The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 805 pages of information about The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887).

The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 805 pages of information about The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887).

Wash the saddle carefully; see that no hairs are left dried on to the outside.  Use a saddle of venison of about ten pounds.  Cut some salt pork in strips about two inches long and an eighth of an inch thick, with which lard the saddle with two rows on each side.  In a large dripping-pan cut two carrots, one onion and some salt pork in thin slices; add two bay-leaves, two cloves, four kernels of allspice, half a lemon sliced, and season with salt and pepper; place the saddle of venison in the pan, with a quart of good stock boiling hot and a small piece of butter, and let it boil about fifteen minutes on top of the stove; then put it in a hot oven and bake, basting well every five minutes, until it is medium rare, so that the blood runs when cut; serve with jelly or a wine sauce.  If the venison is desired well done, cook much longer, and use a cream sauce with it, or stir cream into the venison gravy. (For cream sauce see SAUCES.)

Venison should never be roasted unless very fat.  The shoulder is a roasting piece and may be done without the paper or paste.

In ordering the saddle request the butcher to cut the ribs off pretty close, as the only part that is of much account is the tenderloin and thick meat that lies along the backbone up to the neck.  The ribs which extend from this have very little meat on them, but are always sold with the saddle.  When neatly cut off they leave the saddle in a better shape, and the ribs can be put into your stock-pot to boil for soup.

Windsor Hotel, Montreal.

VENISON PIE OR PASTRY.

The neck, breast and shoulder are the parts used for a venison pie or pastry.  Cut the meat into pieces (fat and lean together) and put the bones and trimmings into the stewpan with pepper and salt, and water or veal broth enough to cover it.  Simmer it till you have drawn out a good gravy.  Then strain it.

In the meantime make a good rich paste, and roll it rather thick.  Cover the bottom and sides of a deep dish with one sheet of it, and put in your meat, having seasoned it with pepper, salt, nutmeg and mace.  Pour in the gravy which you have prepared from the trimmings, and a glass of port wine.  Lay on the top some bits of butter rolled in flour.  Cover the pie with a thick lid of paste and ornament it handsomely with leaves and flowers formed with a tin cutter.  Bake two or more hours according to the size.  Just before it is done, pull it forward in the oven, and brush it over with beaten egg; push it back and let it slightly brown.

Windsor Hotel, Montreal.

VENISON HASHED.

Cut the meat in nice small slices, and put the trimmings and bones into a saucepan with barely water enough to cover them.  Let them stew for an hour.  Then strain the liquid into a stewpan; add to it some bits of butter, rolled in flour, and whatever gravy was left of the venison the day before.  Stir in some currant jelly, and give it a boil up.  Then put in the meat, and keep it over the fire just long enough to warm it through; but do not allow it to boil, as it has been once cooked already.

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The Whitehouse Cookbook (1887) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.