This was a recipe from Julia Child Cooking with Master Chefs. Daniel Bouloud created the dish. It calls for sweetbreads and veal chops. It would be great with just the sweetbreads alone. If you decide to do both, you need to adjust the cooking time of the chops, otherwise they will be way overcooked. Not sure what he was thinking.
Roasted Veal Chops and Sweetbreads with Lemon and Rosemary
6 Servings
VEGETABLES
12 ounces sweet onions, spring or Vidalia
4 celery stalks, medium-sized
3/4 pound carrots
3 fennel bulbs, about 1 pound
6 ounces radishes
6 ounces turnips
15 garlic cloves, peeled and split
MEAT
2 pounds sweetbreads, kept in bowl of ice water
6 sprigs rosemary, 10-12 inches long
3 veal rib chop, about 1 3/4" thick,8-10 ozs. ea.
SEASONING
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1 lemon, juiced
1/4 cup dry white wine
2 cups veal stock
FINISHING
1/2 teaspoon rosemary, chopped
3 tablespoons chives, finely chopped
3 tablespoons chervil, roughly chopped
Preparing the Vegetables:
Onions. Trim away the green stems and the root ends; cut in half and then into wedges 1 in. wide.
Celery. Peel and cut into 2-in. pieces.
Carrots. Peel and trim the greens away, leaving 1/2-in. stem(if baby), or cut into thin slices.
Fennel. Trim the feathery tops and remove the 2-3 tough outer leaves; trim away the root ends and cut into 1/2-in. wedges.
Radishes. Leave whole but cut away the green leaves and the root ends.
Turnips. Trim away the stems within 1/2-in. bulb and peel them with a paring knife; or trim all the ends from regular turnips, peel them, and cut into 1-in. wedges.
May be prepared several hours in advance; keep them separate, cover with plastic or a wet towel, and refrigerate.
TRIMMING THE MEATS: Poke a hole horizontally through the center of each sweetbread with a long skewer or a knife. Push a sprig of rosemary through the hole, leaving 1/2 inch of leaves protruding. Tie a piece of butcher's twine around the circumference of the chop to keep the meat securely in place. Cut 3 sprigs of rosemary into inch-long pieces and tuck them into the string surrounding the meat.
Preheat the oven to 475°. Season the chops and the sweetbreads with salt and pepper. Dust lightly with Wondra flour and pat off excess. Pour 2 tablespoons of vegetable oil into the large roasting pan and set over high heat. When very hot but not smoking, add the veal chops and the sweetbreads. Stir in 2 tablespoons of butter and slowly brown the pieces on both sides.
When the meats are nicely browned, push them to the sides of the pan, swish 4 tablespoons of butter into the pan, and scatter the vegetables around the meat, sprinkling them with salt, pepper, and sugar. Stir gently over moderate heat for a few minutes, then drizzle the lemon juice over all, and pour in the wine.
Set the hot pan in the middle level of the preheated oven and bake for 10-12 minutes, until the wine has reduced almost to a glaze, then add the veal stock to the pan. Roast for another 15-20 minutes, basting occasionally with the pan juices until the veal is lightly springy when pressed, and cooked through.
Remove the chops and sweetbreads from the pan; set them aside and keep warm. Return the roasting pan and vegetables to the oven for another 15-20 minutes, or until the vegetables are very tender and the cooking juices have reduced to 1 cup of liquid. Transfer the pan to the stove top over low heat, and stir in the chopped herbs, reserving a few tablespoons for the finished dish. Adjust seasoning and keep warm.
Set the chops on a cutting board, discard the strings, and work rapidly from now on. One at a time, leaving a serving of meat on each chop, neatly cut off 3 slanting 1/2-in. slices of meat, and arrange the slices in the center of your warm platter. Arrange the bone-and-meat servings around the slices. Remove and discard the sprigs of rosemary from the sweetbreads, and cut the sweetbreads into 1/2-in. slices. Lay them on the platter around the veal. Spoon the vegetables and sauce over and around the veal, and decorate with the chopped herbs.
"I feel sorry for people who don't drink. When they wake up in the morning, that's as good as they're going to feel all day." Frank Sinatra