Baked Beef and Potatoes

A Plain Cookery Book for the Working ... · Francatelli, Charles Elmé · 1852
Source
A Plain Cookery Book for the Working Classes
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (9)
Beef cuts suitable for baking or roasting
Seasoning for beef
For baking dish
Instructions (8)
  1. Sprinkle the chosen piece of beef well over with pepper, salt, and flour.
  2. Place the seasoned beef upon a small iron trivet in a baking dish.
  3. Add peeled potatoes and about half-a-pint of water to the baking dish.
  4. Bake in your own oven or send to the baker's.
  5. If baking in your own oven, turn the meat over on the trivet every twenty minutes.
  6. Baste the meat all over now and then with the fat that runs from it into the dish, using a spoon for that purpose.
Yorkshire Pudding (Optional, Economical Addition)
  1. If you have baked meat for dinner, make a Yorkshire pudding to be baked under it.
  2. If using a baking dish with a parting down the middle, put the potatoes in one part and the pudding in the other part.
Original Text
No. 56. Baked Beef and Potatoes. The cheapest pieces of beef, suitable for baking or roasting, consist of the thick part of the ribs, cut from towards the shoulder, the mouse buttock and gravy pieces, and also what is commonly called the chuck of beef, which consists of the throat boned and tied up with string in the form of a small round. Whichever piece of beef you may happen to buy, it should be well sprinkled over with pepper, salt, and flour, and placed upon a small iron trivet in a baking dish containing peeled potatoes and about half-a-pint of water, and either baked in your own oven or else sent to the baker's. If you bake your meat in your own oven, remember that it must be turned over on the trivet every twenty minutes, and that you must be careful to baste it all over now and then with the fat which runs from it into the dish, using a spoon for that purpose. It would be very economical if, when you have baked meat for dinner, you were always to make a Yorkshire pudding to be baked under it. There are baking dishes made with a parting down the middle which just suit this purpose. In this case the potatoes are put in one part and the pudding in the other part.
Notes