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Award-winning chef, author and forager Alan Bergo. Food is all around you.

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Brain Fritters with Gruyere, Lemon and Sage

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Lamb brain recipe fritters with lemon and sageIf you’ve never eaten brains, but are curious about them, these fritters should be the first thing on your list to make. If you’re a seasoned eater of elusive cranial sweets, you can probably say hello to your new favorite brain recipe.  

The key with brains, at least for me, in trying to serve them to others, at least for the time being, seems to be figuring out the best way to disguise them, and I don’t know anyone who will turn their nose up at crispy, cheesy, golden brown fritters perfumed with fresh sage and anointed with a squeeze of lemon. Seriously. Everything is good in cake or fritter form. 

cooking brain fritters in a cast iron pan

While doing research for all my cranial cookery projects for this site, I made notes of the brain recipes I wanted to try and tweak, and I found more than one recipe for fritters. Richard Olney described one in his great book of offal cookery, but looking at the ingredients I could see it was going to be a bit dense, since there wasn’t any egg. Another recipe I found in the great Phaidon book I Know How to Cook had a recipe for brain fritters too, and that one, with it’s gruyere cheese, nutmeg and eggs, was more to my speed. 

cooking brain fritters in a cast iron pan with sage leaves

I put the sage leaves in the pan while I shot it, and you can if you’re careful, but I wrote the recipe to be a little more fool proof since the leaves are part of what’s attractive here.

After I played around with a few versions, I settled on the one here, which is more or less the same, with the addition of fresh sage and a little tweak on some of the proportions. It’s really easy, and, I can gaurantee, if you don’t tell your friends they’re eating brains, no one will suspect a thing. You can break it to them as they fight over the last golden brown fritter, and watch their minds juggle with the cognitive dissonance that comes with loving something they might never have considered edible. 

Lamb brain recipe fritters with lemon and sage

Lamb brain recipe fritters with lemon and sage
Print Recipe
5 from 2 votes

Lamb Brain Fritters with Lemon and Sage

Fritters of brains mixed with grated gruyere cheese are a delicious way to begin your journey into enjoying one of the most under-utilized offal delicacies. Serve 2-4 and makes about 10-12 cakes
Prep Time15 mins
Cook Time15 mins
Soaking Time and Prep (unattended)8 hrs
Course: Appetizer, Snack
Cuisine: American, French
Keyword: Brains, Lamb
Servings: 4

Ingredients

Fritters

  • 4 oz cooked lamb or other brains *see note I used 2 whole lamb brains, halved
  • 2 oz Gruyere or Parmesan cheese
  • 1 large egg
  • 2 tablespoons heavy cream or half and half
  • 2 tablespoons all purpose flour or equivalent
  • Fresh cracked black pepper
  • A few scrapes of fresh nutmeg
  • Tiny pinch of cayenne

For serving

  • Fresh sage leaves about 12
  • ¼ cup clarified butter or cooking oil for frying
  • Fresh lemon wedges

Instructions

Batter

  • Cut the lamb or other brains into ½ inch cubes, then mix with the remaining ingredients except the flour. Mash the brains around with a fork a bit to break them up. Add the flour until just combined.
  • Cook a small piece of batter to test the seasoning and adjust as needed. Heat the clarified butter or oil in a pan about 8-10 inches in diameter, a cast iron skillet is great.

Cooking the Fritters

  • Fry the sage leaves until just crisp, then transfer to a pan lined with a towel in the oven to keep warm. Fry the cakes a few at a time in the now sage-flavored butter until golden on each side, transferring cooked brain fritters to a dish in a warmed oven.
  • Once all the fritters are done, arrange them on a warmed plate, put a sage leaf on each on, and serve hot with lemon wedges.

Notes

To prepare the brains for cooking

Soak the brains in cold water in the refrigerator, changing the water until it runs clear, then poach them in lightly salted water to cover with a peel of lemon zest and a bay leaf for 20 minutes. Cool the brains in their liquid completely, then they’re ready for the fritters.

Using other brains besides lamb 

You can use other brains here, and you'll get a better yield from pork or beef. All of my lamb and goat brains have lost about half their weight after poaching, for what it's worth. 

