{ Savory Tv is pleased to introduce you to Chef Christopher Cina. A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Christopher is a well seasoned chef, international traveler, and food photographer. He has worked in restaurant venues around the world, including San Francisco, Europe, and Denver. He currently lives and works in Denver, Colorado, and has a beautiful food blog at ChristopherCina.com. Please join us in welcoming Chef Christopher, as he shares a restaurant secret and favorite appetizer recipe with us in this very special guest post! }
White Bean Pâté
In restaurants, the name of the game is money. In your better restaurants, this is tempered somewhat by quality, meaning that chefs and owners are willing to pay more for better quality. The most ‘high end’, well respected and nationally known restaurants have the luxury of passing the cost of quality on to the customer. Not so much for the little guy. Independent operators with talented but unfamous chefs are forced walk that fine line between being overpriced and serving lesser quality ingredients. You would expect to pay $44 for a hangar steak at Robuchon, but would you pay that at a local restaurant downtown that didn’t have a chef with 4 restaurants, a cookbook and a gaggle of Michelin stars?
“Necessity is the mother of all invention.” Never have truer words been spoken and this is a common mantra at every ‘middle-of-the-road’ restaurant trying to watch costs. If there is a cheaper way to do it without sacrificing quality, someone in that restaurant will figure it out. It could be reconfiguring a dishwasher that the chemical guys don’t know about, building a plug out of skewers for that damn Robot Coupe bowl, or a recipe like this White Bean Pate.
In the late 90’s while at my first Executive Chef position, dairy prices were through the roof. So much so that we halved the portion of butter that we served with the bread as an option to help offset the cost. The only other option would be to reprint all the menus with higher plate costs. You see, every restaurant includes a little formula while pricing out dishes, what I call the ‘Q Factor’. It is in every one of my costed out menus. A ‘Q Factor’ is a charge for everything in a restaurant the customer sees as free, because it is not on the bill. I figure in the cost per person of my bread service, meaning bread and butter, I figure in ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, coffee creamer, coffee sweetener, even salt and pepper. That number is figured into every dish on the menu. It’s never a big number, always less than a dollar per plate, but that helps me pay for the things customers see as complimentary.
Back to the pate, I needed to figure out something that would help my butter cost. Halving the butter portion only upset people, they would ask for more and they were getting more than they were originally before we adjusted the portion. I didn’t want to go back to the olive oil, everyone else at that time was doing olive oil, plus it was expensive for really good oil and I wasn’t going to skimp there. I was forced to come up with something original that would act as a butter substitute, hence the white bean pate. It was vegetarian, used a third of the butter and it was different. My guests loved it, they always asked for more, and because the ingredients were so inexpensive, it worked out well. We started getting a lot of requests for the recipe. So many that we began to put a stack of the recipes at the host stand every night.
I use a little more butter in my home version, I’m not worried about the cost as I would be making a much larger batch and who doesn’t love butter? Once made it will keep in the fridge for up to a week. Truth be told, it’s at its best about the 3rd day, when all the flavors have become intertwined.
This recipe makes about 2 quarts of pate.
- 1 ½ # Great Northern Beans
- 1 ¼ # butter, softened to room temperature
- 1 bay leaf
- 1 large red onion, julienned fine
- 1 cup balsamic vinegar
- ½ cup whole garlic cloves
- olive oil, about a cup and a half
- 1/2 cup chopped parsley
- salt and white pepper to taste
Method
- Simmer (do not boil!) the white beans in unsalted water with bay leaves just until they start to split, about 2 ½ hours.
- While the white beans are simmering, in a small sauté pan, cover the garlic cloves with oil. Place them on medium low heat and allow them to soften and turn golden brown.
- Allow the garlic to cool.
- Drain the oil and reserve in the fridge.
- In a small mixing bowl, mash the garlic with a fork. Reserve until the beans are done.
- Heat a larger sauté pan with 2 Tbs. of oil, place on medium high heat.
- When the pan is hot, add the onions and cook until they start to develop some color, about 5 minutes.
- Add the balsamic vinegar to the onions, reduce by half and remove from heat. Reserve until the beans are done.
- When the beans have finished, remove the bay leaves and drain.
- While the beans are still hot, begin to mash them with a large spoon. You can also mash them in a mixer with the paddle.
- Once you’ve mashed the beans, add the butter, half pound at a time and continue to mix until all the butter has been incorporated.
- Add the mashed garlic, onions and vinegar, and parsley and mix well.
- Season with salt and white pepper. Keep in mind while seasoning hot ingredients that will be served cold, you want to slightly over salt as the saltiness will dissipate considerably when served cold.
- Remove to a serving dish and chill for at least 4 hours.
- Serve with breads, crackers or anything else you might use with a spread.
