Fréginat is the Catalan pork stew of Roussillon — a rich, slow-cooked preparation of pork shoulder, liver, and sometimes blood, braised with garlic, bay, and red wine in the Catalan tradition, representing the French side of the cross-Pyrenean charcuterie culture that links Perpignan to Barcelona. But fréginat exists within a broader ecosystem of Catalan charcuterie unique to Roussillon: the llonganissa (a coiled, dry-cured pork sausage seasoned with black pepper and garlic, cured in the dry Tramontane wind), the botifarra (both black — amb sang, with blood — and white — blanche, without), the bull (a large, round salami-style sausage cured for 3-6 months), and the fetge de porc (liver paté seasoned with garlic and Banyuls). The fréginat itself: cut 1kg pork shoulder into 4cm cubes, brown deeply in olive oil (not lard — Catalan cooking uses olive oil almost exclusively), add diced onion, several whole garlic cloves, bay leaves, a cinnamon stick (the Catalan spice), and deglaze with 500ml Côtes du Roussillon rouge. Add the pork liver (250g, cut in chunks — it will dissolve into the sauce, thickening it), season with salt, pepper, and a pinch of piment, and braise at 160°C for 2-3 hours until the meat is falling apart and the sauce is thick, dark, and deeply flavored. The liver-thickened sauce is the dish's signature — rich, slightly bitter, complex. Serve with white beans (mongetes) or roasted potatoes. The Catalan charcuterie tradition in Roussillon is maintained by artisan xarcuters (charcutiers in Catalan) in Céret, Perpignan, and the Vallespir valley, who still cure their products in the cold, dry Tramontane wind that sweeps down from the Canigou mountain.
Pork shoulder + liver braised in red wine with garlic, bay, cinnamon. Liver dissolves into sauce (thickens and enriches). Olive oil (not lard) — Catalan tradition. Broader Catalan charcuterie: llonganissa, botifarra, bull, fetge. Tramontane wind for curing. Cinnamon as Catalan spice signature. Serve with mongetes (white beans).
For the liver component, pork liver works but adding 100g chicken livers creates an even richer, silkier sauce. The cinnamon should be a whole stick, not ground — it adds warmth without being identifiable. Use a Côtes du Roussillon Villages for the braise — the wine's concentration and Grenache character complement the pork. For the complete Catalan charcuterie experience in Roussillon: visit the xarcuteries of Céret during the cherry festival (May), where botifarra negra is grilled alongside the cargolade. The llonganissa should be sliced paper-thin and eaten with pa amb tomàquet (tomato bread) and a glass of Collioure rosé.
Using lard instead of olive oil (Catalan cooking in Roussillon uses olive oil as the primary fat). Omitting the liver (it IS the sauce — without it, you have a generic pork braise). Forgetting the cinnamon (it's the Catalan aromatic signature that distinguishes this from Languedocien cooking). Not browning deeply enough (the caramelization provides the sauce's base flavor). Serving without beans (mongetes blanques — white beans — are the canonical accompaniment). Confusing with a Languedocien daube (fréginat is Catalan — different spice profile, different fat, different philosophy).
Cuisine Catalane du Roussillon — Eliane Thibaut-Comelade; La Xarcuteria Catalana