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Free Books / Cooking / Directions For Cookery / | ![]() |
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Dried Or Smoked Beef |
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This section is from the book "Directions For Cookery", by Eliza Leslie. Also available from Amazon: Directions for Cookery in Its Various Branches.
The best part for this purpose is the round, which you must desire the butcher to cut into four pieces. Wash the meat and dry it well in a cloth. Grind or beat to powder an equal quantity of cloves and allspice, and having mixed them together, rub them well into the beef with your hand. The spice will be found a great improvement both to the taste and smell of the meat. Have ready a pickle made precisely as that in the preceding article. Boil and skim it, and (the meat having been thoroughly rubbed all over with the spice) pour on the pickle as before directed. Keep the beef in the pickle at least six weeks, and then smoke it about three weeks.
Smoked beef is brought on the tea-table either shaved into thin chips without cooking, or chipped and fried with a little butter in a skillet, and served up hot.
This receipt for dried or smoked beef will answer equally well for venison ham, which is also used as a relish at the tea-table.
Mutton hams may be prepared in the same way.
 
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