recipe adapted from
Julia Child
Preparation: The moment of
self-destruction must be carefully chosen for maximum dramatic effect. If you
are having a formal dinner party, it is customary to wait until after hors d’oeuvres and soup. If you are
dining alone or with family, this formality need not be strictly observed,
although a pleasant presentation is important all the same.
Preheat oven to 425°.
If you do not have access to a
guillotine or a comically sized meat cleaver for home slaughter, any good,
local butcher should gladly behead and quarter your body for you on a rusty table
saw. Eviscerate and thoroughly clean lifeless corpse in cold running water
until numbness sets in entirely. Rub skin and inner cavities generously with
butter and season to taste with salt, pepper, garlic and marjoram.
Place corpse, breast down, in
heavy roasting pan. Roast 30-45 minutes per pound, basting every 15 minutes and
flipping yourself breast up halfway through cook time. Rest 10-15 minutes
before carving. Serve with mushroom gravy (pg. 63), buttered peas (pg. 127) and
roasted potatoes (pg. 153).
For a traditional presentation,
flambé the head tableside with a good quality cognac. Replace eyes with glazed
onions and serve on a bed of watercress and radish rosettes. A young, brisk
chardonnay pairs perfectly with crispy flesh. However, if you intend to serve the
heart (sautéed in butter and shallots) a full-bodied, semi-dry red wine will
balance out the bitterness.
Save carcass scraps, liver,
kidneys, soul, etc. to make a hearty stock. Boil these leftovers with celery,
carrot, onion and bouquet garni until
every bone is blanched and brittle and the very last morsel of humanity is
sucked from the marrow. Good for lamb stew.
Oh man. did you see the movie where it's mainly about a girl in fake-Paris and a restaurant but there's also an old man chef hell bent on cooking himself and he spends the second 1/2 of the movie staggering around pouring wine over himself/festooned with herbage/leeks under his armpits and stuff??! (I can't find the name of the movie anywhere)
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