Filet Mignon of Tuna and Duck Foie Gras from Chef Patrick O'Connell

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  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2024
  • Filet Mignon of Tuna and Duck Foie Gras from Chef Patrick O'Connell
    For more Great Chefs videos, recipes, and downloads visit www.greatchefs....
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    This luxurious dish combines seared onions, tuna, and foie gras with silky wine-butter sauce. Make the sauce first
    and keep it warm; once you start cooking the onions, the dish develops quickly, and the crisp seared tuna and foie gras need to be served immediately.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 89

  • @jamesfox4261
    @jamesfox4261 Рік тому +12

    I worked there in the mid 2000’s before he received his first Michelin reviews. He is legend. Best training and experience as a young journeymen chef.

    • @cameronquinn4972
      @cameronquinn4972 Рік тому +2

      I worked there 2021-2023 best training ever. Chef Patricks still at the pass every day. This dish is also still served from time to time when guests specially request it.

    • @Ken-fw7ue
      @Ken-fw7ue 2 місяці тому

      This is a perfect dish

  • @lancer525
    @lancer525 11 років тому +15

    I can't recall a better series, a better concept, or better execution than this fantastic bit of Television. This show really expanded the boundaries of what cooking could be, and whether anyone wants to admit it or not, this show paved the way for the Food Network.

    • @jeffparnell5805
      @jeffparnell5805 4 роки тому +1

      I went to high school for culinary arts. This show inspired me to get in the kitchen back then. I remember coming home from school and watching this show. There was nothing like it, and there still is nothing like it. No competition, no studio kitchen, unpretentious. It's been 20+ years since I would come home from school to watch this, but I still remember if like yesterday.

  • @macco360
    @macco360 13 років тому +22

    I've said it before: the negative comments and "thumbs down" are from people who don't know their food history! This was a show from the end of the nouvelle cuisine era among the cutting edge. Whatever you think of the food world at that time, you have to admit this stuff was chic. What will future generations think of our informal, peasant food craze? It's all interesting in its own way. Time and place should always be factored into retroactive criticism.

  • @kendallwi
    @kendallwi 4 роки тому +5

    Beautifully simple dish. As of last year, he had a modern take on this dish which still incorporated tuna and foie gras.

  • @ahahaha6228
    @ahahaha6228 6 років тому +18

    For everyone talking shit: he's got 2 michelin stars now lol
    EDIT: Now he's the only one with 3 stars on the eastern seaboard not in NYC.

    • @Marmalade_Sally
      @Marmalade_Sally 5 років тому +4

      And none of that changes the fact that he served burnt, bitter onions in a dish that looked utterly unappealing. Using "He has Michelin stars!" as a defence is like watching a cop shoot a baby in the face and then screaming "But it's totally ok cause he's a cop! LOOK AT THE BADGE! He knows what he's doing, guys." Learn to think for yourself, buddy.
      Love, a chef of 12 years.
      P.S. No Michelin stars, though XD.
      P.S.S. But I can cook an onion.

    • @ahahaha6228
      @ahahaha6228 5 років тому +2

      @@Marmalade_Sally someone's triggered.

    • @dahweinerslave
      @dahweinerslave 5 років тому +1

      Chef of 12 years and you don't know what a charred vegetable is? Idk if I believe u internet chef sir. Any culinary textbook will go in depth of the science of flavor development through charring (known as the Mallard reaction). Dude this is like trying to argue science. R u a flat earther? You know dinosaurs r real right? U know charred onions taste fucking amazing and have been around since modern cuisine? Read a book. Jesus

    • @dahweinerslave
      @dahweinerslave 5 років тому +1

      @@Marmalade_Sally look man if u can't spell "defense" I don't care for your opinion on fine dining. Working at McDonald's for 12 years doesn't make u a chef.

    • @Marmalade_Sally
      @Marmalade_Sally 5 років тому

      wOrKiNg aT mcDOnALd'S foR 12 YEars DOesN'T mAke u a cHeF

  • @stephendove2850
    @stephendove2850 14 днів тому

    He’s come a long way!

  • @ZinsWorld
    @ZinsWorld 5 років тому +4

    Wonderful guy and wonderful food, i'm happy to be able to call him a friend :)

  • @hkwall7590
    @hkwall7590 9 років тому +3

    My mom said she used to watch this show years ago...she really likes the show...

  • @DavidBrothers-j2o
    @DavidBrothers-j2o 2 місяці тому

    This guy looks and sounds like Bill Walsh the former coach of the 49ers

  • @macco360
    @macco360 12 років тому +4

    @Anguis79 Agreed. What was edible by our ancestors ten thousand years ago is still edible now, but by virtue of the industrial age we have access to many more flavors. Styles change. One generation's food is another's animal fodder. Frankly, we are lucky to have any food at all.

