Bollito misto
Bollito misto is a classic northern Italian stew, resembling the French pot-au-feu, typically consisting of various tougher cuts of beef and veal, cotechino sausage, and a whole hen or capon, all gently simmered in an aromatic vegetable stock.
Bollito misto and its many regional variations are eaten throughout Italy; it is particularly popular in Emilia-Romagna, Piedmont, and Lombardy. The meat is sliced thinly and served with mostarda, and a green sauce – salsa verde – and other sauces.
History and description
One-pot stews have long been common to many cuisines. Those using a mixture of meats include the French pot-au-feu, the Belgian hochepot, the German Pichelsteiner, the Spanish cocido and the South American puchero. Bollito misto is a comparable dish from Italy.Anna Del Conte writes in her 2001 Gastronomy of Italy that the mixture of meats in a bollito misto varies by locality. In Piedmont and Lombardy beef is the main ingredient, and in Emilia-Romagna pork products – cotechino and zampone – take first place. Del Conte stipulates, "A classic bollito misto should include beef, veal, chicken, tongue, a cotechino and half a calf's head". The meats are added to the pot at different times, depending on how long they take to cook. Chefs and food writers from Italy and elsewhere prescribe widely differing ingredients:
| Cook/writer | Beef | Veal | Poultry | Sausage | Ref |
| James Beard | Brisket | Tongue | Capon | Cotechino | |
| Biba Caggiano | Brisket; tongue | Rump; calf's head | Chicken or capon | Cotechino | |
| Antonio Carluccio | Brisket | Cheek and tongue | Boiling chicken | Cotechino | |
| Elizabeth David | Silverside | Fillet; calf's head and feet | Capon or turkey | Cotechino | |
| Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall | Brisket or shin; tongue | – | Boiling hen | Cotechino | |
| Rose Gray and Ruth Rogers | Tongue | Silverside | Capon or boiling fowl | Cotechino or zampone de Modena | |
| Sophie Grigson | Brisket, flank or shin | Tongue; shoulder or brisket | Chicken | Cotechino and/or zampone | |
| Marcella Hazan | Brisket or rump; tongue | Brisket or rump; half a calf's head | Chicken | Cotechino | |
| Alastair Little | Shank; tongue | Shank; foot | Capon or chicken | Cotechino or zampone | |
| Anton Mosimann | Tongue; brisket, rump or chuck | Shoulder; foot | Chicken | Cotechino | |
| Claudia Roden | Brisket; tongue | Rump or shoulder; foot | Chicken | Cotechino | |
| Jody Scaravella | Chuck | Shoulder | Capon or turkey | Cotechino | |
| John Torode | Salt beef; tongue | Shank | Chicken | Cotechino | |
| Alice Waters | Brisket; tongue | – | Chicken legs | Fennel sausages |
According to Larousse Gastronomique, the meat is cooked in stock with onions, carrots and celery and served with vegetables such as carrots, turnips and celeriac cooked in a little of the strained stock. Depending on the region, bollito misto is accompanied by different sauces. The two most frequently served are salsa verde and bagnet ross or salsa rossa. According to Del Conte, the best-known bollito misto, the Piedmontese gran bui, is served with at least three sauces, with saussa d’avie in addition to salsa verde and salsa rossa. In the Veneto, bollito misto is accompanied by peverada, and in Lombardy mostarda di Cremona is served along with salsa verde.
Restaurants that offer bollito misto often serve it from special trolleys with each of the various meats in its separate compartment full of hot stock. The meat is removed from the stock and carved individually for each customer; this prevents the meats from drying out.