Larding

The Book of Household Management · Beeton, Mrs. (Isabella Mary) · 1861
Source
The Book of Household Management
Status
success · extracted 13 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (2)
Instructions (16)
  1. Trim the bacon, lay it on a table, rinds downwards.
  2. Trim off any rusty part.
  3. Cut the bacon into slices of an equal thickness.
  4. Place the slices one on the top of another, and cut them evenly into narrow strips, so arranging it that every piece of bacon is of the same size.
  5. For fricandeau, poultry, and game, bacon strips should be about 2 inches in length, and rather more than one-eighth of an inch in width.
  6. If for larding fillets of beef or loin of veal, the pieces of bacon must be thicker.
  7. Trim the fricandeau.
  8. Lay the fricandeau, lengthwise, upon a clean napkin across your hand, forming a kind of bridge with your thumb at the part you are about to commence at.
  9. With the point of the larding-needle make three distinct lines across, 1/2 inch apart.
  10. Run the needle into the third line, at the further side of the fricandeau, and bring it out at the first, placing one of the lardoons in it.
  11. Draw the needle through, leaving out 1/4 inch of the bacon at each line.
  12. Proceed thus to the end of the row.
  13. Make another line, 1/2 inch distant, stick in another row of lardoons, bringing them out at the second line, leaving the ends of the bacon out all the same length.
  14. Make the next row again at the same distance, bringing the ends out between the lardoons of the first row, proceeding in this manner until the whole surface is larded in chequered rows.
  15. Everything else is larded in a similar way.
  16. In the case of poultry, hold the breast over a charcoal fire for one minute, or dip it into boiling water, in order to make the flesh firm.
Original Text
LARDING. 828. INGREDIENTS.—Bacon and larding-needle. Mode.—Bacon for larding should be firm and fat, and ought to be cured without any saltpetre, as this reddens white meats. Lay it on a table, the rinds downwards; trim off any rusty part, and cut it into slices of an equal thickness. Place the slices one on the top of another, and cut them evenly into narrow strips, so arranging it that every piece of bacon is of the same size. Bacon for fricandeau, poultry, and game, should be about 2 inches in length, and rather more than one-eighth of an inch in width. If for larding fillets of beef or loin of veal, the pieces of bacon must be thicker. The following recipe of Soyer is, we think, very explicit; and any cook, by following the directions here given, may be able to lard, if not well, sufficiently for general use. "Have the fricandeau trimmed, lay it, lengthwise, upon a clean napkin across your hand, forming a kind of bridge with your thumb at the part you are about to commence at; then with the point of the larding-needle make three distinct lines across, 1/2 inch apart; run the needle into the third line, at the further side of the fricandeau, and bring it out at the first, placing one of the lardoons in it; draw the needle through, leaving out 1/4 inch of the bacon at each line; proceed thus to the end of the row; then make another line, 1/2 inch distant, stick in another row of lardoons, bringing them out at the second line, leaving the ends of the bacon out all the same length; make the next row again at the same distance, bringing the ends out between the lardoons of the first row, proceeding in this manner until the whole surface is larded in chequered rows. Everything else is larded in a similar way; and, in the case of poultry, hold the breast over a charcoal fire for one minute, or dip it into boiling water, in order to make the flesh firm."
Notes