  • @永恒-i1p
    @永恒-i1p 8 років тому +8

    Even time I watch Hell's Kitchen, I don't believe that these stupid "Chefs" who are eliminated very early are real. Now I finally realize that there are a bunch of people who don't know what they are doing at all, yet really think they are professional.....

    • @julesgainey9677
      @julesgainey9677 5 років тому +1

      It’s called the dunning Krueger effect: stupid/untalented don’t know that they’re stupid or untalented so they assume themselves to be THE MOST INTELLIGENT & THE MOST TALENTED., look it up

  • @jon1805
    @jon1805 4 роки тому +2

    What IS this orange vegetable? SIMPLY AMAZING

    • @angeloveloso5004
      @angeloveloso5004 3 роки тому

      A carrot

    • @aveuch
      @aveuch 2 роки тому

      @@angeloveloso5004 Clearly he was being facetious 6:50

  • @awesome220
    @awesome220 13 років тому +1

    @33barbington How many michelin stars do you have?

  • @Landon_Lucas
    @Landon_Lucas 3 роки тому +3

    Back in the day when fish was a great meat substitute lol

  • @wulwul6113
    @wulwul6113 3 роки тому

    Lol the plating XD hahhhahaha

  • @Gourmet_Goon80
    @Gourmet_Goon80 7 років тому +2

    I respect this man until the end of the earth. He is my Thomas Keller. All-knowing, creative, and innovative.

  • @TheTruth61989
    @TheTruth61989 12 років тому +1

    if this video was posted last month....how are the comments from last year?

  • @colinhague1436
    @colinhague1436 6 років тому +2

    Wtf is with all the charred onions, I get a few as a small addition but damn. I do not like at all.

  • @chrissmith7730
    @chrissmith7730 9 років тому +5

    I seriously doubt that a charred to jet fucking black onion taste very good!

    • @richardkennethantolin7016
      @richardkennethantolin7016 9 років тому +3

      Chris Smith we used charred to jet fucking black onion in our old fashioned consomme :) it sweetens the soup and amplify its aroma and flavor..

  • @christophersmith4466
    @christophersmith4466 6 років тому +1

    Nastiness looking dish I've seen in quite a while! How on Earth can a majority of everything charred taste any good??

    • @CooManTunes
      @CooManTunes 4 роки тому +1

      You're a tasteless imbecile.

    • @kennethlatham3133
      @kennethlatham3133 4 роки тому

      Ever had S'MORES?

    • @joepetch308
      @joepetch308 3 роки тому

      Charred = bitter
      Onions = acidic
      Acid > bitter.
      Also salt counteracts bitterness along with acidity so it works out.

  • @foreignmilk
    @foreignmilk 2 роки тому +2

    flamin' yawn is my favorite cut of meat

  • @marcuscicero9587
    @marcuscicero9587 3 роки тому +3

    keeps using the rear burners, yikes

  • @sammy50001
    @sammy50001 8 років тому +1

    "meat substitute'...lmao tuna IS MEAT!

    • @robrandolph9463
      @robrandolph9463 7 років тому +1

      meat without feet

    • @kennethlatham3133
      @kennethlatham3133 4 роки тому +4

      For generations the word "meat" was used to tacitly refer to red meat, pork, chicken, lamb. Vegetarians were just a fringe terrorist organization back then.

  • @isaacvs1
    @isaacvs1 10 років тому +7

    Sooooooo 80s

    • @michaelchamp3093
      @michaelchamp3093 Рік тому

      Was actually the 90’s. Couldn’t wait to watch the episodes as a young culinarian

  • @kita4601
    @kita4601 9 років тому +3

    Thank God for innovation. Good for its era. Looking back, its like what the fuck! Boiled veggies and burnt onion. Meh, have to try make this. See if its actually any good. Good thing there is a link for recipe.

    • @SuperOlds88
      @SuperOlds88 9 років тому +1

      Kitty The onion brule' is used more to add a darker color to stocks, not to really eat as is. Boiled veg, so what, still done.

    • @christophersloan4842
      @christophersloan4842 6 років тому +1

      Chefs are roasting leeks to cinder then dusting things with it , food it shit at the mo no individuals no skill

  • @markie19921
    @markie19921 8 років тому +3

    So its burned unions on one side and raw on the other side? Cooking green vegetables in the same water as carrots????? And seriously balsamic vinegar and foi grass??? I wouldnt send my worst enemy's to this place

  • @superwoman2887
    @superwoman2887 9 років тому +10

    A chef really ? really in France he will be put in jail using foie gras like that!

