Beef
While the greatest care should
be exercised in the selection of beef as regards its soundness and
wholesomeness, it must likewise be selected with reference to economy
and adaptability for cooking purposes, pieces from different portions
of the animal being suitable for cooking only in certain ways. Ox beef
is said to be best. That meat is most juicy and tender which has fine
streaks of fat intermingled with the lean. Beef which is coarse-grained
and hard to cut is apt to be tough. An economical piece of meat to
purchase is the back of the rump. It is a long piece with only
a small portion of bone, and weighs about ten pounds. The thickest
portion may be cut into steaks, the thin, end with bone may be utilized
for soups and stews, while the remainder will furnish a good roast.
Only a small portion of choice tender lean meat is to be found in one
animal, and these are also the most expensive; but the tougher, cheaper
parts, if properly cooked, are nearly as nutritious. RECIPES.
Broiled
Beef.—Beef for broiling should be juicy and have a tender
fiber. Steaks cut from three parts of the beef are in request for this
purpose,—tenderloin, porterhouse, and round steak. The last-named is
the more common and economical, yet it is inferior in juice and
tenderness to the other two. Steak should be cut three fourths of an
inch or more in thickness. If it is of the right quality, do not pound
it; if very tough, beat with a steak-mallet or cut across it several
times on both sides with a sharp knife. Wipe, and remove any bone and
superfluous fat. Have the fire in readiness, the plates heating, then
proceed as directed. The work is chiefly done by the
radiation of heat directly upon the surface of the food, although some
heat is communicated by the hot air surrounding the food. The intense
heat applied to the food soon sears its outer surfaces, and thus
prevents the escape of its juices. If care be taken frequently to turn
the food so that its entire surface will be thus acted upon, the
interior of the mass is cooked by its own juices.
Cold-Meat
Stew.—Cut pieces of cold roast beef into thick slices and put
into a stewpan with six or eight potatoes, a good-sized bunch of celery
cut into small pieces; and a small carrot cut in dice may be added if
the flavor is liked. Cover with hot water, and simmer for three fourths
of an hour. Thicken with a little browned flour.
Pan-broiled
Steak.—In the absence of the necessary appliances for
broiling over coals, the following method may be employed. Heat a clean
skillet to blue heat, rub it with a bit of suet, just enough to keep
the meat from sticking, but leave no fat in the pan. Lay in the steak,
pressing it down to the pan, and sear quickly on one side; turn, and
without cutting into the meat, sear upon the other. Keep the skillet
hot but do not scorch; cook from five to ten minutes, turning
frequently, so as not to allow the juices to escape. Add no salt until
done. Serve on hot plates. This method is not frying, and requires the
addition of no water, butter, or stock.
Pan-broiled
Steak No.2.—Take a smooth pancake-griddle, or in lieu of
anything better, a clean stove-griddle may be used; heat very hot and
sear each side of the steak upon it. When well seared, lift the steak
into a hot granite-ware or sheet-iron pan, cover, and put into a hot
oven for two or three minutes, or until sufficiently cooked.
Roast
Beef.—The sirloin and rib and rump pieces are the best cuts
for roasting. Wipe, trim, and skewer into shape. Sear the cut
surfaces and proceed , cooking twenty minutes to the pound if
it is to be rare, less half an hour deducted on account of soaring. The
application of salt and water has a tendency to toughen the meat and
draw out its juices; so if it is desired to have the meat juicy and
tender, it is better to cook without basting. Unless the heat of the
oven is allowed to become too great, when meat is cooked after this
manner there will be a quantity of rich, jelly-like material in the
pan, which with the addition of a little water and flour may be made
into a gravy.
Smothered
Beef.—Portions from the round, middle, or face of the rump
are generally considered best for preparing this dish. Wipe with a
clean wet cloth, put into a smoking-hot skillet, and carefully sear all
cut surfaces. Put into a kettle, adding for a piece of beef weighing
about six pounds, one cup of hot water. Cover closely and cook at a
temperature just below boiling, until the meat is tender but not
broken. As the water boils away, enough more boiling water may be added
to keep the meat from burning. Another method of securing the same
results is to cut the beef into small pieces and put into a moderate
oven inside a tightly covered jar for an hour. Afterward increase the
heat and cook closely covered until the meat is tender. Thicken and
season the juice, and serve as a gravy.
Vegetables
with Stewed Beef.—Prepare the beef as directed for Stewed
Beef, and when nearly tender, add six or eight potatoes. Just before
serving, thicken the gravy with a little browned flour braided in cold
water, and add a cup of strained, stewed tomato and a teaspoonful of
chopped parsley.
Stewed
Beef.—The aitch-bone and pieces from the shin, the upper part
of the chuck-rib and neck of beef, are the parts most commonly used for
stewing. All meat for stews should be carefully dressed and free from
blood. Those portions which have bone and fat, as well as lean beef,
make much better-flavored stews than pieces which are wholly lean. The
bones, however, should not be crushed or splintered, but carefully
sawed or broken, and any small pieces removed before cooking. It is
generally considered that beef which has been previously browned makes
a much more savory stew, and it is quite customary first to brown the
meat by frying in hot fat. A much more wholesome method, and one which
will have the same effect as to flavor, is to add to the stew the
remnants of roasts or steak. It is well when selecting meat for a stew
to procure a portion, which, like the aitch-bone, has enough juicy meat
upon it to serve the first day as a roast for a small family. Cut the
meat for a stew into small pieces suitable for serving, add boiling
water, and cook as directed. Stewing
is the prolonged cooking of food in a small quantity of liquid, the
temperature of which is just below the boiling point. Stewing should
not be confounded with simmering, which is slow, steady boiling. The
proper temperature for stewing is most easily secured by the use of the
double boiler. The water in the outer vessel boils, while that in the
inner vessel does not, being kept a little below the temperature of the
water from which its heat is obtained, by the constant evaporation at a
temperature a little below the boiling point. Remove
all pieces of bone and the fat before serving. If the stew is made of
part cooked and part uncooked meat, the cooked meat should not be added
until the stew is nearly done. The liquor, if not of the
proper consistency when the meat is tender, may be thickened by adding
a little flour braided in cold water, cooking these after four or five
minutes. Head
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