Rillettes are meat, fish or poultry that’s been chopped or shredded, seasoned with salt and pepper and preserved slowly in its own fat, the fat of another animal, olive oil or butter to make a thick spread for sandwiches, crudité or pasta stuffing. If that sounds a lot like confit, you’re right — the difference is that confit items are usually cooked and served whole, whereas rillettes are the result of shredding the confit. “Confit is just the cooking method,” Westermann clarifies. “It is a traditional way of preserving meat, which also adds a lot of flavor to the meat. Because rillettes are so rich, you need plenty of salt and other spices to help balance the flavors.”

How are rillettes different from pâtés and terrines? Westermann says, “Pâtés and terrines are smoother and usually use organ meat, like liver,” whereas rillettes will use meat from the leg, thigh, shoulder or rib. “We mostly eat rillettes with bread and cornichons as an appetizer or snack. Pâté and rillettes are not really a meal by themselves,” Westermann adds. This preparation is also known as “potted” meat or fish.

Charlotte

Passionnée de vin et de communication, j’ai lancé Les Itinéraires de Charlotte en 2009 pour proposer un regard frais sur l’œnotourisme. Thématiques originales, adresses insolites, événements grand public… Pendant six ans, j’ai multiplié les projets pour rendre le vin plus accessible et vivant.
Puis l’aventure a pris d’autres formes : rédactrice en chef d'un média spécialisé, experte en communication digitale, journaliste et intervenante professionnelle... autant de façons d’explorer et de transmettre ma passion.

Aujourd’hui, l’appel de l’indépendance et du terrain est trop fort : Les Itinéraires de Charlotte renaît, plus libre que jamais, prêt à raconter le vin autrement.

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