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Milan, Lombardy, Italy — the traditional garnish for Ossobuco alla Milanese Techniques

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Milan, Lombardy, Italy — the traditional garnish for Ossobuco alla Milanese
Gremolata
Milan, Lombardy, Italy — the traditional garnish for Ossobuco alla Milanese
Gremolata is Milan's essential finishing condiment — a raw mixture of finely chopped lemon zest, garlic, and flat-leaf parsley that is scattered over Ossobuco alla Milanese at the moment of serving. It is never cooked, never made in advance, and never served alongside — it goes directly onto the dish and is eaten as part of each bite. The genius of gremolata is its function: after the long, slow braise of veal shin in wine and stock, the dish is rich, soft, and deep. Gremolata provides the exact opposite — bright citrus acidity from the lemon zest, raw pungency from the garlic, clean herbal freshness from the parsley. The combination lifts the entire dish without disrupting its coherence. The technique is entirely in the chopping: all three ingredients must be very finely minced, almost to the point where they blend at their edges. A rough chop produces uneven bites — a pocket of raw garlic here, a piece of parsley there. Properly made gremolata should be fine enough to scatter like a seasoning, not spoon like a relish. Gremolata has migrated beyond ossobuco in modern kitchens — it works brilliantly on braised lamb shanks, grilled fish, roasted beets, and bean soups. But its function is always the same: to provide acid, pungency, and freshness as a counter to richness or long cooking. Outside of its Milanese context, gremolata with anchovy stirred in (a modern adaptation) works particularly well on grilled meats.
Provenance 1000 — Pantry