Dried and Smoked Meats
HUNG BEEF—A SHROPSHIRE SIRLOIN.
From the sirloin of a grass-fed young Scot, or prime heifer, the butcher should take off the superfluous suet of the under side, so as to leave the joint handsome, and when it has hung up a week in cold weather, rub it well in every part with
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Juniper berries, bruised | 1 | oz. |
| Shalots, minced | 1 | oz. |
| Black pepper, ground | 1 | oz. |
Turn the meat and continue the rubbing three days, when you may add
| Rock or common salt | 1½ | lb. |
| Bay salt, pounded | 1 | lb. |
| Treacle | 1 | lb. |
Persist in this course four days longer, when it will be sufficient to turn it only every second day, and baste it with the liquor ten minutes each time. When it has thus laid fourteen days more, it may be taken up, wiped dry, and suspended in a quick current of air, and bound round with broad tape, so that it may be turned upside down occasionally, to prevent the juices settling in one part. When dried sufficiently, rub coarse oatmeal or bran, first well heated, all over the joint, and hang it in your chimney to be smoked, three days only, with
| Beech chips | 2 | parts |
| Peat | 2 | parts |
| Oak sawdust | 2 | parts |
which will impart scarcely any flavour of the smoke for observe, it is “Hung Beef.”
CHOICE BREAKFAST BACON.
Take a side or “middle” of dairy-fed pork from a pig not exceeding eight score pounds weight, and mixing well
| Bay or rock salt, pounded | 1½ | lb. |
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Shalots, minced | 1 | oz. |
| Saltpetre, in powder | 1 | oz. |
| Sal prunelle, in powder | 1 | oz. |
| Bay leaves | 2 | oz. |
Rub both sides of the meat well for a week, turning it every other day, then add common salt and treacle, each one pound, and rub again daily for a week; after which baste and turn only, for a week longer, then take it up, dry with coarse cloths, rub it well all over with peas meal and bran mixed, equal quantities, and hang it to be smoked with
| Oak lops or sawdust | 2 | parts |
| Dried fern | 2 | parts |
| Peat or bog-earth | 2 | parts |
for three weeks. Commit it to your ham and bacon chest, to be kept three months or longer, well embedded in malt coom and pulverised charcoal. It will never be rancid.
MELTON-HUNT BEEF.
Choose a round of prime ox beef, about thirty pounds weight, the butcher removing the bone; examine the flap and take out the kernels and skins, and hang it up in a dry air, where let it remain as long as the weather will permit. Then take
| Juniper berries, bruised | 2 | oz. |
| Ten shalots, minced | ||
| Allspice, ground | 2 | oz. |
| Black pepper, ground | 3 | oz. |
| Dried bay leaves | 3 | oz. |
| Coarse sugar | 2 | lb. |
| Bay salt | 2 | lb. |
Mix them well, and rub all parts well, particularly the flap and the void left by the bone, every day for a week, and turning it every other day. Then add
| Rock salt or common salt | 1 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | 1½ | oz. |
| Garlic, minced | 2 | heads |
and never omit rubbing well with the pickle every day for ten days. After this turn it daily for ten days more, then take it up, look well to the centre and fat, and setting it up in proper shape, and skewer and bind it firmly. Wipe it dry, and if not immediately wanted, coat it well over with dry bran or pollard, and smoke it a week with
| Beech chips | 3 | parts |
| Oak lops | 1 | part |
| Fern or grass turfs | 2 | parts |
Otherwise, bake it, and when it has cooled forty-eight hours, not less, it will cut firm and obtain for you high commendation.
BEEF’S HEART SMOKED.
