Chicken liver pâté with verjus and cider jelly
- Published: 1 Sep 16
- Updated: 20 Sep 24
Chicken liver pâté is combined with acidic, sour, yet delicately flavoured verjus for the perfect toast accompaniment.
-
Serves 6 -
Hands-on time 45 min, plus chilling
Nutrition
- Calories
- 388kcals
- Fat
- 32.6g (20.1g saturated)
- Protein
- 14.2g
- Carbohydrates
- 3.7g (2.9g sugars)
- Fibre
- 0.7g
- Salt
- 0.2g
FAQs
What is verjus?
Verjus, or sometimes verjuice, is quite literally 'green juice' from the French words vert (green) and jus (juice). Not necessarily green in colour, as it can be made from red grapes too. Verjus is the pressed juice of unripened grapes. It has a gentler, less acidic flavour than vinegar.
How do I use verjus?
With its slightly acidic sweet-tart taste it can be great used to boost sauces, salad dressings or mustards.
delicious. tips
You can make the jelly (step 4) using apple juice instead of cider, if you don’t want it so boozy.
The pâté will keep, chilled and covered with cling film, for 3-4 days or for 24 hours once cut.
When trimming chicken livers, discard any sinewy or green-tinged bits as they can taste bitter.
A good bottled cider – medium-dry and not too fizzy – is great here. Alternatively, go for a fruity beaujolais villages.