 

 

Related

Previous Post: « Brain Salad with Herbs and Pickled Peppers (Salade de Cervelle)
Next Post: Buckwheat Kasha with Wild Mushrooms and Onions »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jacqui

    January 2, 2021 at 7:30 pm

    Like my daughter says: “everything’s better when it’s fried”.
    You can do anything with brains that you would do with sweetbreads. Like … with asparagus in a vol-au-vent

    Reply
  2. Jessica

    September 13, 2021 at 3:33 am

    Hi there! I’d love to try this recipe but the title says it Gruyere and the recipe calls for Parmesan. Which cheese is the intended one? Thanks looks great!

    Reply
    • Alan Bergo

      September 13, 2021 at 9:38 am

      Either parm or gruyere are fine. I include parm as an option as most people have it more readily available.

      Reply
  3. Midnight Carp

    October 4, 2021 at 11:31 pm

    5 stars
    Don’t try swapping the parmesan for feta, was very blaned

    Reply
    • Alan Bergo

      October 5, 2021 at 8:42 am

      Yeah feta is too wet and won’t brown as pictured in the recipe. Thank

      Reply

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Alan Bergo
I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. You tak I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. 

You take the pure juice of the leaves, mix it with salt, Koji rice, and more chopped fresh ramp leaves, then ferment it for a bit. 

After the fermentation you put it into a dehydrator and cook it at 145-150 F for 30 days. 

The slow heat causes a Maillard/browning reaction over time. 

After 30 days you strain the liquid and bottle it. It’s the closest thing to plant-based fish sauce I’ve had yet. 

The potency of ramps is a pretty darn good approximation of the glutamates in meat. But you could prob make something similar with combinations of other alliums. 

The taste is crazy. I get toasted ramp, followed by mellow notes from the fermentation. Potent and delicate at the same time. 

I’ve been using it to make simple Japanese-style dipping sauces for tempura etc. 

Pics: 
2: Ramp juice 
3: Juicy leaf pulp 
4: Squeezing excess juice from the pulp
5: After 5 days at 145F 
6: After 30 days 
7: Straining through Muslin to finish

#ramps #veganfishsauce #experimentalfood #kojibuildscommunity #fermentation #foraging
Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Pepin used to make for French president Charles de Gaulle. 

You bake eggs in a ramekin with shrimp topped with creamy morel sauce and eat with toast points. 

Makes for a really special brunch or breakfast. Recipe’s on my site, but it’s even better to watch Jacques make it on you tube. 

#jacquespepin #morels #shrimp #morilles #brunchtime
Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each instead of the pound. 

Good day today, although my Twin Cities spots seem a full two weeks behind from the late spring. 2 hours south they were almost all mature. 

76 for me and 152 for the group. Check your spots, and good luck! 

#morels #murkels #mollymoochers #drylandfish #spongemushroom #theprecious
The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natu The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natural secretion of water I typically see with plants. 

I understand it as an indicator that the mushrooms are growing rapidly, and a byproduct of their metabolism speeding up. If you have some clarifications, chime in. 

Most people know it from Hydnellum 
peckii-another polypore. I’ve never seen it on pheasant backs before.

Morels are coming soon too. Mine were 1 inch tall yesterday in the Twin Cities. 

#guttation #mushroomhunting #cerioporussquamosus #pheasantback #naturesbeauty
Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a grocery store. 

#groceryshopping #sochan #rudbeckialaciniata #foraging
Italian wild food traditions are some of my favori Italian wild food traditions are some of my favorite. 

Case in point: preboggion, a mixture of wild plants, that, depending on the reference, should be made with 5-23 individual plants. 

Here’s a few mixtures I’ve made this spring, along with a reference from the Oxford companion to Italian food. 

The mixture should include some bitter greens (typically assorted asters) but the most important plant is probably borage. 

Making your own version is a good excercise. Here they’re wilted with garlic and oil, but there’s a bunch of traditional recipes the mixture is used in. 

Can you believe this got cut from my book?!

#preboggion #preboggiun #foraging #traditionalfoods
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