This section is from the "The Manila Cook Book" book, by Central Methodist Church. Also see Amazon: The Manila Cook Book.
Mrs. Fox.
beefsteak 1 pint boiling water 1 teaspoon pepper
1 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1 onion, 1 teaspoon butter.
Put a very thick piece of steak into the baking pan in boiling water. Add pepper and salt, onion and butter. Roast one hour if wanted well done, or less time if preferred rare.
Mrs. G. A. Miller.
beefsteak potatoes
onions butter
Alternate layers of steak chopped fine with layers of potatoes and onions. Season each layer and add a piece of butter. Over all pour stock or water. Bake.
Mrs. F. W. Van Buskirk.
round steak 2 cups dry bread
1 1/2 cup boiling water salt and pepper
1 teaspoon butter 1/4 teaspoon mixed herbs 1 egg yolk
Make stuffing by pouring over bread 1/2 cup boiling water; mash; add butter, herbs, yolk of egg; beat together; salt and pepper; put in steak. Put in pot to brown as for pot roast; add one cup boiling water;, let it simmer one and one half hours; then roast in oven one half hour. Round steak not essential but preferable.
Mrs. C. H. Smith.
sirloin 1 onion
salt and pepper few slices bacon
mushrooms, or oysters, or kidneys
Chop the flank end of the sirloin rather coarsely. Cover with cold water and simmer until the juice is extracted, adding more water if necessary. Cut the tenderloin into thin slices crosswise. Rub the slices with the cut side of an onion, if desired, and dust with a very little pepper. Roll the slices and put a layer of them into a small buttered baking dish. Add some tiny pieces of bacon and a few mushrooms. Pour some of the broth around the meat. Add pepper and salt; then another layer of beef rolls and the rest of the broth. (Oysters may be used with this if desired.) Cover with crust.
This pie can be made with kidneys in the place of mushrooms and bacon by preparing the kidneys as for any stew and using them with the beefsteak. The English always use them with their famous beefsteak pie, making the crust of suet, flour, salt, water and egg; and steaming for two hours or more.
2 cups flour, 1/4 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon baking powder.
1/4 cup butter, 1/2 cup cream.
Sift together flour, salt and baking powder. Chop into this the butter. Mix lightly with enough cream to make a moist dough (less than one half cup will be needed). Turn onto a board, and pat out to fit baking dish. Puncture top and bake 45 minutes.
Mrs. Ryan.
1 1/2 pounds beefsteak
1 pint milk
2 tablespoons flour
3 eggs salt onion parsley
Chop beefsteak. Add a little salt, onion, parsley, milk, flour and eggs. Bake one hour in a quick oven.
beef (topside or sirloin)
salt
Select a thick piece of topside or sirloin, and with a dull knife scrape with the grain of the meat, leaving all the stringy white fibre behind. Roll this pulp into balls about the size of small marbles. Have a clean, smooth frying pan. Sprinke a little salt in it; shake until brown; then lay in four balls at a time, and with a spoon keep them rolling and turning for just a minute or two. The salt gives them a delicious flavor, while they will be rare inside and delicately brown outside. Prepared in this way they can be digested by the weakest stomach.
3 pounds lean beef
1 dozen butter crackers
4 eggs
1 tablespoon black pepper 1 tablespoon salt
butter size of an egg
Chop beef finely. Add crackers, eggs beaten, pepper, salt and butter. Mix thoroughly, mould into two bricks, and bake like a roast. Sliced cold this makes a very nice dish for tea. A. very little sage may be added, if desired.
1 kidney 1 onion
chopped parsley
salt and pepper to taste
Wash kidney thoroly, pulling off the thin skin and removing all membrane. Cut into pieces the size of a walnut. Wash again and squeeze out the blood. More than cover with hot water and simmer slowly in a covered stew-pan two or three hours, until nearly done. Take off the scum. Add boiling water when necessary to keep the meat covered, and salt about fifteen minutes before removing from the fire. Let the kidney cool in the juice and stand over night if convenient. Take kidney from juice and cut into small pieces the size of lima beans. Return to juice, add chopped onion, salt and pepper to taste, and boil slowly until thoroly done. Thicken with a little flour mixed with water or milk. Add chopped parsley and serve with rice.
four mutton
salt and pepper butter
Wash and dry with a clean cloth; lay in dripping pan and add a little water to baste it with at first; afterwards baste with its own gravy. Allow in roasting about 12 minutes to a pound, if fire is strong as it should be. When it begins to roast well, salt and pepper. Baste often; and about a quarter of an hour before you think it will be done, dredge with flour and baste with butter. Skim the gravy well and thicken very slightly with brown flour. Serve with currant jelly or other tart sauce.
3 pounds lamb (fore-quarter) salt pork 2 onions flour
3 raw potatoes salt and pepper milk short biscuit dough
Cut up the lamb into small pieces removing the fat. Wash it well and put it over the fire, with just enough cold water to cover it well, and let it heat gradually. It should stew gently until partly done; then add a few thin slices of salt pork, one or two onions sliced, salt and pepper and two or three raw potatoes, cut up into inch pieces. Cover it closely and stew until the meat is tender. Drop in a few dumplings, made like short biscuit, cut out very small. Cook fifteen minutes longer. Thicken the gravy with a little flour moistened with milk.
Mrs. G. A. Miller.
1 1/2 pounds veal 1 1/2 pounds pork 2 eggs 1/2 cup cream
3 crackers 1/2 onion salt to taste pinch of sage
Use less pork and more veal if preferred. Put veal and pork through food chopper. Add eggs, cream, cracker crumbs, little onion, salt, and sage. Mould into a loaf and bake.
Mrs. C. H. Smith.
1 pound lean veal 1/4 pound Swift premium bacon 1/4 teaspoon pepper 1/2 teaspoon powdered sage
Cream sauce l teaspoon butter tablespoon flour
cream
bacon grease
Grind veal and bacon in a beef chopper. Add salt, pepper and sage. Form into balls and fry in bacon grease. Serve with cream sauce made by adding butter, flour and cream to the bacon grease. Delicious when used with flannel cakes for breakfast.
 
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