Chapters · Advanced Techniques
Chicken Galantine
The culmination — fermentation, curing, sous vide, consommé, and the creative freedom to compose your own dishes.
★★★ Advanced$3 hr

Foundations Referenced
- → Chicken Stock (for poaching)
- → Bouquet Garni
- → Protein Fabrication
Ingredients
Galantine
- 1 whole chicken (4 lbs), deboned (see method below)
- Salt, pepper
Forcemeat
- 8 oz ground pork
- 8 oz ground veal (or more pork)
- 4 oz pork fatback, small dice
- 1 egg
- 2 tbsp brandy
- 1 tbsp fresh thyme, minced
- 1 tbsp fresh parsley, minced
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp white pepper
- 1/4 tsp nutmeg
- 1/4 tsp allspice
Garnish (inside the roll)
- 1/4 cup pistachios, toasted
- 2 oz ham, cut into 1/4" strips
- 2 oz dried apricots, diced (optional)
Poaching Liquid
- 3 quarts chicken stock (→ foundation)
- 1 bouquet garni (→ foundation)
- 1 onion, halved
- 1 carrot
- 1 celery stalk
Method
Debone the chicken (the hardest part — take your time)
- Place chicken breast-side down. Cut along the backbone from neck to tail.
- Working one side at a time, use a boning knife to carefully separate the meat from the carcass, keeping the skin intact. Follow the bones, scraping meat away.
- When you reach the leg and wing joints, cut through them to free the carcass.
- Remove the leg and wing bones from inside the meat (cut around the joints, scrape down the bones).
- You should have a flat, boneless chicken with skin intact — like a butterfly. Save the carcass for stock.
Make the forcemeat
- Combine ground pork, veal, fatback, egg, brandy, herbs, and spices. Mix until cohesive.
- Cook a small test patty. Taste and adjust seasoning.
- Fold in pistachios, ham strips, and apricots.
Assemble
- Lay the deboned chicken skin-side down on a large sheet of plastic wrap. Season with salt and pepper.
- Spread forcemeat evenly over the chicken, leaving a 1" border.
- Roll tightly into a cylinder, using the plastic wrap to help. Twist the ends tight (like a candy wrapper). Wrap in a second layer of plastic, then tightly in cheesecloth. Tie the ends and middle with twine.
Poach
- Bring poaching liquid to 170°F (a bare simmer — no bubbles).
- Lower the galantine into the liquid. Maintain 165–170°F for 1.5 hours until internal temp reaches 165°F.
- Remove. Let cool 30 min at room temperature, then refrigerate overnight (still wrapped).
Serve
- Unwrap. Slice into 1/2" rounds with a sharp knife.
- Each slice reveals a mosaic of chicken, forcemeat, pistachios, ham, and apricots.
- Serve on a platter with cornichons, Dijon mustard, dressed greens, and crusty bread.
What You're Learning
- Deboning a whole bird while keeping the skin intact — the most advanced fabrication skill
- Forcemeat: a seasoned mixture of ground meat and fat that binds and flavors the filling
- The test patty: always taste your forcemeat before assembling (you can't fix seasoning after poaching)
- Poaching at a precise low temperature: too hot = the forcemeat expands and bursts the skin
- This is classical garde manger at its finest — a cold preparation meant to showcase skill
- The cross-section is the presentation: the mosaic of colors and textures is the visual payoff
- Every technique in this dish draws from earlier chapters: fabrication (Ch.02), stock (Ch.02), seasoning (Ch.01), poaching (Ch.03)
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