It
is a long time since I saw heart in the ordinary butcher’s shop. It is even
longer since I saw it on a restaurant menu. Come to think of it, I don’t
remember ever seeing heart on a restaurant menu. I am certain, however, that
much heart is eaten, the eater being unaware because it is hidden in sausages,
burgers, pies, meatloaves, and other useful aids to devious manufacturers and
cooks.
No
so long ago, in times when waste was abhorred and folk less squeamish, there
was no sense of any need to disguise this admirable meat. I give you a fine
selection of recipes for heart from
The family save-all, a system of
secondary cookery (1861) by Robert Kemp Philp. The author
does refer to heart as “unmanageable,” this seems to be because it requires
some effort in trimming and preparing for cooking. I would be interested to
know if any of you are tempted to source and try any of these dishes.
Various ways of
Cooking and re-Cooking that unmanageable dish, Ox-heart.
181.
Trim and clean the Heart, and
wipe it dry; fill the cavities with a stuffing made thus:— Crumbs of bread (the
quantity must depend upon the size of the heart), chopped suet or butter, say
about two ounces, parsley and sweet marjoram, chopped lemon-peel grated,
pepper, salt, and nutmeg, with the yolk of an egg; mix, and fill the cavities
of the heart. Serve it with gravy, melted butter, and currant jelly. Prepared
in this way, it may be either baked or roasted, and will require a quarter of
an hour for each pound weight.
182.
Or, clean and cut the Heart in
large pieces lengthwise. Put these into a stew-pot with cold water and salt,
and carefully skim away the blood, which will rise in large quantities;
parboil; take up the parboiled pieces, and carve them into mouthsful;
strain the liquor, and return the cut meat, with plenty of shred onion, a shred
head or two of celery, pepper, and allspice, and a dozen or more peeled
potatoes, or some sliced carrots, This is a nourishing and economical Stew-soup, and half a full-sized
bullock's heart will be sufficient to make it.
183.
Or, cut into pieces lengthwise, the pieces not being thicker than half an
inch; Broil, with a piece
of fat or bacon, for ten minutes; serve with a little currant jelly and butter,
under the slices.
184.
Or, wash in several waters, cut it into pieces lengthwise; take a baking dish,
and lay some slices of potatoes at the bottom, then a few slices of bacon, then
the pieces of heart, another layer of bacon; season each layer to liking, and
fill up the spaces with veal stuffing made into balls; add water, and Bake about an hour.
185.
Kidney and Heart may be mixed, or the flesh
of Cow-heel be mixed with either heart or kidney.
186.
Calf’s Heart may be dressed in the
same way, or be stuffed with veal stuffing, and Baked upon potatoes.
187.
Or, Bullock's Heart, stuffed as for
baking, may be Boiled. Small hearts,
as of Sheep, Lambs, &c., may be
stuffed, enclosed in paste, with a bit of fat bacon wrapped round them, and Baked, like Savoury Dumplings.
188.
Cold Heart may be Hashed the
same as Beef or Hare, the stuffing being mixed with the gravy, and accompanied
by Currant Jelly.
Hi Janet, Lights and heart I've failed at every time. Head meat, tripe, liver, kidney, sweetbreads, brains, yes.
ReplyDeleteIn the 1980s the grocery store would grind up heart on my request. I used it for meatloaf. Kids didn't know the difference! The only problem was that one store of the two I frequented wanted notice ahead of time. They said they had to clean the machine after grinding the heart before they could use it again for other muscle meats.
ReplyDeleteI've never had beef heart, but poultry I know well. When I visit my sister for Thanksgiving one of my jobs is making the gravy, and my price is the heart. The liver and such can go in the gravy, but the heart is mine!
ReplyDeleteSandra
Let's just say that if I were to make Ox Heart again I would stuff and bake it.
ReplyDeleteI started preparing beef heart when I was in graduate school. It sold for about $0.40/lb. I usually braised it for stews but now I prefer to marinate it for grilling. I don't know why people are so squeamish about it.
ReplyDeleteI am with anonymous here, I have loved poultry heart since I was a little kid and began to make the gravy. I would try the roasting or the potato and bacon layers! I think Alexis Soyer tried to get his Shilling Cookery readers to make of heart, along with cheek, that may have been the recipe that caused an old lady to throw a shoe at Soyers imaginary, epistolary female writer...
ReplyDelete