From choice, take the heart of a prime Scot or well-fed heifer, and hang it in a current of dry air for a week, but if it should be a fine large one, and you are in doubt as to its age and probability as to tenderness, ten days or more in hard weather will not be too long to keep it. Clean it well from the coagulated blood in the cavities, ventricles, and wipe the outside with salt and water and sponge. Then take
| Bay or rock salt | 6 | oz. |
| Coarse sugar | 6 | oz. |
| Sal prunelle | ½ | oz. |
| Water | 1 | quart |
| Bay leaves, powdered | ½ | oz. |
| Laurel leaves, shred | ½ | oz. |
Boil these a quarter of an hour, skimming well. Put the meat, the small end downwards, in a deep straight-sided vessel, that will just more than contain it, and add to it six large onions sliced and fried brown, with some sweet lard; also
| Powdered sage | 1 | oz. |
| Black pepper, ground | ½ | oz. |
| Fine salt | 2 | oz. |
and pour the liquor, nearly scalding hot, upon all these, covering close with brown paper tied over; thus let it remain forty-eight hours, if a moderate sized one, and sixty hours if a large one. Next take it out and wipe dry, and fill all the hollows, of which there are four, with the following stuffing:
| Fried onions | 1 | lb. |
| Bay salt, fine powder | 1 | oz. |
| Allspice, fine powder | 1 | oz. |
| White pepper, fine powder | ½ | oz. |
| Olive oil | 3 | oz. |
And having pressed this into all parts accessible, make the “deaf ears” secure, that the stuffing does not come out, by sewing thin leather or bladder over the base of the heart, and hang it up, point downwards, in your chimney, and smoke it three weeks. When boiled and got cold properly, it will be a nice relishing article at a trifling expense. Beech chips, with oak dust and fern, or short grass, will be the proper fuel.
ULVERSTON RED FLANK OF BEEF.
For this purpose engage about twelve pounds of prime young meat, and let it hang the full time to become tender. Trim away the skin neatly, and cut it into pieces adapted to the family requirements. Set the trimmings, with a pound of any rough beef, and a similar weight of lean gammon of bacon, on the fire with
| Allspice, crushed | 1 | oz. |
| Juniper berries, crushed | 1 | oz. |
| Black pepper, crushed | 1 | oz. |
| Eight shalots, minced | ||
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Common salt or rock | ¾ | lb. |
| Water | 5 | pints |
and boil twenty minutes, skimming well; strain the liquor and pour it hot over the meat, which must be totally immersed. In a week boil up the pickle, adding
| Saltpetre | 2 | oz. |
| Bay leaves, dry | 1 | oz. |
| Cochineal | ½ | oz. |
Cover the meat again, and let it remain ten days more; then take it up, dry it well with cloths, and hang it up in a quick current of air, rub it well on both sides with warmed bran, and when it is not capable of retaining any more, coat it with the gelatine and treacle composition so effectually as to totally exclude the air. In three months, meat thus preserved will be juicy and mellow, and presenting a striking contrast with the dry and tough preparations of the general common practice. When wanted for table, plunge a piece of the meat into a pan of boiling water, and keep it so boiling for ten minutes or a quarter of an hour, after which draw the utensil a little off the fire, and simmer only, until the cooking is completed.
BEEF HAMS.
Your butcher will furnish you with a joint of a prime young beef, cut handsomely, and shaped for the purpose. Hang it as long as prudent, then rub it well in all parts with coarse sugar, and turn it every second day for six days, then mix well,
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Common or rock salt | 1 | lb. |
| Foots of coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | 1 | oz. |
| Old stale ale | 1 | quart |
These are allowed for each ten pounds of meat. Let the rubbing in of this mixture be sedulously observed for three weeks, and then only the turning every second day, two weeks longer, the pickle having been boiled up again and well skimmed, adding twenty per cent. of the ingredients to replenish the strength. Now take up and dry your meat, and give it a nice firm covering of oatmeal and bran mixed and warmed; hang it in the fresh air a week, changing its position, so that all the juices may not be at one end of it. Smoke it a month with oak lops and sawdust, fern or short grass turfs, and plenty of beech and birch chips. Store it in malt cooms and charcoal, and let it not be molested for four months.
HAMBRO’ ROUGH BEEF.
Take ten or twelve pounds of any part of the animal that has not much fat or skin, and no bone attached; rub it well over with a pound of West India molasses, made moderately hot, and let it lie so four days; make a pickle of
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Common or rock salt | 1 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | 1 | oz. |
| Garlic, minced | ½ | oz. |
| Juniper berries, bruised | 1 | oz. |
| Water | 2 | quarts |
boiled and skimmed clear, and added to the meat, which must be quite covered, and remain so three weeks more. Now dry it well, give it a good coat of pea flour, and covering with brown paper, smoke it a month with
| Oak sawdust | 5 | parts |
| Peat or bog earth | 1 | part |
BRESLAU BEEF.