    • @kita4601
      @kita4601 9 років тому +1

      Superwoman agreed

    • @superwoman2887
      @superwoman2887 8 років тому

      Because it goes against any rules of test,,,this guys thinks he can replace the ingredients and create something original half burger half sushi to create his version of french cuisine,Many chef in the US do this like mixing salmon or steacks with strawberries etc can of i dont even know how to call that...

    • @Phranclinn
      @Phranclinn 8 років тому +3

      you guys are idiots , foie gras goes awesome with tuna , just look at Le Bernardins menu , yea the Le bernadins in New York , named one of the best restaurants in the entire world , They have Tuna carpaccio served over foie gras medallion , brushed with olive oil and a squeeze of lemon , SUBLIME !!!

    • @weakassnow
      @weakassnow 5 років тому

      This guy just got his 3rd Michelin Star idiot also when was this the 70s ?

    • @kennethlatham3133
      @kennethlatham3133 4 роки тому

      Oh, you'd probably cry "Rape!" if somebody put chocolate in your peanut butter.

  • @urbanviii6557
    @urbanviii6557 6 років тому +1

    The completely blackened onions would disturb me. Looks ugly, and probably tastes ugly.

  • @tammynewman
    @tammynewman 2 роки тому +1

    Burnt onions man I don’t know 🤔

  • @AaronsTasteTravels
    @AaronsTasteTravels 9 років тому +1

    so dated....

  • @pronoun-free
    @pronoun-free 8 років тому +5

    I don't know if I can trust a chef that cannot pronounce mignon correctly. Not to mention, aren't the veins supposed to be removed from foie gras, not 'cleansed'? Coupled with the fact that he believes people are too stupid to realize those vegetables are carrots and zucchini, and the addition of burnt onions? No thank you!

  • @blakfloyd
    @blakfloyd 11 років тому

    lol conventional narrow mindedness.

  • @sammy50001
    @sammy50001 8 років тому +3

    LOL is this a joke? Burned onions? ... and wow does putting the foie gras in ice water cleanse the veins??? Up-vote for laughs.

  • @smcgloth
    @smcgloth 9 років тому +5

    What a horrible looking plate. The onions just ruin it.

    • @mmil3s272
      @mmil3s272 5 років тому +3

      SleeplessSteve youve got michelin stars right

  • @mikeycorales282
    @mikeycorales282 9 років тому +3

    Im sorry but he isnt that great!

  • @33barbington
    @33barbington 13 років тому +1

    This is a terrible way to treat a beautiful cut of tuna. The preparation of the vegetables is much ado about nothing. It is wasteful to treat expensive ingredients like that.

  • @TheIkaika777
    @TheIkaika777 8 років тому

    Stop making the natural beauty of food look unnatural.

  • @ianelgar6472
    @ianelgar6472 5 років тому

    How in the fuck can you eat the onions. What a fail

  • @3starskiwi
    @3starskiwi 2 роки тому

    Those onions are cancerous.🤮🤢

  • @karel007
    @karel007 6 років тому

    Black onions !!!! Wtf. Sure he's no real cheff... Pretend.. Cancerous.. U probably never heard of it!! The French don't call rhT sauce "vin rouge". Sorry find another profession... Not in food.

    • @connor9024
      @connor9024 4 роки тому +1

      Karel he called it a buerre rouge which is a traditional sauce like a buerre Blanc. I use to work at a very prestigious hotel and we’d serve charred onion with our green beans. Plus the French use burnt onion in milk sauces called an onion brûlée or sometimes an onion flute

    • @kennethlatham3133
      @kennethlatham3133 4 роки тому

      Ever heard of "S'MORES"?

  • @NigelLew
    @NigelLew 7 років тому

    That is entirely pedestrian, boring and wrong.

  • @georgewbushcenterforintell147
    @georgewbushcenterforintell147 5 років тому

    Little kids in Laos make better food from landmines and snakes

  • @johnyf.q.8043
    @johnyf.q.8043 8 років тому

    humm... Cancer by the slice

  • @jeydub8541
    @jeydub8541 5 років тому

    Very weak garnish. Inappropriate sauce. And that plate is ridiculous. I suspect Patrick and Reinhardt spent more time picking out that plate than considering the garnish for this dish. Maybe he ought to change the name to The Inn At Little Gay Babylon . Let's bring out the silver service tray for Great Chefs.

  • @dickmeisterling3924
    @dickmeisterling3924 2 роки тому +1

    Don't burnt onions taste like burnt onions?