A panada (panade in French) is a starch-based binding paste incorporated into forcemeats to improve texture, moisture retention, and emulsion stability. The classical repertoire recognizes four primary types: bread panada, made from 200g crustless white bread (pain de mie) soaked in 300ml whole milk then squeezed dry and cooked in 30g butter until the mass pulls cleanly from the pan; flour panada, prepared by bringing 250ml water with 75g butter to a boil and stirring in 150g sifted flour (Triticum aestivum) to form a pâte à choux-like paste cooked to 85°C (185°F); rice panada, using 100g short-grain rice (Oryza sativa var. japonica) simmered in 350ml stock until fully absorbed and passed through a tamis; and frangipane panada, combining 125g flour, 4 egg yolks, 60g melted butter, and 250ml milk, cooked to a thick béchamel-like consistency. The mechanism of binding relies on gelatinized starch granules forming a continuous matrix that traps moisture and fat during thermal processing, preventing the separation and graininess that afflict lean forcemeats. Panada typically constitutes 15-25% of the total forcemeat weight; exceeding 30% produces a gummy, bread-like texture that obscures the primary protein's character. The panada must be cooled to below 4°C (39°F) before incorporation into the meat mixture to maintain the cold chain essential for stable emulsification. For fish mousselines, bread panada is preferred for its neutral flavor; for robust game terrines, frangipane panada provides the structural integrity needed to bind coarsely ground venison and boar. All panadas must be perfectly smooth—any lumps will create textural inconsistencies in the finished forcemeat.
{"Cool panada to below 4°C before incorporating into forcemeat to preserve emulsion integrity","Maintain panada at 15-25% of total forcemeat weight to bind without masking primary protein flavor","Cook flour and bread panadas until the mass pulls clean from the pan, indicating full starch gelatinization","Pass all panadas through a fine tamis to eliminate lumps before incorporation"}
{"Prepare panada in advance and refrigerate overnight; the set paste is easier to weigh and portion accurately","For delicate fish mousselines, replace milk in bread panada with fumet for reinforced seafood flavor","Spread hot panada onto a parchment-lined sheet pan for rapid cooling before refrigeration","Test forcemeat binding by poaching a quenelle in 75°C water—if it holds shape and remains moist, the panada ratio is correct"}
{"Adding warm panada to cold forcemeat, breaking the emulsion and causing fat separation during cooking","Exceeding 30% panada ratio, producing a stodgy, bread-like texture in the finished product","Under-cooking the panada so starch remains partially raw, yielding a pasty, chalky mouthfeel","Using bread with crusts, which introduces color variation and bitter tannins from Maillard compounds"}
Le Guide Culinaire (Escoffier); Professional Charcuterie (Kinsella & Harvey); La Technique (Pépin)