Hashed Beef

The Book of Household Management · Beeton, Mrs. (Isabella Mary) · 1861
Source
The Book of Household Management
Time
Cook: 120 min Total: 120 min
Yield
0.5 pint
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (11)
Instructions (9)
  1. Take off all the meat from the bones of ribs or sirloin of beef; remove the outside brown and gristle; place the meat on one side, and well stew the bones and pieces, with the onions, carrot, herbs, pepper, salt, and mace, for about 2 hours, till it becomes a strong gravy, and is reduced to rather more than 1/2 pint.
  2. Strain this gravy.
  3. Thicken with a teaspoonful of flour.
  4. Let the gravy cool.
  5. Skim off all the fat.
  6. Lay in the meat, let it get hot through, but do not allow it to boil.
  7. Garnish with sippets of toasted bread.
  8. The gravy may be flavoured as in the preceding recipe.
Note
  1. Be careful that hashed meat does not boil, or it will become tough.
Original Text
II. 629. INGREDIENTS.—The remains of ribs or sirloin of beef, 2 onions, 1 carrot, 1 bunch of savoury herbs, pepper and salt to taste, 1/2 blade of pounded mace, thickening of flour, rather more than 1 pint of water. Mode.—Take off all the meat from the bones of ribs or sirloin of beef; remove the outside brown and gristle; place the meat on one side, and well stew the bones and pieces, with the above ingredients, for about 2 hours, till it becomes a strong gravy, and is reduced to rather more than 1/2 pint; strain this, thicken with a teaspoonful of flour, and let the gravy cool; skim off all the fat; lay in the meat, let it get hot through, but do not allow it to boil, and garnish with sippets of toasted bread. The gravy may be flavoured as in the preceding recipe. Time.—Rather more than 2 hours. Average cost, exclusive of the cold meat, 2d. Seasonable at any time. Note.—Either of the above recipes may be served in walls of mashed potatoes browned; in which case the sippets should be omitted. Be careful that hashed meat does not boil, or it will become tough. TO PREPARE HUNG BEEF. 630. This is preserved by salting and drying, either with or without smoke. Hang up the beef 3 or 4 days, till it becomes tender, but take care it does not begin to spoil; then salt it in the usual way, either by dry-salting or by brine, with bay-salt, brown sugar, saltpetre, and a little pepper and allspice; afterwards roll it tight in a cloth, and hang it up in a warm, but not hot place, for a fortnight or more, till it is sufficiently hard. If required to have a little of the smoky flavour, it may be hung for some time in a chimney-corner, or smoked in any other way: it will keep a long time.
Notes