Ossobuco alla Milanese is one of my favorite recipes. It’s a special and flavorful dish and one that I love to serve to guests. Make sure to purchase the veal shanks from a great butcher!
Ossobuco is most often associated with Milan and the Lombardy region and dates back to the Middle Ages. To prepare it you need sliced veal shank (veal marrow bones) thickly cut: about 1 inch thick. Slow-cooked is the name of the game because the star of the dish is the bone marrow which needs to slow-cook and soften up to creamy deliciousness.
The addition of the gremolade at the end adds an additional burst of flavor and umami richness. The original recipe first presented in Pellegrino Artusi’s cookbook had no anchovy in the gremolade. I love to add a hint of anchovy to many dishes because it adds that magical burst of flavor and richness we’ve come to know as umami.
This dish is fabulous served with a creamy saffron parmesan risotto, or creamy mashed potatoes.
Course Dinner, Main Course, Second Course
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 30 minutesminutes
Cook Time 2 hourshours15 minutesminutes
Total Time 2 hourshours45 minutesminutes
Servings 4
Calories 485kcal
Author Wendy
Equipment
Heavy bottom skillet, best is cast iron (I prefer Le Creuset)
Ingredients
For the gremolade:
2teaspoonsLemon peelminced
1Anchovy filletminced
2tablespoonsParsleyminced
1Garlic clovemedium, minced
For the ossobuco:
1kilogramVeal shank (veal marrow bones)veal shank (veal marrow bones) 4 pieces, 200 to 250 grams each (7 ounces), cut 2 ½ centimeters (1 inch) thick
50gramsOnionabout half of a medium white or yellow onion, minced
50gramsButtersalted
½cupFlourenough to flour both sides of the veal shank