HOW TO ROAST A GOOSE

Monday, November 14, 2005 14:46

Roast Goose

Roasting a goose is quite an undertaking.
I discovered it is, at least, a three-day affair!
You might want to make sure the large roasting pan fits your oven before you embark upon this event…

Facts: A 12+ pound bird would serve about 8 people, max.
I obtained mine from Puritan Poultry at the Fairfax/3rd St Farmers Markets. Cost was approx $68.00.

Day One: First, obtain your goose, preferably fresh, washed and cleaned.
Add at least TWO DAYS if you need to thaw it!!
Day Two: Brine your goose overnight
Day Three: Prepare, stuff, roast then serve goose - this will take at least one hour prep time, followed by roasting, basting and serving over 3 & ½ hours, from 5 until about 8.30pm.

Ingredients:
1 fresh goose, 11-13 lbs.
About 8 sweet apples, cored and cut into slices
8 small pears, peeled but with the stems left intact
zest of 2 well-washed oranges
some ground ginger (or cardamom)
accompanying vegetables
Note - some people stuff with breaded/herb stuffing and/or ground pork and veal mixture…

Instructions:

Have your butcher wash the goose inside and out and remove the gizzards, neck etc. and pull all the excess white fat from the goose’s cavity - you can reserve this stuff if you’d like to use it later.

Brine your goose.

Ingredients:
salt
sugar
some cinnamon sticks
a handful of cardamom pods, first mashed in a mortar
a few bay leaves

Instructions:

Find a container that will hold your goose with enough space around it to allow the brine to move freely. Cover your goose with cold — even icy — water, which you should measure as you add. Mine worked out to be 3 gallons. Then, for each gallon, put into a saucepan ½ cup of salt and ½ cup of sugar. Add a few cups of water and bring to a boil to dissolve. Off the heat, add whatever flavorings you’d like, see above ingredients.

Let brine cool and then pour into the water surrounding the goose. Refrigerate (yeah, right! I don’t live in a restaurant) or store in a cool place for about 24 hours, longer for a giant bird.

Next day, remove the goose, pat it dry inside and out with paper towels, and either use immediately or store in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. Discard brine.

Let the goose come to room temperature for 3 or 4 hours before roasting. As I did not refrigerate while brining, I prepped it right away.

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F (220 deg C).

Choose a heavy roasting pan just large enough to hold the goose comfortably.

Fry two large, roughly diced onions in olive oil until golden. Take off heat and throw in a handful of fresh sage.

Fill cavity with onions and sage mix, and your sliced apples (I left the skin on). Finally, I squeezed half a large lemon into the cavity opening and threw the lemon half in as well. It was sort of an afterthought - I probably should have doused the apple slices with lemon juice.

Roast Goose w stuffing

Using a knife, cut small slits all over goose - do not puncture flesh, just pierce the fat. The knife must be held nearly flat to the surface in order to do this.

Place goose on a rack, on its side, in your massive roasting pan. In case you haven’t worked it out, this was the biggest thing I have ever cooked.

Roast for ½ an hour, then turn goose onto its other side and baste. Lower heat to 325 deg F and roast for 1 hour. Turn goose onto its back (breast facing up), remove rack and roast for a further hour at 325 deg F. Check temp during that last half hour and baste frequently.

Total roasting time for my 12+ pound bird, in my convection oven, was 3 hours.

Also during the last hour of cooking, roast your pears in the goose fat around the bird (that’s why you remove the rack) that have been sprinkled (rubbed?) with ground ginger mixed with orange zest.

Also roast your seasoned potatoes and other vegetables in a separate pan during that last hour or even hour and a half, frequently basting with goose fat. I used a separate oven and was able to keep a higher temperature for the veg. Or you can roast your veg alongside the goose and pears (if there’s room) but they will be quite sodden with goose fat.

Roast goose until brown and your instant-read meat thermometer, when inserted into thickest part of thigh, registers 175 deg F.

Let the goose rest for 20 minutes before carving and serve on a large platter, surrounded by the little roast pears and the apple stuffing. Cook your peas.

When you remove the goose from the oven, drain off and reserve goose fat and, if necessary, return your veg to the oven, cranking up the heat, while the goose rests and is then carved. That should work.

Enjoy accolades!

My comments:

While my husband and guests raved (one couldn’t stop sneaking bits off the bird while we were cleaning up and took home a huge thigh and drumstick) I did not love this dish and will never make it again. All that labor would have been worth it only for a sensational meal that also knocked MY socks off.

I really like duck (in restaurants - I have never roasted one myself, but I will now) but I realize I do not care for goose. All the meat is very dark - darker than duck - and fairly strong, yet not too gamey, and very rich.

I also may have overcooked my goose a little (yet it was not dry), as the temp was very high at the three hour mark and I should have been checking it more often during that last half hour.

I thought the pears were wonderful and will do those again (I reserved a ton of silky goose fat for future cooking) but others preferred the apples over the pears (but loved both).

The goose-fat drenched and roasted potatoes were fantastic — super brown and crispy!
I also served carrot sticks that had been baked in butter and Grand Marnier until they were a little sticky and delicious, as well as boiled peas.

While this meal was a tremendous success, I would much rather make and eat many other dishes over this one. Leftovers were enjoyed the next day, but not by me!

I intend to make a fabulous stock from the carcass, skim it and freeze it then probably use it for Risotto.

By MaxMillion (see more of her posts). Max Million is the nom de 'net of Pauline Adamek. Born in Sydney, Australia, Pauline has lived in Los Angeles for the past thirteen years and finds it agrees with her. She has been reviewing films and filing celebrity-based interview articles since 1991, and has filed stories from various international film festivals, including Cannes, Venice, Berlin, Toronto and Sundance. She completed a family cookbook and has also written novels for 8-12 year olds. She is the creator and host of ArtsBeatLA.

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