Mushroom Catchup (No. 439)

The Cook's Oracle; and Housekeeper's ... · Kitchiner, William · 1817
Source
The Cook's Oracle; and Housekeeper's Manual
Yield
2.0 quarts
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (8)
For the catchup
For serving
Instructions (10)
  1. Prepare mushrooms: Select fresh, full-grown flap mushrooms. Layer them in a deep earthen pan, sprinkling salt between each layer. Let stand for two to three hours until softened.
  2. Pound and ferment: Pound the salted mushrooms in a mortar or mash them well with your hands. Let them stand for two days, mashing and stirring them well each day.
  3. First boil: Pour the mashed mushrooms into a stone jar. Add 1.5 oz of whole black pepper and 0.5 oz of allspice per quart of mushroom mixture. Seal the jar tightly and place it in a stew-pan of boiling water. Keep boiling for at least two hours.
  4. Strain and reduce: Carefully pour the clear juice from the settlings through a hair-sieve (without squeezing the mushrooms) into a clean stew-pan. Gently boil this juice for half an hour. For double catchup, continue boiling until the liquid is reduced to half its original quantity.
  5. Clarify and cool: Skim the concentrated mushroom juice well. Pour it into a clean, dry jar or jug, cover tightly, and let it stand in a cool place until the next day.
  6. Second straining: Gently pour off the clear catchup from the sediment at the bottom of the jug through a tamis or thick flannel bag until perfectly clear.
  7. Add brandy and settle: Add one tablespoonful of good brandy to each pint of catchup. Let it stand again. A new sediment will form.
  8. Bottle: Quietly pour off the catchup from this second sediment and bottle it in pints or half-pints that have been washed with brandy or spirit. It is best to bottle in quantities that will be used soon.
  9. Seal and store: Cork the bottles very tightly and seal them down or dip them in bottle cement. Store in a cool, dry place.
  10. Reboil if necessary: If any pellicle appears, boil the catchup again with a few peppercorns.
Original Text
Mushroom Catchup.—(No. 439.) If you love good catchup, gentle reader, make it yourself,283-* after the following directions, and you will have a delicious relish for made-dishes, ragoûts, soups, sauces, or hashes. Mushroom gravy approaches the nature and flavour of meat gravy, more than any vegetable juice, and is the superlative substitute for it: in meagre soups and extempore gravies, the chemistry of the kitchen has yet contrived to agreeably awaken the palate, and encourage the appetite. A couple of quarts of double catchup, made according to the following receipt, will save you some score pounds of meat, besides a vast deal of time and trouble; as it will furnish, in a few minutes, as good sauce as can be made for either fish, flesh, or fowl. See No. 307. I believe the following is the best way of extracting and preparing the essence of mushrooms, so as to procure and preserve their flavour for a considerable length of time. Look out for mushrooms from the beginning of September. Take care they are the right sort, and fresh gathered. Full-grown flaps are to be preferred: put a layer of these at the bottom of a deep earthen pan, and sprinkle them with salt; then another layer of mushrooms, and some more salt on them; and so on alternately, salt and mushrooms: let them remain two or three hours, by which time the salt will have penetrated the mushrooms, and rendered them easy to break; then pound them in a mortar, or mash them well with your hands, and let them remain for a couple of days, not longer, stirring them up and mashing them well each day; then pour them into a stone jar, and to each quart add an ounce and a half of whole black pepper, and half an ounce of allspice; stop the jar very close, and set it in a stew-pan of boiling water, and keep it boiling for two hours at least.[284] Take out the jar, and pour the juice clear from the settlings through a hair-sieve (without squeezing284-* the mushrooms) into a clean stew-pan; let it boil very gently for half an hour: those who are for superlative catchup, will continue the boiling till the mushroom-juice is reduced to half the quantity; it may then be called double cat-sup or dog-sup. There are several advantages attending this concentration; it will keep much better, and only half the quantity be required; so you can flavour sauce, &c. without thinning it: neither is this an extravagant way of making it, for merely the aqueous part is evaporated; skim it well, and pour it into a clean dry jar, or jug; cover it close, and let it stand in a cool place till next day; then pour it off as gently as possible (so as not to disturb the settlings at the bottom of the jug,) through a tamis, or thick flannel bag, till it is perfectly clear; add a table-spoonful of good brandy to each pint of catchup, and let it stand as before; a fresh sediment will be deposited, from which the catchup is to be quietly poured off, and bottled in pints or half pints (which have been washed with brandy or spirit): it is best to keep it in such quantities as are soon used. Take especial care that it is closely corked, and sealed down, or dipped in bottle cement. If kept in a cool, dry place, it may be preserved for a long time; but if it be badly corked, and kept in a damp place, it will soon spoil. Examine it from time to time, by placing a strong light behind the neck of the bottle, and if any pellicle appears about it, boil it up again with a few peppercorns. We have ordered no more spice, &c. than is absolutely necessary to feed the catchup, and keep it from fermenting, &c. The compound, commonly called catchup, is generally an injudicious combination of so many different tastes, that the flavour of the mushroom is overpowered by a farrago of garlic, eschalot, anchovy, mustard, horseradish, lemon-peel, beer, wine, spice, &c. Obs.—A table-spoonful of double catchup will impregnate half a pint of sauce with the full flavour of mushroom, in much greater perfection than either pickled or powder of mushrooms. [285]
Notes