Provençal Veal Breast Stuffed With Swiss Chard

Provençal Veal Breast Stuffed With Swiss Chard
Melina Hammer for The New York Times
Total Time
About 3½ hours
Rating
4(56)
Notes
Read community notes

This Passover holiday recipe, an ancient jewel of Jewish Provençal cooking, feels modern with our new love of Swiss chard. It is traditional to use a whole veal breast with all the bones, but that makes for a giant roast by today’s standards. For this simplified but magnificent version, have a butcher trim, butterfly and remove the bones -- and save them to cook beside the meat, where they will add flavor and texture to the braise. The dish tastes best cooked a day ahead to allow the flavors to blend.

Featured in: A Seder Feast in Provence, with Roots in Ancient Rome

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Ingredients

Yield:8 to 10 servings
  • 6tablespoons olive oil
  • 3large onions; 2 diced, 1 cut into 2-inch pieces
  • Kosher salt
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 3garlic cloves, finely chopped (about 1 tablespoon) plus 2 cloves, unpeeled
  • 4sprigs thyme, leaves removed and chopped (about 1 teaspoon)
  • 1sprig fresh rosemary, leaves removed and finely chopped (1 teaspoon chopped)
  • 2pounds Swiss chard (2 to 3 bunches), leaves and stems chopped
  • 1(15-ounce) can crushed tomatoes
  • 1large egg, lightly beaten
  • 1square matzo, crumbled into ½-inch pieces
  • 1boneless breast of veal, about 4 pounds, trimmed, butterflied, bones reserved (a butcher can do this, or order it for you); see note
  • ½cup Côtes du Rhône or other dry red wine
  • 3carrots, cut in half lengthwise and then cut on the diagonal in 1-inch slices
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

543 calories; 36 grams fat; 12 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 19 grams monounsaturated fat; 3 grams polyunsaturated fat; 17 grams carbohydrates; 4 grams dietary fiber; 6 grams sugars; 36 grams protein; 1002 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Make the filling: In a large skillet, heat 4 tablespoons of the olive oil over medium heat. Add diced onions, season with salt and pepper and sauté until softened. Mix in the chopped garlic, thyme and rosemary. A few handfuls at a time, stir in the chard and, using tongs to toss, cook with the onion mixture until all the greens are soft, about 10 minutes. Turn off the heat and use a slotted spoon to transfer chard mixture to a large bowl. Stir in tomatoes, egg and matzo pieces, mixing well. You will have at least 5 cups cooked filling.

  2. Step 2

    Heat oven to 375 degrees. Lay the meat flat on a clean work surface, season the top with salt and pepper and spread a thin layer of the filling (about half) evenly over the surface of the meat, leaving a 1-inch border. Reserve and refrigerate the remaining stuffing. Tightly roll the meat and secure it with kitchen twine, making a knot every 1½ inches and tucking the meat in to enclose the ends. Season the outside of the roll with salt and pepper.

  3. Step 3

    Add the remaining olive oil to the skillet, turn the heat to medium-high and brown the stuffed veal on all sides. Transfer to a large roasting pan with a lid. (If your skillet isn’t large enough, brown veal directly in the roasting pan, laid over 2 burners of your stovetop.) To the pan where you browned the meat, add wine and simmer for about a minute, scraping up any browned bits from the bottom of the pan. Spoon liquid over the meat. Scatter the carrots, large onion pieces and whole garlic cloves around the veal, place the bones, and pour in about 8 cups of water or enough to come halfway up the meat.

  4. Step 4

    Reduce oven to 325 degrees and cook, covered, 2½ hours, basting every 20 minutes or so, until veal is cooked through and tender, 165 degrees on a meat thermometer.

  5. Step 5

    Remove the meat from the pan, set aside to cool, then refrigerate overnight. Strain the sauce, reserving the carrots and discarding the bones and the onions. Refrigerate sauce and carrots.

  6. Step 6

    The next day (or when ready to serve), remove and discard the fat from the sauce and simmer sauce in a small pot until reduced by ⅓. Season with salt and pepper. Using a long sharp knife, slice the veal into 1-inch portions. (Pull out kitchen twine as necessary). Carefully transfer slices to a large ovenproof serving dish or roasting pan, scatter the reserved stuffing around the veal and pour the braising liquid and carrots over the top. (You can refrigerate the whole dish at this point, to be reheated just before serving, or proceed to reheat the meat now.)

  7. Step 7

    Just before serving, reheat in a 350-degree oven, covered with foil, about 20 minutes or until heated through. Serve in individual portions or on a platter, with a little chard stuffing and carrots on top of each slice for color, and drizzled with some of the braising liquid.

Tip
  • You can use breast of lamb instead of veal.

Ratings

4 out of 5
56 user ratings
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Cooking Notes

Two questions, please. How many does this serve? Can it be made in advance and frozen? Looks like a wonderful change from brisket.

Breast is the brisket! Brisket is the breast!

Recipe says it makes 8 to 10 servings. Made in advance and chilled (for a day or so) is fine; freezing the whole thing would impair texture and flavor.

I made this a long time ago; spinach & herbs, otherwise much like your recipe. I roasted it with the bones—veal was tender enough to cut between them & served them like a rib dinner! I was very fond of this entree!

excellent!

I have a wonderful butcher at our local supermarket who ordered the breast with the bones &then took them out, leaving me with the butterflied piece and the bones.. I am in making it right now. One comment suggested that it should be covered but it doesn't say that in the recipe.I tasted the stuffing and the swiss chard seems a bit bitter. After sweating over stuffing the veal, I put the rest with some butter underneath and I will heat it covered it the oven. Keeping fingers crossed

My butcher had veal breast with the bone in. I needed to get about 7lbs to make 4 lbs boneless. This is enough for 8-10 people but not if people want seconds. In one of the photos about this community in the paper they have 2 full globes of garlic floating in the dish, not 2 unpeeled cloves as stated in the ingredient list. I opted to do that and the results were delicious, not overly garlicky at all. Roasted to 160F and refrigerated a couple days before slicing and reheating, came out perfect

This is very delicious. Well worth the effort in preparing. But what takes more effort than the prep is finding veal. Any veal. In the large metropolitan area where I live, only 1 or 2 stores have any veal at all ,when they have it, and what they do have is expen$ive. Even a few cubes of veal to make "city chicken." would be nice to find once in a while. But, if you can get a veal breast, or even 5 or 6 ribs of a breast and a kind butcher to fix it up for you, it is worth the effort.

Can I use a Dutch oven instead of a roasting pan with a lid for this recipe?

Could I use a butterfloid veal flank steak for this? - and would the cooking time be approximately the same?

Two questions, please. How many does this serve? Can it be made in advance and frozen? Looks like a wonderful change from brisket.

Recipe says it makes 8 to 10 servings. Made in advance and chilled (for a day or so) is fine; freezing the whole thing would impair texture and flavor.

Breast is the brisket! Brisket is the breast!

Can I use another cut of beef? flank steak perhaps? I don’t eat veal.

I made this a long time ago; spinach & herbs, otherwise much like your recipe. I roasted it with the bones—veal was tender enough to cut between them & served them like a rib dinner! I was very fond of this entree!

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