Ingredients
Garlic butter
Crumb mixture
Coleslaw
Method
Main
1.For garlic butter, combine ingredients in a bowl, season with 2 tsp salt and whip until all fully incorporated. Place in a piping bag with a nozzle the size of a pea and keep at room temperature until ready to use.
2.Bone the quail and cut into breasts and legs, or if you and your butcher are close I’m sure he’ll do it for you.
3.For the breasts, French the wing bone and make a small insertion in the meat next to the wing using a vegetable knife, going as deep as you can – the more room, the more butter. Pipe garlic butter into this hole, then place quail on a tray and refrigerate until the butter is set hard (30 minutes).
4.For the leg, bone the thigh, leaving the leg bone intact and French the leg bone. Pipe some butter onto the thigh, roll the meat over to enclose, then refrigerate until butter is hard as with the breasts.
5.For the crumb mixture, gently toast the whole spices in a frying pan over low heat until fragrant (4 minutes). Finely grind with a mortar and pestle, then transfer to a large bowl and mix in the flour, ground spices and salt.
6.Place buttermilk in another bowl. Dip each quail piece into the buttermilk, then into the spice mix, repeating this process to coat well. Place on a tray and back to the fridge it all goes for a little while.
7.For coleslaw, place both types of cabbage in a bowl, lightly salt them, and set aside for 5 minutes. Rinse the cabbage, then dry on a paper towel. Place in a bowl, add all other ingredients, mix well and set aside.
8.Preheat oven to 185C. Heat oil in a deep-fryer to 170C. Deep-fry the quail in batches until the crumb is nice and golden (2 minutes; see note). Transfer to an oven tray lined with baking paper, then roast until cooked through (5 minutes). Rest quail for 2 minutes, then serve on a plate with coleslaw and lemon wedges alongside.