Agrippa d'Aubigné’s menu
Roast and Game Dishes

Hare Civet with Verjuice and Spices

FestiveDocumented🧂 🍄 🌶️difficile2 h 30 (plus marination)

A dark, deep hare stew, marinated in Gascon wine, perfumed with spices and sharpened with verjuice. The sauce, bound according to ancient custom with the animal's blood, is the pinnacle of Renaissance game cooking.

Roast and Game Dishes

A dark, deep hare stew, marinated in Gascon wine, perfumed with spices and sharpened with verjuice. The sauce, bound according to ancient custom with the animal's blood, is the pinnacle of Renaissance game cooking.

Here is the dish for days when the sword was sheathed to celebrate. Marinate the hare all day in the wine of our hillsides, then gently cook it on the fire with clove, ginger, and cinnamon, and bind the sauce with its blood, as our fathers did. A dash of verjuice at the last moment, and the dark flesh takes on a flavor worthy of all the poets' praises. Serve it with bread for sopping, and spare not the wine of Saintonge.
Agrippa d'Aubigné
Ingredients
  • Hare with its bloodone, skinned (main meat)
  • Red Gascon winea pint (marinade and sauce)
  • Bacona piece (cooking fat)
  • Onionsa few (aromatic)
  • Ginger, cinnamon, clove, long pepperto taste (spices)
  • Verjuicea dash (acidity)
How it was made : The civet (from cive, onion) is attested as early as the Middle Ages in Taillevent's Le Viandier and Le Ménagier de Paris. The blood binding, the use of verjuice and oriental spices (ginger, cinnamon, clove) characterize the sweet-and-sour, spiced cuisine of the elite until the 17th century.
Sources : Taillevent, Le Viandier · Le Ménagier de Paris (c. 1393)