Taillage à froid encompasses the disciplined art of slicing, portioning, and presenting cold meats, terrines, pâtés, and cured products for buffet service and à la carte garde manger plates. The foundational principle is that cold proteins must be sliced at their optimal internal temperature—between 2-4°C (36-39°F)—when the gelatin matrix, fat distribution, and protein structure are firm enough to yield clean cuts without tearing, crumbling, or smearing. The primary tool is a long, thin-bladed slicing knife (lame à trancher) with a blade length of 30-35cm, maintained at a razor edge through consistent honing on a 1000/3000-grit Japanese waterstone. For terrines and pâtés en croûte, the knife is dipped in hot water (70°C / 158°F) and wiped clean between each slice—the heated blade melts through the gelatin and fat layer cleanly, preventing drag and fracture of the pastry crust. Standard portion thickness for buffet service is 8-10mm for terrines, 3-4mm for cured meats such as jambon de Paris and saucisson sec, and 1.5-2mm for bresaola and other air-dried whole-muscle preparations sliced on an electric slicer calibrated with a dial gauge. Presentation follows the classical shingled arrangement (en éventail): slices are overlapped at a consistent 30-degree angle across the plate or mirror, with each slice revealing approximately two-thirds of its surface area. Garnishes—cornichons (Cucumis sativus), pickled pearl onions (Allium cepa), Dijon mustard quenelles, and seasonal micro-greens—are placed at the 2 o'clock and 10 o'clock positions to frame the protein without obscuring it. For competition and banquet work, each slice is brushed with liquid aspic at 28°C (82°F) using a soft-bristle pastry brush to apply a protective glaze that retards oxidation and surface desiccation during extended display periods of up to 3 hours. All cold-cut platters must remain below 7°C (45°F) during service; use chilled mirror trays or platters set over crushed ice to maintain food-safe temperatures in ambient dining environments.
{"Slice cold proteins at 2-4°C internal temperature for clean cuts without tearing or smearing","Dip slicing knife in 70°C water and wipe clean between each cut for terrine and pâté work","Maintain shingled presentation at a consistent 30-degree overlap, exposing two-thirds of each slice","Keep finished platters below 7°C during service using chilled mirrors or crushed-ice underlays","Calibrate electric slicers precisely—3-4mm for charcuterie, 1.5-2mm for air-dried whole-muscle cuts"}
{"For pâté en croûte, freeze the terrine for 20 minutes before slicing to firm the gelée insert for perfectly clean cross-sections","Use a meat slicer with a gravity feed for uniform bresaola and coppa slices—hand-slicing these products invites inconsistency","Arrange slices on the platter starting from the outside edge and working inward for the most controlled, even shingling","Place a damp towel under the cutting board and a dry towel under the presentation platter to prevent both from sliding"}
{"Slicing proteins at room temperature, causing fat smearing, crumbling, and loss of defined edges","Using a dull knife that drags through terrines, destroying the mosaic pattern and tearing the farce","Inconsistent slice thickness across a platter, creating an amateur, unprofessional appearance","Overcrowding the plate with garnish that obscures the featured protein and disrupts visual hierarchy","Failing to glaze competition pieces with aspic, allowing oxidation to grey the surface within 60 minutes"}
Garde Manger: The Art and Craft of the Cold Kitchen (CIA); Le Guide Culinaire (Escoffier); Professional Charcuterie (Kinsella & Harvey)