Makes 6 servings
Verrine is a combination of the word terrine, which is similar to a pâté made with either vegetables, seafood, or meat (terrine also refers to the rectangular mold the mixture is cooked in), and the word verre, or glass.
I first encountered verrines at the restaurant of Nicolas Le Bec in
Lyon, where many dishes are served in jars and other unusual
containers. Here’s a summery verrine that I came up with that uses
fresh goat cheese, tomatoes bursting with flavor, and mint leaves.
Serve this as suggested, in fanciful glasses as a first course, or even
as a between-courses taste.
INGREDIENTS
- 8 ounces (225 g) soft fresh goat cheese
- 1 small shallot, minced
- Fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
- 1/3 cup (80 ml) heavy non-ultrapasteurized cream, chilled
- 2 medium (5-ounce/150-g) very ripe and flavorful tomatoes, peeled, seeded, and diced
- 2 teaspoons walnut oil
- ¼ cup (25 g) walnuts, lightly toasted and finely minced
- Fresh mint leaves or chervil for garnish
PREPARATION
- Puree the goat cheese in a small bowl or the bowl of a food processor until smooth. Transfer to another small bowl and fold in the minced shallot. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
- Whisk the chilled cream to stiff peaks and fold it into the seasoned goat cheese.
- In a small bowl, toss the diced tomatoes with walnut oil until coated. Season with salt and pepper.
- Place an equal amount of seasoned tomatoes in the bottom of six martini or other nicely shaped glasses. Top with 1 teaspoon of the toasted, finely minced walnuts, then with equal amounts of the goat cheese mixture.
- Sprinkle the remaining toasted walnuts over each serving. Serve immediately, garnished with mint leaves or chervil.
Note:
- Use large-curd cottage cheese with a bit of yogurt stirred into it, pureed in a blender if fresh goat cheese is not available.
- Assemble the elements of this dish no sooner than half an hour before serving.