Giblet Pie

The Book of Household Management · Beeton, Mrs. (Isabella Mary) · 1861
Source
The Book of Household Management
Yield
5.0 – 6.0 persons
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (8)
Instructions (10)
  1. Clean the giblets and put them into a stewpan with an onion, whole pepper, and a bunch of savoury herbs.
  2. Add rather more than a pint of water, and simmer gently for about 1-1/2 hour.
  3. Take the giblets out, let them cool, and cut them into pieces.
  4. Line the bottom of a pie-dish with a few pieces of rump-steak.
  5. Add a layer of giblets and a few more pieces of steak.
  6. Season with pepper and salt.
  7. Strain the gravy that the giblets were stewed in and pour it into the pie-dish.
  8. Cover with a plain crust.
  9. Bake for rather more than 1-1/2 hour in a brisk oven.
  10. Cover a piece of paper over the pie, to prevent the crust taking too much colour.
Original Text
GIBLET PIE. 966. INGREDIENTS.—A set of duck or goose giblets, 1 lb. of rump-steak, 1 onion, 1/2 teaspoonful of whole black pepper, a bunch of savoury herbs, plain crust. Mode.—Clean, and put the giblets into a stewpan with an onion, whole pepper, and a bunch of savoury herbs; add rather more than a pint of water, and simmer gently for about 1-1/2 hour. Take them out, let them cool, and cut them into pieces; line the bottom of a pie-dish with a few pieces of rump-steak; add a layer of giblets and a few more pieces of steak; season with pepper and salt, and pour in the gravy (which should be strained), that the giblets were stewed in; cover with a plain crust, and bake for rather more than 1-1/2 hour in a brisk oven. Cover a piece of paper over the pie, to prevent the crust taking too much colour. Time.—1-1/2 hour to stew the giblets, about 1 hour to bake the pie. Average cost, exclusive of the giblets, 1s. 4d. Sufficient for 5 or 6 persons. THE BRENT GOOSE.—This is the smallest and most numerous species of the geese which visit the British islands. It makes its appearance in winter, and ranges over the whole of the coasts and estuaries frequented by other migrant geese. Mr. Selby states that a very large body of these birds annually resort to the extensive sandy and muddy flats which lie between the mainland and Holy Island, on the Northumbrian coast, and which are covered by every flow of the tide. This part of the coast appears to have been a favourite resort of these birds from time immemorial, where they have always received the name of Ware geese, no doubt from their continually feeding on marine vegetables. Their flesh is very agreeable.
Notes