Confit d'Oignons de Trébons
Trébons, Hautes-Pyrénées — the long-cooked caramelised onion preparation using the indigenous Oignon de Trébons, a flat, elongated, rose-skinned variety cultivated in the Adour valley at the foot of the Pyrenees. The Trébons onion's high sugar content and low water percentage make it the defining ingredient for a confit that caramelises fully without the bitterness of standard yellow onions.
Oignons de Trébons are peeled, halved, and sliced thin (2mm). A wide, heavy sauté pan is loaded with the sliced onion — significantly more than the pan appears to hold, as the volume reduces by 75%. Unsalted-butter and a thread of neutral-frying-oil are heated until foaming. The onions are added and stirred to coat, then reduced to the lowest possible heat. The cook is 45–60 minutes, undisturbed except for periodic scraping of the pan base. The onions pass through three stages: translucent (15 min), golden-blond (30 min), deep amber-brown with caramelised edges (45–60 min). A splash of wine-vinegar added at the 50-minute mark lifts the glaze and balances the sweetness. Finished with sea-mineral-salt.