A Feast for the Palate and the Eye
French cuisine features many noble poultry dishes, but the guinea fowl (pintade) holds a special place on the festively set table. Its tender, delicately aromatic meat is a delicious alternative to chicken or duck – less fatty, yet full of flavor. In this modern interpretation, the noble breast (suprême) is highlighted, accompanied by a creamy celery gratin and a luxurious truffle jus that elevates the dish to a new level of enjoyment.
Ideal for a dinner à la française or a festive occasion such as Epiphany, Christmas, or a special Sunday meal.
📝 Ingredients for 4 people
🐔 For the guinea fowl:
- 4 guinea fowl breasts (with skin)
- Salt & black pepper
- Clarified butter or ghee (for frying)
- 1 sprig of thyme & 1 clove of garlic (for the pan)
🍷 For the truffle jus:
- 1 shallot, finely chopped
- 150 ml poultry stock (homemade or high quality bought)
- 100 ml dry white wine
- 1 tsp butter (cold, for finishing)
- 1 tsp truffle oil or 5–10 g fresh black truffle (thinly shaved)
- Salt & pepper
🥔 For the celery gratin:
- 1 medium celery root
- 200 ml cream
- 100 ml milk
- 1 clove of garlic
- 1 tsp butter for the dish
- Nutmeg, salt, pepper
- Optional: 50 g finely grated Comté or Gruyère
👨🍳 Preparation
1. Prepare the celery gratin (takes the longest)
Best to start first – can be kept warm in the oven.
- Peel the celery and slice into very thin slices (ideally with a mandoline).
- Heat cream and milk in a pot with a crushed garlic clove. Season with salt, pepper, and nutmeg.
- Let the celery slices simmer in it for about 10 minutes.
- Grease a baking dish with butter, layer the celery slices overlapping like roof tiles, add some of the liquid.
- Optionally sprinkle with cheese.
- Gratin in the preheated oven at 180 °C (top/bottom heat) for about 35–40 minutes until golden brown.
2. Prepare the guinea fowl
- Pat the guinea fowl breasts dry and lightly score the skin side.
- In a hot pan with clarified butter, fry the breasts on the skin side over medium heat for about 5–6 minutes until crispy; add thyme and garlic to the pan.
- Turn and fry for another 2–3 minutes.
- Finish cooking in the preheated oven at 120 °C for about 8–10 minutes – the meat should remain juicy.
3. Create truffle jus – simple but sophisticated
- Sauté shallots in a little butter in a small pot until translucent.
- Deglaze with white wine, let reduce briefly.
- Add poultry stock and reduce by half.
- Season with salt and pepper.
- Remove from heat and mount with cold butter, stir in truffle oil or truffle shavings.
Tip: Do not keep boiling to preserve the truffle aroma.
🍷 Plating & Serving
On each plate:
- A pool of the truffle jus
- The juicy guinea fowl breast, sliced slightly diagonally
- An elegant portion of the celery gratin
Garnish suggestion: Fresh truffle shavings, microgreens, or a touch of fleur de sel.
🥂 Wine Recommendation
An elegant but not too heavy white wine pairs perfectly:
- Bourgogne Chardonnay
- Condrieu (Viognier)
- Or a matured Champagne brut nature
👑 Conclusion: Festive, fine, and full of character
This dish combines rustic warmth with French savoir-faire. The guinea fowl impresses with aroma and tenderness, the celery brings depth and creaminess, and the truffle jus refines the whole with a luxurious touch. It is a perfect main course for special occasions – or simply when you want to treat your guests (or yourself!) royally.