Christopher Cina
September 4, 2009 at 2:58 pmRT @SavoryTv Guest post on Savory Tv from Chef Christopher Cina @ccina, sharing a white bean pate, pls visit /RT! http://bit.ly/uAKSC
All type of RECIPES!.. » Chef Christopher Cina's Restaurant Recipe, White Bean Pate …
September 4, 2009 at 3:08 pm[…] mustard, mayonnaise, coffee creamer, coffee sweetener, even salt and pepper. Continued here: Chef Christopher Cina's Restaurant Recipe, White Bean Pate … Friday, September 4th, 2009 at 15:23 RSS feed for comments on this post Leave a comment | […]
Matt Hanson-Weller
September 4, 2009 at 4:39 pmThis looks like a tasty recipe with familiar ingredients to satisfy my tastebuds. I am always curious what to do with the different varieties of beans available, so this recipe will definitely be served sometime in the near future. Yum!
The salting tip is one I will keep under my hat as well.
Savory Tv
September 4, 2009 at 4:54 pmThank you Matt for visiting, let us know your if you try it. Christopher has many more great recipes on his site also. Have a great holiday!
Healthycoffee
September 4, 2009 at 5:52 pmChef Christopher Cina’s Restaurant Recipe, White Bean Pate …: I figure in the cost per person of my bread .. http://bit.ly/33Kmh
Christopher Cina
September 4, 2009 at 9:44 pmCheck out the white bean pate recipe on Savory.TV…guest posting here… http://bit.ly/3ePDCF
Chef John
September 5, 2009 at 12:15 pmWow, that looks great! Nice post and beautifully “buttery” recipe. Thanks (and thanks Heidi for sharing!)
Savory Tv
September 5, 2009 at 1:16 pmThank you Chef John, glad you enjoyed his post!
Jessie
September 5, 2009 at 1:16 pmohhh that looks really good, I bet it would make a great panini sandwich spread too
Chef John
September 5, 2009 at 1:18 pmCheck it out! A great white bean pate post on @SavoryTv http://tinyurl.com/n9jdng
JGadFly
September 5, 2009 at 1:21 pmRT @FoodWishes Check it out! A great white bean pate post on @SavoryTv http://tinyurl.com/n9jdng
Gera @ SweetsFoods
September 5, 2009 at 5:09 pmAn outstanding and delicious buttery recipe. I want it right now to spread on multi-cereal bread…a perfect match.
I wonder how will taste with other type of beans.
Cheers!
Gera
Savory Tv
September 5, 2009 at 5:26 pmThanks for visiting Jessie and Gera!
Jessie, great idea, I bet that would be tasty.
Gera you could always try, I would stick with a similar mild bean variety.
Christopher Cina
September 5, 2009 at 11:22 pmGlad you all like the recipe. Heidi is right, Gera. You want to keep it to a mild bean, at least with this recipe. I’ve tried it with black beans, baby borlotti, kidney beans, and white marbles. They aren’t bad, but to get to the proper balance of vinegar, butter and bean, you need to adjust the ratios.
C-
fast cooker
September 6, 2009 at 12:13 pmIt look amazing. I don’t like parsley, do you think I can make this recipe without it?
JMom
September 6, 2009 at 1:07 pmOMG, I can just imagine how that much butter would taste! Just give me a spoon, please. lol!
That was great info in restaurant cost. I’m not in the restaurant business, so it was really interesting to find out that nothing is truly free 🙂
grassosalvato86
September 7, 2009 at 7:05 amThis recipe is simply delicious, and looking at this high quality photo I can clearly see that Chris is a great photographer as well!
Salvatore
Savory Tv
September 7, 2009 at 11:30 amJmom and GrassoSalvato86,always a pleasure to have you visit!
Fastcooker, absolutely you could omit the parsley, give it a try.
zerrin
September 7, 2009 at 1:41 pmThis looks so tasty! It will be a great savory food (meze) with Turkish raki. I can even have it at breakfast. YUM!
Rosa
September 7, 2009 at 9:11 pmThat spread looks delicious! A wonderful recipe! I love that kind of savory food…
Cheers,
Rosa
Savory Tv
September 7, 2009 at 10:14 pmMany thanks Zerrin and Rosa for visiting!
Mixed Drink Recipes
September 9, 2009 at 12:54 pmWhat a gorgeous photo! Pate looks good too!
averagebetty
September 10, 2009 at 9:02 amChef John made us a late night snack of white bean pate in Aspen… the first I’d ever had. It was delicious! Being the average home cook I am, I’ll give this a try but with canned beans (shhh!). Looks great!
Hillary
September 11, 2009 at 11:13 amThis looks delicious and very healthy! Thanks for sharing! You should submit this recipe to Recipe4Living.com!
Savory Tv
September 12, 2009 at 12:15 amMixed Drink Recipes, thanks for visiting, I hope you will try it.
Average Betty, so sorry I missed that special snack (Savory Tv was lame that evening in Aspen and went in early!), is there secret video footage on one of your cameras? Spill the beans!
Hillary, thanks as always for stopping in!
Easy Vegetarian Recipes
October 15, 2009 at 1:25 pmThis looks like a tasty dish, and you have to love anything that uses beans. Great source of fiber!
Nancy Selby
July 25, 2011 at 5:01 pmI made the recipe, but way too much. Can it be frozen?
Savory Tv
July 28, 2011 at 12:22 am@Nancy, yes it can, but use within 4-6 weeks.