olives stuffed with blue cheese
1½ lbs meatloaf mix (equal parts ground beef, pork & veal)
1 medium onion, finely chopped
1 cup Italian seasoned bread crumbs
1 large beaten egg
½ tsp salt
½ tsp pepper
For the sauce
2 tbsp butter
1 cup sliced shiitake mushrooms
1½ tbsp flour
1¼ cups low sodium beef broth
½ tsp chopped fresh rosemary
¼ tsp salt
¼ tsp pepper
¼ cup heavy cream
Directions
1. Put gin and vermouth into a glass pitcher, fill with ice, stir vigorously while incanting, “You who know all, thank you for providing us juniper and all the other obscure ingredients responsible for creating this sacred liquid!” Strain into a pre-frozen Martini glass of admirable size. Skewer the olives on one of those tacky cocktail swords, place in glass. Immediately begin consuming. Now you can begin the food prep, and the cooking!
2. Preheat oven to 325°
3. Mix all the meatloaf ingredients together with your hands in a large bowl until well blended. Transfer mixture to a 2qt baking dish (7”x11”), then form into an 8”x3½”x2” loaf.
4. For sauce: Melt butter in skillet over medium-high heat. Cook mushrooms, stirring occasionally ‘til they begin to brown, about 5 minutes. Add flour and cook, stirring for a minute or so. Add broth, rosemary, salt & pepper and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer ‘til sauce begins to thicken, 2-3 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in cream.
5. Spoon sauce over meatloaf. Bake ‘til instant read thermometer inserted into the center reads 160°, about 1½ hours.
6. Let sit for 10 minutes. Slice, transfer to serving platter with sauce spooned over the meat loaf.
n.b. I made up the Brillat-Savarin quote. I could say something political, like it was the candidate-running-for office vibe that took command of me. An expedient exaggeration. Nothing more than a rhetorical device to illustrate a point. Well… I’m not running for office; and regardless of political preferences, meatloaf and good red wines are to be enjoyed by all. And in the true words of Brillat-Savarin, “The pleasure of the table belongs to all ages, to all conditions, to all countries, and to all areas; it mingles with all other pleasures, and remains at last to console us for their departure.”
Brillat-Savarin
