Roast goose, apple sauce, lemon potato stuffing and Marsala gravy

Serves 6-8 Starters and mains

Nigel Book Goose Plated

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Ingredients

  • 4.5-5kg goose
  • 1.3kg floury potatoes
  • 400g banana shallots
  • 3tbsp olive oil
  • 1 lemon
  • 3 sprigs rosemary
  • 10 sprigs thyme

For the apple sauce

  • 3 large cooking apples, such as bramley
  • 2 lemons
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 4 cloves

Method

Remove the goose from its wrapping and place in a large, deep roasting tin. Heat the oven at 220C/450F/Gas 7. Peel the potatoes and quarter them, then cook them in boiling, lightly salted water for about 10 minutes, until they have just started to soften.

Peel and halve the shallots, remove the roots, then unfurl the layers. Warm the olive oil in a shallow pan over a moderate heat, add the shallots and let them cook until soft and golden.

Drain the potatoes and return to the dry saucepan, pressing down on them lightly with a potato masher or fork to slightly crush. Squeeze in the lemon juice, then cover with a lid to infuse. Reserve the empty lemon shells.

Pull the needles from the rosemary and roughly chop, then chop the thyme leaves. Add the herbs to the potatoes, fold in the cooked shallots, then season with salt and black pepper.

Stuff the crushed potatoes into the goose. A few may fall out into the tin – no matter. Season the skin of the goose with salt, add the lemon shells to the tin and place in the oven for 20 minutes, then lower the temperature to 180C/350F/Gas 4 and leave to roast for 2 hours. Watch the progress carefully; cover with foil if it appears to be browning too quickly. Baste a couple of times. When it is ready, the skin should be a deep walnut brown. (If the goose produces vast amounts of fat, remove some carefully from the tin with a baster or small ladle).

While the goose roasts, make the apple sauce. Peel, core and roughly chop the apples. Put them into a heavy-based saucepan. Squeeze the lemons and add the juice to the pan together with the cinnamon stick and the cloves. Bring to the boil, then lower the heat and leave to simmer until the apples are soft. Remove and discard the cloves and cinnamon, then crush the apple sauce finely with a fork or a potato masher.

Lift the goose from the tin, place it on a warm serving platter and cover with foil. Resting for 30-40 minutes. Carefully ladle out most of the fat into a bowl or jar, let it cool and store in the fridge. (There should be lots, and it is useful for roasting chickens and potatoes, and sautéing vegetables).

To carve, place the goose on a chopping board with a little foil underneath to catch any juices. Using a long, sharp carving knife, make an incision as close as possible to the breastbone, at the open end of the goose. Slide the knife along the length of the bird, keeping as close to the breastbone as you can. Prise the meat away from the bone and slice downwards, the blade of your knife tight to the ribcage, removing the breast in one large, long piece. Now repeat with the other breast. Move the carcass onto a serving dish, then cut the breast into short, thick slices, putting them on a warm serving dish. Cut slices from the legs, removing as much meat as you can, and serve.

Recipes and photographs taken from The Christmas Chronicles by Nigel Slater, photography by Jonathan Lovekin. (Fourth Estate, £26).
Nigel Book Goose Plated
Recipes and photographs taken from The Christmas Chronicles by Nigel Slater, photography by Jonathan Lovekin. (Fourth Estate, £26).

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