Hassenpfeffer
Submitted by themaillady
German hasenpfeffer: rabbit marinated in vinegar and wine, then braised with bacon, onions, and a touch of chocolate for a velvety sauce. Old-world hunter’s stew.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
2 daysHasenpfeffer is the German hunter’s stew that brought rabbit to American supper tables through generations of immigrant grandmothers. The name translates roughly to “hare pepper," but the dish is so much more than peppery rabbit. It’s vinegar, wine, garlic, bay, bacon, and the secret weapon: a tablespoon of grated unsweetened chocolate stirred in at the end.
The two-day marinade in vinegar and oil is the technique that transforms tough game rabbit into something tender. The acid breaks down the connective tissue while the oil keeps the meat from drying. Skip this step and the rabbit stays chewy no matter how long you braise it.
The chocolate at the end is the chef’s-secret that defines real hasenpfeffer. It’s not enough to taste, but it darkens the sauce to a deep mahogany and adds the rich, complex undercurrent that distinguishes this from any other braise. The technique is borrowed from Italian salmi di lepre and traveled north through Alpine cooking.
The braising bottle of dry red wine is heavy lifting in the recipe. Use something drinkable, not cheap cooking wine. The wine reduces during the 90-minute simmer into the rich, slightly sweet, deeply savory pan sauce that defines the dish.
Chef Tips
- Have a butcher disjoint the rabbit cleanly. Home-butchering can leave bone shards that cause unpleasant surprises.
- Brown the rabbit pieces in the bacon fat without crowding. Sear color builds the sauce flavor.
- Don’t skip the small white onions sautéed separately. They’re a textural contrast to the soft braised meat and traditional garnish.
- Serve over egg noodles or spätzle to soak up every drop of sauce.
Variations
- Substitute chicken thighs for rabbit if hare isn’t available. The dish loses some authenticity but stays delicious.
- Add 1 tablespoon of red currant jelly with the chocolate for a sweeter, more pronounced German style.
- Serve with red cabbage and boiled potatoes for the full German-table presentation.
Ingredients
Directions
Have the rabbit disjointed and cleaned.
Pour boiling water over it, scrape, rinse, and dry.
In a glass or pottery bowl combine the vinegar, garlic, bay leaf, salt (optional, pepper, and 4 tablespoons of the oil.
Add the rabbit and marinate in the refrigerator for 48 hours.
Drain.
Put the bacon in a Dutch oven and cook until lightly browned.
Add the sliced onions and cook until golden.
Blend in flour and add rabbit.
Cook 10 minutes turning the pieces several times.
Add the wine, bring to a boil, and stir in the chocolate.
Cover and cook over low heat 1½ hours or until tender; add salt and pepper to taste after 1 hour.
While the rabbit is cooking, sauté the white onions in the remaining oil until golden.
Arrange the rabbit on a hot platter with the sautéed onions and bread around it.
Serve with noodles.
Comments
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