- 50g/1¾oz caster sugar
- 50g/1¾oz distilled vinegar
- 150g/5½oz frozen blackcurrants
- 450g/1lb clear honey
- 450ml/16fl oz red wine vinegar
- 3 carrots
- 3 parsnips
- 1 small swede
- 1 small celeriac
- 1kg/2lb 4oz duck or goose fat
- 6 sprigs lemon thyme
- 3 garlic cloves
- 1 sprig rosemary
- fine sea salt, to taste
- ground white pepper, to taste
- fine sea salt, to taste
- 3 thyme sprigs, leaves picked
- white ground pepper, to taste
- 50ml/2fl oz double cream
- 175g/6oz unsalted butter, diced
- 5 tbsp olive oil
- squeeze of lemon
- 150g/5½oz butter, softened
- 35g/1¼oz garlic, crushed
- 35g/1¼oz flatleaf parsley, finely chopped
- 1 savoy cabbage, shredded
- 2 tbsp whole black peppercorns
- 2 tbsp juniper berries
- 800g/1lb 12oz Oisin venison loin, trimmed
- For the blackcurrant gastrique, put the sugar and vinegar in a saucepan and cook until it has reduced to a syrup and is golden in colour. Add the frozen blackcurrants and cook until the berries break down. Taste the gastrique, add more sugar if it is too sour or a little more vinegar if it is too sweet.
- For the honey reduction, put the honey, red wine vinegar and 450ml/16fl oz water in a saucepan and bring to a gentle simmer, cook until it has reduced in volume by two-thirds. Set aside.
- Peel and wash all the root vegetables. Cut all the root vegetables into the same sized chunks. Blanch the carrots and swede briefly.
- Bring the duck fat to a gentle simmer. Wrap the lemon thyme, garlic and rosemary in a muslin cloth and add to the duck fat. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
- Cook the parsnips in the duck fat for 10-15 minutes – they should be cooked through but still retain a bite. Drain the parsnips in a colander and sprinkle with a little seasoning. Once drained, cool down on a tray so they stop cooking and don’t get mushy. Repeat the same process for all the remaining vegetables.
- When all your vegetables are done and still tepid mix them all gently. Fry the vegetables in a large non-stick pan (the pan should be big enough so that the vegetables do not overlap). When the vegetables start to turn a nice golden colour, add the honey reduction to glaze.
- For the butter emulsion, bring 150ml/5fl oz water to the boil. Add the salt, thyme and pepper. Leave to infuse then add the cream. While the water is still hot, add the butter and use a hand blender to create an emulsion, then add the oil and use the hand blender again. Check the seasoning, balance with a squeeze of lemon juice and pass through a fine sieve. Leave at room temperature.
- For the cabbage, make a garlic butter. Mix the garlic and parsley with the softened butter. Blanch the cabbage for 1-2 minutes, then drain. Melt the garlic butter and toss the drained cabbage in it.
- For the venison, toast the peppercorns and juniper berries in a frying pan (as you would do with seeds) until they release an aroma, then grind using a spice grinder or in a pestle and mortar. Lightly dust the venison with the ground spices. Sear the venison gently and cook until rare, leave to rest in a warm place.
- Carve the venison and serve with the honey glazed vegetables and garlic butter cabbage. Drizzle over a little of the emulsion and spoon the blackcurrant gastrique over the venison.