DM:
There are many recipes from Italy for boar. The ones better known in the States, it seems, tend to be from more northerly regions, especially Tuscany, but boar has been eaten traditionally all along the Appennines down to Calabria.
There are some general tendencies in the treatment of boar across the regions: many recipes include garlic and peperoncini and the herbs most widely used with this meat are laurel and rosemary.
Along those basic lines a typical preparation would be to:
1) marinate the meat in vinegar and water for a day or two.
2) brown the meat (usually with some lard).
3) add a soffritto of at least garlic and peperoncino, though perhaps also with other aromatics (onion, carrot, celery, celery leaf, parsley), with laurel and/or rosemary.
4) braise slowly for a few hours with a little water and wine.
Some significant variations can be made through the inclusion of some pancetta or a little tomato (
pomodori pelati or
conserva or
passata).
Most recipes involve cutting the meat into smallish pieces though one could do the above with a large chunk or joint.
For roasting a joint
all' Italiana, you could marinate the meat for a couple of days in wine with the cut up aromatics and herb. One would then dry the meat and brown it in lard or oil and then roast it in the usual way.
A fairly common accompaniment to roasted or braised boar in Italy is polenta.
*
Small pieces of boar meat cooked with a basic battuto, some red wine, laurel and a good dose of tomato can also be used as a substantial
sugo to dress fresh pappardelle.
*
The best boar dish I ever tried in Italy was fresh
guanciale di cinghiale at La Garga in Florence. Unfortunately, that was a rather long time ago now.
*
Beyond that, I'm inclined to add that some of the most elegant treatments of boar are to be found in Belgium. The boars, including rather young ones (
marcassins), of the Ardennes in eastern Wallonia are much appreciated and have long been renowned for their quality. There are a number of great recipes in the Belgian (and Franco-Belgian or Belgo-French) repertoire, ranging from the relatively baroque to the very simple. A number of them involve apples (which also appear in some Italian recipes).
*
I hope that's of some help. I'm sure there must be recipes on line in English that purport to be Italian but, as in all cases, Google searches can turn up far more chaff than wheat, or perhaps that should be more gristle than meat. Hopefully, the notes above may be useful as background for further searching, though the preceding is pretty much how I think in terms of recipes.
Anyway, welcome and, as Jacques Pépin would say,
'appy cooking!
Antonius
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
________
Na sir is na seachain an cath.