I have another Aussie story/recipe for you today,
the eve of Anzac Day. It is from The West Australian,
November 21, 1879, and speaks to a number of issues not strictly related to
food, but I feel sure you will enjoy it, and will feel more confident about
ordering your next stew pot to be made.
The
Editor asks me to write something for his Ladies' Column, and I eagerly seize
the opportunity to disburden my mind upon a subject which I have much at heart;
I want to teach my West Australian country-women how to stew.
There are of course exceptions to every rule; but, as a rule, we know no-thing
at all about it, or if we do, we certainly don't practice what we know.
Housewives
living in town, have no idea what a part that stew-pot plays in our bush economy.
In town you can always get a joint of some sort or another, which requires comparatively
speaking but little art in its preparation for the table; but, in the bush,
when you are probably supplied with mutton from your own flocks, where the meat
is often very poor, very frequently reduced to culls, and you have to make use
of all parts of the carcase, a decent joint is often a rarity and the stew-pot
comes into constant requisition. Now unless you know how to use that stew-pot
properly, how to dress your poor mutton up and convert it into succulent and palateable
dishes, you have often fare both monotonous and meagre, with the added pleasure
of seeing sulky male faces scowling round your board.
I
have had a wide experience in this colony, of many cooks, and many houses, and
I have no hesitation in saying that as a rule, good pot cookery is a lost art,
or rather perhaps an art which has never been acquired. I will just describe
the way in which a West Australian stew is generally made: the meat is
cut up, roughly, and thrown untrimmed
into a pot; pepper and salt is dusted over it, an abundance of water is poured
on, and then the pot is set upon the fire. Probably no further notice is taken
of it until a noisy hissing proclaims the fact that the water has boiled over. Our housewife runs quickly
to the rescue, and pulls it to one side, where it will boil more slowly. This
occurs probably, at the outside, two hours before dishing up. The stew boils
on, at sometimes slowly, sometimes fast, according to the accidental state of
the fire beneath it, till, a quarter of an hour before dinner time, it occurs
to the cook that the thickening might as well go in. The flour dredge is then
put into active requisition, the mess stirred up perhaps a dish of sance is
added, another boil is given, and then the stew is served. This
method – the method almost universally adopted - makes a washy unpalateable
compound, which only accentuates the badness of your lean mutton or tough beef.
I
was in darkness myself not long ago, and I will tell my readers how I learnt to
use the stew-pot properly. Great had been my trouble about this stew-pot.
Where we lived was very cold wet country in winter time. Often for six months
in the year, and more, the sheep were very poor, and we could not get a decent
joint once in a month. So I made stews, and small curries, and tried the
cooking pot in every imaginable way, but all to no purpose. My husband was,
like most men, dreadfully unreasonable about his food, always grumbling, and thinking
that everything was better done, in other people's houses than in his. He was
particularly fond of telling me that I should take a lesson in pot-cooking from
old Bill, our shepherd at the swamp. This annoyed me verymuch. I used to look
dignified, and make believe I did not hear; but in secret I often cried about
lit, and sat up studying Mrs. Beeton till my eyes were dim and sore.
One
day it struck me that without letting anybody know, or lowering my dignity at
all, I might learn something from 'old Bill,' and profit by it. So I waited for
a chance. A good one came ere long; a cow had calved out on the run, and the men
being all engaged, I volunteered to fetch it, and once out of sight of home I
galloped off in a straight line for 'old Bill's swamp. In front of his hut
door, was a great line of ashes, with a pot handle sticking out of it. Nobody
was there, so I scraped the ashes carefully away, till I made bare the lid, and
could take it off with a forked stick. Then I saw at once what Harry meant! Gently,
very gently simmering was a most delicious stew; velvety, smooth, shining, and
rich brown in colour. The meat was soft,
but not in rags, browned but not burnt; as different as possible in colour, in
consistency, and in appearance, from anything I ever made. I tasted it, and
tasted it again, and felt quite sorry for poor Harry, and sat down and waited till
‘old Bill' brought in his sheep, to learn the secret of this mystery.
It
was soon told. He put his meat into the pot, with a little bit of dripping, and
no water. This was placed at dawn upon the ashes, not the fire, and by the time
his sheep were ready to draw off, the moisture had run out of the meat, and
formed almost sufficient gravy to steam the stew. To this he added a little
sauce or curry, and about a wine glass full of water or of broth. Then a big
hole was made in his large heap of well-warmed cinders, some cool ashes were spread
upon the bottom of this hole, and the pot put upon them, more cool ashes were
built round it, and then the hot ones all banked up. The cover of his pot was
made dutch-oven fashion, and the ashes were heaped upon it too, until nothing
was seen but the black handle, sticking out of this great white cinder heap. Bedded
in these ashes, which were not too hot, but kept up the heat that was in them
nearly all day long, 'old Bill's pot simmered slowly till the night, and when
he opened it, the richest and most succulent of stews was his reward.
I
soon learnt, to work upon old Bill's method under the altered conditions of a
kitchen range,
and I will give the result of my experience. In the first place you should have
your stew-pots made with dutch-oven covers. Having such a one, this is how you
should proceed. Put your pot on the fire, with a little butter or dripping in
it, and while this is melting, cut up your meat and trim it properly, free it
from skin and gristle, and everything that is not nice; then dust it with a
pinch of salt, put it in the pot and cover up. Place your pot in a very moderately
warm position on the fire bars, and put a few hot ashes on the top. In half an
hour, look to see if it wants moistening at all, and if it does, use a little
drop of stock. (It is very easy to keep a small supply of stock on hand, with any
sort of management.) If you wish to use sauce, curry powder, lemon, wine,
cayenne, parsley, or anything else to flavour your stew, now is the time to put
it in. Cover it up again and put it on with fresh warm ashes on the lid, and
let it simmer slowly, very slowly for several hours, three or four at least,
adding a little stock when wanted; Never let it approach a boil; it is done for
if you do. And you must keep hot ashes on the top if you wish to be successful;
the meat must braise, as well as simmer from the heat below. Half an hour
before you want to dish if the rich, velvety, dark-brown gravy, which this method
of pot-cooking should produce, is not as thick as you would like it, mix a little
cornflour or arrowroot with a little stock and add; stir gently, so as not to
break up the meat, and simmer on again till ready.
If
housewives would give these directions for pot-cooking a fair trial, varying of
course the combinations according to their ingenuity and taste, I feel sure
their bush dinners would be more frequently successful, and their husbands less
frequently provoking!
MARTHA.
3 comments:
What wonderful advice that can still be put to use today. Not that I have hot ash on my stove top, but such lovely slow cooking without boiling and other advice really is the secret to a lovely, tasty stew.
Wow, that made me hungry. Though I'm not entirely sure how to adapt that for those of us not fortunate enough to have a pit full of cinders.
Hi Chef and HI Kate
I dont have an open fire and ash situation either. A slow cooker would work though, wouldnt it? with less liquid.
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