Breaded rabbit, deep fried

Food & drink
Deep fried confit rabbit with mustard and breadcrumbs

A little while ago, I made some confit rabbit by slowly and gently cooking the jointed legs from a brace of rabbits in goose fat for a couple of hours and then storing them in the fat. It’s a centuries-old technique that produces the most flavourful and tender meat imaginable.

To use the rabbit, all you have to do is dig a joint out of it’s blanket of fat and flash it in a hot oven to crisp it up a bit, or shred the meat directly into a salad, perhaps.

Or you could do this…  Warm enough sunflower or vegetable oil to deep fry in to a temperature of 150c. I shouldn’t need to go into the obvious dangers of dealing with vats of boiling oil, but I will anyway – do not, under any circumstances whatsoever leave the oil unattended. Make sure your pan is firm and stable before you start, or better still, use a proper deep fat fryer with a thermostat. In fact, I won’t deep fry ANYTHING unless I’m using a thermostatically controlled fryer.

Hot oil terrifies me, and fear, in this case, is a very good thing.

Whilst the oil is heating up, wipe the confitted rabbit legs clean of as much as the preserving fat as you can and liberally brush them with Dijon mustard.

Dust the legs in flour, dip them in egg and roll them in breadcrumbs. I used store bought crumbs of Polish origin this time, and they gave an excellent result – fine and crisp.

Deep fry the joints for seven minutes before removing them to a plate lined with kitchen towel to drain.

Serve immediately.

This is very high calorie food, and it’s very rich indeed. A simple, plain salad is all you need on the side, dressed in a sharp dressing heavy on the lemon to cut through the richness of the rabbit meat.

I’ve cooked rabbit many times, but never with any huge success. It’s cheap and plentiful, and there’s a superb gamey flavour to it, but my previous attempts have always missed the culinary mark, to the point where Jen rolls her eyes and looks disappointed when I tell her that I’ve picked up a rabbit.

This was different.

The combination of techniques here – confitting and deep-frying – worked wonders. The first stage tenderised the meat and worked up it’s natural flavours, the second stage gave it a smack of crunch and an extra layer of mustard flavour.

It’s reminiscent of a much more refined version of a certain fast-food chain’s produce…

Astonishingly good.