Cheap, Clear Gravy Soup

Modern cookery for private families · Acton, Eliza · 1845
Source
Modern cookery for private families
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (22)
Soup Base
Finishing and Enrichment
Sauces for Serving with Meat
Instructions (15)
  1. Cut evenly off five or six pounds from the thick fleshy part of about ten pounds of beef shin or leg. Divide the knuckle so the whole may lie compactly in the stewing vessel.
  2. Pour in three quarts of cold water.
  3. Bring slowly to boil and skim well.
  4. Throw in salt, peppercorns, cloves, mace, savoury herbs, carrots, and celery heart. Add a mild onion if desired.
  5. Stew very softly for four hours.
  6. Probe the larger bit of beef. If quite tender, lift it out for table.
  7. Simmer the soup for two to three hours longer.
  8. Strain through a fine sieve into a clean pan.
  9. When perfectly cold, clear off every particle of fat.
  10. Heat a couple of quarts of the cleared soup.
  11. When it boils, stir in sugar, soy sauce, and Harvey's sauce (or mushroom catsup).
  12. If carefully made, the soup will be perfectly transparent and of good colour and flavour.
  13. A thick slice of lean ham or a pound or so of neck of beef with an additional pint of water can enrich the quality.
  14. Good broth can be made from the fragments of the whole boiled down with a few fresh vegetables.
  15. Serve Brown caper sauce, hot horseradish sauce, sauce Robert, or sauce piquante (made with the boiling liquor) with the portion of meat sent to table.
Original Text
CHEAP, CLEAR GRAVY SOUP. The shin or leg of beef, if not large or coarse, will answer extremely well for this soup, and afford at the same time a highly economical dish of boiled meat, which will be found very tender, and very palatable also, if it be served with a sauce of some piquancy. From about ten pounds of the meat let the butcher cut evenly off five or six from the thick fleshy part, and again divide the knuckle, that the whole may lie compactly in the vessel in which it is to be stewed. Pour in three quarts of cold water, and when it has been brought slowly to boil, and been well skimmed, as directed for bouillon (Page 8), throw in an ounce and a half of salt, half a large teaspoonful of peppercorns, eight cloves, two blades of mace, a faggot of savoury herbs, a couple of small carrots, and the heart of a root of celery; to these add a mild onion or not, at choice. When the whole has stewed very softly for four hours, probe the larger bit of beef, and if quite tender, lift it out for table; let the soup be simmered from two to three hours longer, and then strain it through a fine sieve, into a clean pan. When it is perfectly cold, clear off every particle of fat; heat a couple of quarts, stir in, when it boils, half an ounce of sugar, a small tablespoonful of good soy, and twice as much of Harvey’s sauce, or instead of this, of clear and fine mushroom catsup. If carefully made, the 12soup will be perfectly transparent and of good colour and flavour. A thick slice of lean ham will improve it, and a pound or so of the neck of beef with an additional pint of water, will likewise enrich its quality. A small quantity of good broth may be made of the fragments of the whole boiled down with a few fresh vegetables. Brown caper, or hot horseradish sauce, or sauce Robert, or sauce piquante, made with the liquor in which it is boiled, may be served with the portion of the meat which is sent to table.
Notes