I'd like to make this endive dish but wondering if it appeals to anyone else. I'd have to

Marg CDN

Well-known member
invite someone over to polish it off with me but I'm not sure if it's a bit too European or gloppy for most people. If so, I'd pass. I keep encountering people who want to eat only totally healthful, non-fattening meals.

Braised Endive with Ham and Gruyère by Jean-Georges Vongerichten

Serves 4 400°F.

My grandmother passed this recipe down to my mom and she then passed it on to me. It's a casserole of pure comfort. First, bitter endive is simmered until sweet, then wrapped in savory ham and smothered with a creamy nutmeg béchamel. Gruyère tops it off before it's baked until bubbly and golden.

Endive

5 tablespoons unsalted butter

1/4 cup sugar

3 1/2 tablespoons kosher salt

8 large yellow Belgian endive, trimmed

8 ounces thinly sliced Black Forest ham

Béchamel

2 tablespoons unsalted butter

1/4 cup all-purpose flour

2/3 cup whole milk, warmed

1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg

1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

8 ounces Gruyère cheese, shredded (1 2/3 cups)

To cook the endive, combine the butter, sugar, salt, and 10 1/2 cups water in a large pot. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to maintain a steady simmer. Add the endive, cover, and cook until very tender, about 45 minutes. A knife should be able to pierce through with no resistance. Use a slotted spoon to transfer the endive to paper towels. Reserve 1 1/4 cups cooking liquid. When cool enough to handle, squeeze out as much liquid as possible from the endive.

Wrap each endive with slices of ham. Arrange the endive in a shallow baking dish that holds them snugly; you don't want any space between the endive.

To make the béchamel, melt the butter in a medium saucepan over medium-low heat until golden. Add the flour and cook, whisking constantly, until the mixture smells nutty, about 2 minutes. Continue whisking and add the milk, then the reserved endive cooking liquid in a slow, steady stream. Bring the mixture to a boil while whisking. Continue whisking until thickened, about 5 minutes. Whisk in the nutmeg and pepper.

Pour the béchamel over the endive and spread to cover them evenly. Sprinkle the cheese evenly over the top. Set the dish on a rimmed baking sheet and bake until bubbly and golden brown on top, about 15 minutes. If you want the top more browned and crusty, broil for a minute or two after baking. Serve hot.

 
Sounds good to me... I've made something similar

but used kale instead of endive and bacon instead of ham. As you say, not a low-calorie food, but very good comfort food!

 
I've made a version of this and it is wonderful. But 4 teaspoons of nutmeg? That sounds off to me.

I would grate a little in to taste. Same with the sugar--I would use less. The sauce doesn't sound like it would be too thick or gloppy but you could always save out a little of the braising liquid to thin it just in case.

This is one of Jacques' favorites and I think it is a fairly common household dish in Fance.

 
Totally healthful, non-fattening meals? Shoot me first. . .

The recipe sounds good to me. I's a keepin' it to try!

 
This is a classic...

I learned this recipe from a German friend who's mother was making it in Bonn in the 1920's. Great dinner party dish.

I'm with Joe on the Nutmeg overload. Your guests would be buzzed from all that nutmeg. LOL

1/4 tsp. maybe? Pinch???

 
I don't think I've ever had that much nutmeg in my possession at any given time.

 
It's not so terrible. You could cut down on the butter in the initial cooking. (But not the cheese

at the end.) Also, I have always braised endives with lemon, not sugar. They need an acid to keep them from discoloring, like artichokes.

 
Belgian endive

This dish is typical Dutch fare -- great comfort food!! What I do is let the endive braise in chicken stock only -- the cooking it in all that butter and sugar and water seems like over-doing it to me. I let the endive drain a bit on a cloth towel, similar to what your recipe calls for, but also squeeze each endive pretty thoroughly, otherwise the sauce can get watery. I don't add any of the liquid in which the endives were cooked to the bechamel since the simmering liquid is just too pungent/bitter -- though this recipe includes sugar, which would counterbalance that. I also add a cup or so of grated Gruyere or aged Gouda to the bechamel itself, as well as sprinkle more on top. And I agree with the folks who said that's way too much nutmeg -- I grate the nutmeg directly into the bechamel and taste as I go till the sauce has a mild nutmeg flavor. That's usually about a quarter teaspoon for 8 endives. For me, the ham wrapped around the endive is also optional -- it just doesn't seem completely necessary and I often leave it out.
cheers, Bonnie

 
Yep, finally back!

Thanks! Like a few other folks, I couldn't access the site after it changed over to here. Luckily, this iPad received for a Christmas present solved that problem. Hooray!! Glad to be back, that's for sure. cheers, Bonnie

 
Interesting about the nutmeg. I looked inside his book and that's the amount he uses. When I grate

nutmeg using a long rounded microplane grater, it's very light and powdery, if that's the word. 4 teaspoons would tamp down to be a lot less. If you were using pre-grated from a jar, I'm sure it would be way too much.

 
I was thinking about this, too. You're right--fresh-grated nutmeg is almost fluffy.

I can see how a tablespoon and a teaspoon would be justifiable (but then I love nutmeg). smileys/smile.gif

 
So this is on the can-make-again list. Easy to make, easy to eat.

I'm not fond of plain bechamel unless it's in moussaka. So as Bonnie would do, I added half the cheese to the sauce and the other half on top. There was lots of cheese. I used Emmenthaler.

As for the nutmeg, I added just a pinch actually. I made half the recipe for just me, and I'd guess 1/16 t. uncompacted nutmeg. It was perfect in my opinion. I thinned the sauce with the cooking liquid only to the med. sauce level. The cooking liquid tasted and smelled quite decadent and the endive were sweet and delicious, absolutely no trace of bitterness.

I'd make it exactly the same again but will try even thinner ham.

I'm sure I've had this in Alsace at some point but can't remember enough to compare. Thank you for all your comments.

(special bonus...I got $5 worth of endive free because it priced incorrectly. That may be one change for the next attempt)

 
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