Mushrooms Stuffed with Escargot
Submitted by jmar
Mushrooms stuffed with escargot in garlic-shallot herb butter, baked until bubbling. A classic French appetizer that swaps snail shells for tender mushroom caps.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
15 minREADY
45 minThese mushrooms stuffed with escargot are a French bistro classic with a smart twist: mushroom caps replace traditional snail shells as the vessel. Each cap holds a nugget of herb butter, a plump snail, and another layer of butter on top that melts into a bubbling, fragrant pool as it bakes.
The compound butter is the soul of this dish. Softened butter creamed with shallots, garlic, parsley, and celery creates an aromatic, savory coating that bastes the snails as it melts. Save any extra for fish. It’s essentially a classic escargot butter that works on anything.
Coating the mushroom caps in butter before filling keeps them tender and prevents them from drying out in the oven.
Chef Tips
- Choose large, cup-shaped mushrooms with deep caps. Flat mushrooms won’t hold the butter and the snails slide out.
- Drain the canned snails well and pat them dry. Excess liquid dilutes the herb butter and makes the dish watery.
- Don’t overfill with butter. A scant teaspoon underneath and a bit on top is enough. Too much and the butter pools everywhere instead of clinging to the snail.
- Serve immediately in the baking dish. The butter cools and solidifies fast. Hot, bubbling escargot is the whole point.
Variations
- Bourguignon-style: Add a splash of white wine to the baking dish before it goes in the oven for a saucy, more traditional approach.
- Without escargot: Skip the snails and fill each cap with extra herb butter and a sprinkle of breadcrumbs for a vegetarian stuffed mushroom appetizer.
Ingredients
Directions
Cream 6 tablespoons of the butter with the shallots, garlic, parsley, celery, salt and pepper.
Remove the mushroom stems and reserve for another purpose.
Heat the remaining butter in a skillet.
Add the mushroom caps and turn to coat on all sides.
Arrange in the depressions of a snail pan, in scallop shells or in a shallow baking-serving dish.
Place a scant teaspoon of the herbed butter in each mushroom cap, add a snail and cover it with a little more butter.
Before serving, bake in a moderate oven (375 degrees) about 15 minutes.
NOTE: Any leftover herbed butter may be used for baked or broiled fish.
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