Preparation | Cooking | Start to finish |
---|---|---|
20 min. | 25 min. | 40 min. |
1 | For the veal, ask your butcher to cut escalopes as thin as possible. Say that you will be making saltimbocca - a good butcher will understand. Lay the escalopes on a chopping board and cover with plastic film. | ![]() |
2 | Hit the excalopes with something like a saucepan, for example, to flatten them even further. | ![]() |
3 | Cover each escalope with a layer of raw cured ham (Italian if possible). Do not add any salt, just pepper. | ![]() |
4 | Lay sage leaves on top. | ![]() |
5 | Roll up the escalopes. | ![]() |
6 | Cur the rolls into bite-sized chunks... | ![]() |
7 | ...and secure with toothpicks (cocktail sticks) to stop them unrolling during cooking. | ![]() |
8 | Prepare all the rolls like this. | ![]() |
9 | See how the different veal-ham-sage layers give the saltimbocca real eye appeal. | ![]() |
10 | Melt 30 g butter in 3 tablespoons olive oil in a frying pan on medium heat. When this mixture is good and hot. add the saltimbocca and fry until browned all over. | ![]() |
11 | When fried, transfer to a plate and remove the toothpicks. Cover with aluminium foil to keep hot. | ![]() |
12 | Next, make the sauce by putting the frying pan back on high heat with 200 ml dry white wine. Salt, pepper and leave to reduce until it thickens. | ![]() |
13 | Pop the saltimbocca back in the pan briefly for a moment in the hot sauce. | ![]() |
14 | Serve on a bed of pasta or plain white rice. | ![]() |