Balthazar’s Chicken Liver Mousse May 14, 2008
It was a busy day in the kitchen. I made lacto-fermented salsa, lacto-fermented ketchup, chicken stock, a brisket and carrot soup (for dinner), and chicken liver mousse (which we also ended up eating for dinner).
I used the recipe from the Balthazar cookbook for the chicken liver mousse. If you’re not familiar with it, Balthazar is a restaurant in New York City. In SoHo. It’s a fun place to go. And the food is very good.
Anyway, this is a good recipe. The mousse came out great. In the restaurant, they add a little foie gras. But I honestly don’t think you need it. This was so good, even Seth ate it.
It would have been better if we could have put it on bread. But it was still good.
Yes, it has butter in it. We’re trying butter to see how he does. He’s doing fine so far.
I know, you’re supposed to start with clarified butter but he wanted to try. Seth knows himself pretty well and he keeps saying, “I’m fine with butter.”
Anyhow, here’s the recipe:
1 pound chicken livers
1/2 pound plus 4 TBS butter, melted
1 egg
2 tsp salt
Pinch of quatre-epices (equal parts nutmeg, allspice, cloves and cinnamon)
Pinch of freshly ground white pepper
2 TBS Cognac
1. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees F.
2. Brush 6 4-oz ramekins with the 4 TBS melted butter.
3. Process the chicken livers, egg, salt, quatre-epices, pepper, and Cognac in a food processor. (I left out the Cognac, since I wanted to feed this to Kate. I didn’t have any white pepper so I used black pepper instead. And I used freshly grated nutmeg, only because I happen to have whole nutmegs and a nutmeg grater.)
4. With the food processor running, slowly add the 1/2 pound of melted butter. Blend for 15 seconds.
5. Pour the mixture into the ramekins, filling 3/4 of the way.
5. Set the ramekins in a baking dish and fill the baking dish with water to half the height of the ramekins.
6. Bake for 30 minutes.
7. Let the ramekins cool, and then refrigerate until needed.
8. Run a warm knife around the edge of each ramekin, cover with a plate, and invert.
9. Serve chilled (we ate it room temp) with baguette toasts.
So yeah, we ate it without the baguette. No Cognac either. Still so good. Kate loved it, too.
I forgot to put the ramekins in the water bath (see the photo above). But it still came out great.
The salsa came out really good, as well. I didn’t think to use gloves when I was cutting up the chili peppers for the salsa — and I burned the shit out of my hands. They were on fire — for hours. It would not go away. I tried fresh aloe vera and it helped for about 5 minutes but the pain came right back.
I looked online for remedies — and I tried several to no avail. Soaking in vinegar, dishwashing liquid and cold water, olive oil… nothing worked. Then I tried waterless hand sanitizer — it’s ethyl alcohol.
And that worked. Like magic!











I’ve done that making salsa too!! It burns soooo bad!!!
I always scratch my nose after i cut hot chili peppers, when will i ever learn???
i’ll try this recipe, i love chicken liver mousse, yummmy.
I’ll have to try the Chicken Liver Mousse, I do get tired of fried chicken livers. BUT PLEASSSSE share your Salsa recipe! I’d love to have it. My son loves hot hot salsa. Hopefully I’ll remember the gloves!
Hi, Diane, I used the salsa recipe in NT. She doesn’t specify which peppers to use — and I just grabbed a couple at the market. Kate had just dropped her glass bottle (SMASH!) in Whole Foods and I was a bit flustered so I just grabbed.
I thought I was grabbing a jalapeno and an Anaheim. But I think it might have been a serrano and an Anaheim.
I hope it doesn’t come out too hot!
Oh well it’s the first time I made it — I can always make it again and perfect it.
[...] grown to love liver. My friend Ann Marie, over at Cheeseslave blog had a great recipe for Balthazar’s Chicken Liver Mousse and boy is it delicious. I’ll confess right now, I’ve never made a mousse until today, [...]
I was wondering how your ketchup turned out. I made some following the NT recipe and it was very, very thick and super tomato-tasting. It wasn’t eaten because it still tasted and felt like tomato paste.
Hi, Kricket, it came out great! It got the stamp of approval from hubs — he eats it on his eggs every morning (I like salsa on my eggs).
If it tastes too tomato-y, maybe try fooling around with the ingredients. Did you use fresh tomatoes or canned? If you used canned, what brand did you use?
I used canned (just plain whole canned organic tomatoes — Whole Foods brand) but next time I will try fresh. I used fresh tomatoes for my salsa.
Ann Marie
I just made it with all coconut oil and it turned out great!
Yay! That’s awesome! Did you use all coconut oil instead of butter? Did it get too hard in the fridge?