Vitello tonnato recipe | Guy Grossi (2024)

Australian Gourmet Traveller recipe for vitello tonnato by Guy Grossi.

Feb 19, 2015 1:00pm

By Guy Grossi

  • 30 mins preparation
  • 1 hr cooking plus steeping
  • Serves 8 - 10
  • Vitello tonnato recipe | Guy Grossi (1)

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Perhaps Italy's most celebrated cold dish, vitello tonnato makes a great party plate, writes Guy Grossi, of Melbourne's Grossi Florentino. He shows us how it's done.

This dish originates in the north of Italy, in Piedmont, and having a mother from the north meant it featured on our dinner table regularly. It's still one of my family's favourite dishes and we often enjoy it at Christmas and other celebrations.

It's not clear where the idea came from to steep sliced veal in tuna sauce, but it may have been born of the Italian mentality of using up leftovers by turning them into something else. It could well have been that leftover veal and canned tuna was all some clever cook had on hand at the time. And out came vitello tonnato.

Vitello tonnato has a wonderfully unique flavour. While the combination of veal and tuna might seem strange, it certainly is one of the best examples I know of where land and sea work well together. While the body of the sauce is tuna, the flavour that comes from the addition of capers and lemon juice has the perfect balance of salt and acidity without any overpowering flavours of fish.

It's a perfect dish for entertaining. While most versions you see in restaurants outside Italy sauce the veal to order, traditionally it's made a day in advance. It's definitely one of those dishes that are better the day after it's made. Leaving the veal to sit in the tuna sauce for a day allows the flavours to infuse and the veal to soak up the sauce. Take it out in time to lose the chill of the fridge, and remember to have some crusty bread on hand for when the veal is gone. It would be a crime to waste that sauce.

The veal is poached slowly so it remains tender and pink in the centre; it's important to get this right - it should feel firm, but spring back from the touch. Once cooked, the veal should be sliced as thinly as as your sharpest knife will allow. And the tuna sauce, the hero here, should be light and creamy.

Some versions I've seen use mayonnaise, but this is not traditional, and if the sauce is made right you won't need to add it. I like to use our own house-preserved tuna; the flavour and texture of the tuna is delicate and adds a special dimension to the dish.

Of course, canned tuna is perfectly acceptable, too. There's lots of high-quality Italian canned tuna available, which makes this dish easy and accessible.

I like to use La Nicchia Pantelleria capers for both cooking and garnishing here. They're small, sweet capers with a pleasant flavour. Larger capers can be too salty and overpower the subtle tuna flavour of the sauce. The traditional garnishes for this dish, as well as capers, are lemon segments and shaved parmesan. Some rocket can dress it up nicely, too, and add some colour.

In warm weather this dish is easily a go-to for weekend gatherings and dinner parties. It looks impressive and there's no fussing to be done in the kitchen, so you can enjoy your company, glass of white wine in hand. Yes, please.

Ingredients

  • To serve: thinly shaved Parmigiano-Reggiano and trimmed rocket leaves
  • To serve: 2 lemons, segmented

Poached veal

  • 1½ tbsp olive oil
  • 2 (1.2kg) veal girello (see note)
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 celery stalks, thinly sliced
  • 1 carrot, thinly sliced
  • 2 anchovy fillets
  • 3 each cloves and juniper berries
  • 750 ml dry white wine
  • 250 ml (1 cup) white wine vinegar
  • 2 fresh bay leaves

Tuna sauce

  • 5 eggs, at room temperature
  • 500 gm canned tuna
  • 1 tbsp salted baby capers, rinsed, plus extra to serve
  • Juice of 1 lemon
  • 60 ml (¼ cup) extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra to serve

Method

Main

  • 1

    For poached veal, heat olive oil in a wide casserole over high heat and sear the veal until browned on all sides (3-5 minutes), then remove from the saucepan. Set aside.

  • 2

    Add onion, celery, carrot, anchovies and spices to the pan and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until just tender (6-8 minutes).

  • 3

    Return veal to pan and deglaze the pan with white wine and vinegar. Add the bay leaves and just enough water to cover.

  • 4

    Bring to the boil, then simmer over low heat, occasionally turning the veal, until it's cooked pink (10-15 minutes; it should feel firm but spring back when pressed). Remove the meat from the liquid and set aside to cool to room temperature.

  • 5

    Simmer the cooking liquid over high heat until reduced by three-quarters (30-40 minutes), then strain and set liquid aside to cool.

  • 6

    For tuna sauce, cook eggs in boiling water until hard-boiled (9 minutes). Cool in cold water, then peel and set aside.

  • 7

    Process tuna, capers, lemon juice, extra-virgin olive oil and eggs in a blender until smooth.

  • 8

    With the blender running, gradually add enough reduced cooking liquid to the mixture (about 160ml) until it reaches a slightly runny mayonnaise consistency.

  • 9

    Slice the veal thinly across the grain and set aside.

  • 10

    Spread tuna sauce over a serving plate, arrange a single layer of veal slices on top and spoon more sauce over to cover. Repeat, finishing with a good layer of sauce. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight to steep. To serve, bring the vitello tonnato to room temperature, arrange capers, lemon segments, rocket and parmesan shavings on top and drizzle with extra-virgin olive oil.

Notes

Note Girello, a cut from the hind leg, is also sold as veal nut. It's best when not too young but still very light in the flesh. It may need to be ordered ahead from your butcher.

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Vitello tonnato recipe | Guy Grossi (2024)
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