Fuet tartare is one of those ideas that sounds a little unusual at first, but then quickly starts to make a lot of sense. Fuet is a Catalan dry-cured salami, or a thin dry-cured sausage, with a delicate, slightly spicy and pleasantly aged flavour. In this recipe, it is combined with cheese, mini pickles, mustard, chives and egg yolk.
Since fuet is not always easy to find everywhere, this recipe also works without panic if you use a substitute. The best option is a thin dry-cured pork salami with a mild flavour, not too smoky, too fatty or too hard. Fuet should remain the first choice if you can find it, but otherwise take a good dry salami and the whole thing will still be very useful.
This is not a classic tartare, but its playful, more homely and quite fun version. It is excellent for gatherings, festive tables, wine evenings or whenever you want to prepare something small, but still special enough that it is not just sliced meat on a plate.
Fuet tartare with cheese, mini pickles, mustard and egg yolk is a simple but very effective snack to serve with baguette slices. Salty, slightly spicy, a little creamy and just different enough for guests to remember it.
What is fuet?
Fuet is a Catalan dry-cured salami, or a thin dry-cured pork sausage. It is usually gently seasoned, cured and has a distinctive dry, aromatic flavour. On the outside, it may have a white noble mould coating, similar to some other dry-cured salamis.
If you cannot find fuet, use a thinner dry-cured pork salami with a mild flavour. The most important thing is that it is not too smoky, too fatty or too hard. For a stronger flavour, you can also use a spicier cured sausage, but the result will be much more pronounced and spicy.
Ingredients
- 1 fuet sausage, Catalan dry-cured salami; if you cannot find it, use a thinner dry-cured pork salami with a mild flavour
- 100 g aged cheese, cut into smaller cubes
- 8 small pickles
- 2 teaspoons mustard
- 1 egg yolk
- finely chopped chives
- baguette, for serving
Method
1. Prepare the ingredients
Cut the fuet into smaller pieces so it is easier to process. If you are using another dry-cured salami, cut it into smaller pieces as well. If you wish, you can also cut the cheese and mini pickles into smaller pieces, although this is not necessary if you will process everything in a chopper or blender. Finely chop the chives and save them for the end.
2. Roughly chop the base
Add the fuet, or your chosen dry-cured salami, the cubes of aged cheese, mini pickles and mustard to a blender or chopper. Pulse everything briefly until roughly chopped. The mixture must not become a paste. The goal is for it to stay slightly coarse and textured, so it resembles tartare.
3. Shape the tartare
Transfer the prepared mixture to a plate. Using a serving ring, or simply a spoon, shape it into a neat circle or a small mound. Press it down gently so it holds its shape, then make a small well in the centre for the egg yolk.
4. Add the egg yolk
Carefully place one egg yolk into the prepared well. For the best appearance, add it right at the end just before serving. The egg yolk gives the snack that final touch and adds a more velvety feeling once it is mixed into the tartare.
5. Finish and serve
Sprinkle finely chopped chives over the top. Cut the baguette into thin slices and lightly toast them if desired. Serve the fuet tartare so everyone can spoon a little mixture onto a piece of bread, or prepare assembled bites in advance.
Tip
Texture is very important in this recipe. The mixture should be roughly chopped, not blended smooth. If you overprocess it, it will become more like a spread than a tartare. Use short pulses and check what is happening in the chopper after each pulse.
Because this recipe contains raw egg yolk, use the freshest possible eggs from a trusted source. If you do not want to include raw egg yolk, you can leave it out. The snack will still be very good, just less creamy and less “tartare-like” in appearance.

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