Did you ever
pause to wonder how cooks in previous times managed to do their job without
clocks and oven thermometers, not to
mention all the more obvious gadgets of the twenty-first century kitchen? We
did touch on this theme some time ago, in a post which described the use ofprayers as a timing device, but there are plenty more hints and ideas from the
past which we have not explored.
In 1623, the
prolific English writer Gervase Markham published his book A Way to Get Wealth: containing six principall vocations, or callings, in
which every good Husband or House-wife may lawfully employ themselves. The
book was not about the entrepreneurial way to riches, as the title might
suggest to us today, but about developing the skills to enable one to properly
perform one’s role in life, and to husband one’s resources. Naturally, at this
time, for the housewife, this meant skills in the art of cookery – not necessarily
so that one could perform this often lowly job oneself, but so that one could
properly supervise and train the cooks and kitchen staff (many of whom would
have been illiterate.)
Here is his
advice on how to know when meat is roasted enough – roasted on a spit in front
of a fire, that is, not ‘roasted’ in the oven as we do today.
“Lastly, to
know when meat is rosted enough: for as too much rawness is unwholsome, so too
much dryness is not nourishing. Therefore to know when it is in the perfect
height and is neither too moist nor too dry, you shall observe these signs:
First, in your large Joynts of meat, when the steam or smoak of the meat ascendeth
either upright, or else goeth from the fire, when it beginneth a little to
shrink from the spit, or when the gravy which dioppeth from it is clear without
bloodiness, then is the meat enough.
If it be a
Pigge, when the eyes are fallen out, and the body leaveth Piping: for the first
is when it is half roasted, and would be sindged [?] to make the coat rise, and
crackle, and the later when it is full enough, and would be drawn; or if it be any kind of Fowl
you roast, when the thighs are tender, or the hinder parts of the pinions at the
setting on of the wings, are without blood, then be sure that your meat is
fully enough roasted: yet for a better and more certain assuredness, you may
thrust your Knife into the: thickest parts of the meat, and draw it out again,
and if it bring out white gravy without any bloodiness, then assuredly it is
enough, and may be drawn with all speed convenient, after it hath been well
basted with butter not formerly melted, then dredging as aforesaid, then basted
over the dredging and so suffered to take two or three turns, to make crispe
the dredging: Then dish it in a fair dish with salt sprinkled over it, and so
serve it forth. Thus you see the general form of roasting all kind of meats:
Therefore now I will return to some particular dishes together with their
several Sauces.”
As our recipe
for the day, I give you Markham’s instructions for roasting mutton with a
stuffing of oysters – a concept reminiscent of the Carpetbag Steak which we
considered recently in another post.
Roasting of Mutton with Oysters.
If you will roast
Mutton with Oysters, take a shoulder alone or a legg, and after it is washt,
parboyl it a little; then take the Oysters, great Oysters, and having opened
them into a dish, drain the gravy clean from them twice or thrice, then parboyl
them a little, then take Spinage, Endive, Succory, Strawberry leaves, Violet
leaves and a little Parsly, with some Scallions; chop these very fine together,
then take your Oysters very dry drain'd and mix them with an half part of these
herbs; then take your meat, and with these Oysters and herbs farce or stop it,
leaving no place empty, then spit it and roast it, and whilst it is in rosting,
take good store of Verjuice and Butter, and Salt, and set it in a dish on a
chafing dish and coals; and when it begins to boyl, put in the remainder of
your herbs without Oysters, and a good quantity of Currants, with Cinnamon,a
and the yelks of a couple of eggs. And after they are well boyled and stirred
together, season it up according to your taste with Sugar; then put in a few
Lemon slices; the meat being enough draw it, and lay it upon this sawce removed
into a clean dish, the edge thereof being trimmed about with Sugar and so serve
it forth.
Quotation for the Day.
Roast Beef,
Medium, is not only a food. It is a philosophy.
Seated at Life’s Dining Table,
with the menu of morals before
you, your eye wanders a bit over the entrees, the hors d’oevres, and the things
a la though you know that Roast Beef, Medium,
is safe and sane and sure.
Edna Ferber.
2 comments:
I think the word would translate to us as "singed". Pork was often cooked with the skin on, as poultry still is (unless you are of the "skinless, boneless chicken breast" persuation.) This may, in fact, be referring to an entire pig (as in suckling). Exposing the skin to the actual flame would burn off the bristles, and crisp up the skin. Nobody had ever heard of cholesterol.
Usually the bristles were scrubbed off during butchering, but I can definitely see how the skin would rise due to the fat under it and turn brown and puffy, which sounds just marvelous.
I was a bit squicked at the bit about the eyeballs acting like little pop-up turkey timers, though I suppose it's better than them bursting. Unless it meant that they popped out because they burst. In that case, erlack.
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