Take the second round or fillet of beef without fat or bone, cut it into two equal parts horizontally, and rub them well with the following mixture:
| Black pepper, ground | 1 | oz. |
| Garlic, minced | ½ | oz. |
| Juniper berries, bruised | 2 | oz. |
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Rock or common salt | 1 | lb. |
| Foots of sugar | 1 | lb. |
Let them lie, being regularly rubbed and turned for fourteen days. Boil up your pickle, skimming it thoroughly at the expiration of each week, and add, at the end of the fortnight,
| Allspice, bruised | 2 | oz. |
| Saltpetre | 2 | oz. |
| Strong vinegar | 1 | pint |
Let them lie thus a week together, then take them up and wipe dry. Smoke one of the pieces for three weeks, in brown paper, with oak and fern, and hang it in a dry air to harden a month. The other portion of the meat may be thoroughly dried in an air current, and then coated with the gelatine composition, and exposed to the air a month also.
Both these are intended for rubbing on a tin grater, and taken on bread and butter, or as sandwiches, and well adapted for gentlemen emigrating and travelling at home.
WHITEHAVEN CORNED BEEF.
For a round of beef about twenty-five pounds weight. Rub it in all parts with
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Allspice, ground | 3 | oz. |
| Nutmeg, grated | 1 | oz. |
| Sal prunelle | 1 | oz. |
and let it lie, turned and rubbed daily, for a week. Then add
| Rock or common salt | 2 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | ¼ | lb. |
| Vinegar | 1 | pint |
| Water | 1 | pint |
boiled twenty minutes, skimmed and let go cold. Baste the meat twice a day, and turned every second day for three weeks longer. Now take up and wipe dry, sew a broad fillet of light canvas around the meat tightly, and suspend it to be dried very gradually in your chimney, with beech and birch embers. It may hang thus for three weeks, never allowing a flame, and should be turned occasionally.
NEATS’ TONGUES.
For each tongue of seven to nine pounds weight, having cut out the gullet and trimmed the root, take
| Bay salt | 1 | oz. |
| Coarse sugar | 3 | oz. |
| Saltpetre, pounded | ½ | oz. |
| Cochineal, pounded | ½ | oz. |
Mix well, and rub the meat well for four days, then add for each tongue one ounce more salt and continue the rubbing and turning six days longer. The curing is now completed, and if wanted for table, may be boiled slowly four to five hours. If it is intended to dress them fresh out of pickle as wanted, the rubbing, except for the first day, must be omitted, and in such case, they would not be unpleasantly salt for four or five weeks; nevertheless, they should be turned daily. If they are only to be dried, wipe them well when taken out of the pickle, and rub them all over with bran or pollard warmed, but if to be smoked, it must be done with
| Beech chips | 2 | parts |
| Dried fern | 2 | parts |
| Oak sawdust | 2 | parts |
for a week, and they may be packed along with your hams in malt cooms and pulverised charcoal.
NEATS’ TONGUES, VERY HIGH FLAVOUR.
Having cut away the useless parts at the roots, and removed the gullets, rub the tongues all over with coarse sugar or real West India molasses, and let them lie twenty-four hours; then take
| Juniper berries | 1 | oz. |
| Black pepper, ground | ½ | oz. |
| Sal prunelle | ½ | oz. |
| Treacle | 1 | lb. |
mix, and rub with it three days, turning them daily; then add
| Bay salt | 9 | oz. |
| Common or rock salt | 12 | oz. |
rub three days, and turn the meat daily for a week, when you may dry it and smoke with beech and fern or grass turfs. The above proportions are for one fine tongue of eight or nine pounds.
A BOAR’S HEAD.
Procure the head of a large well-fed bacon hog, your butcher having had it open and taken out the tongue, gullet, eyes, and nasal cartilages, and small bones; remove the brain and clean it thoroughly, particularly at the roots of the ears and nostrils; wash it quickly in salt and water, and dry with cloths. Rub it well in all parts with rock or common salt, and hang it up to drain twenty-four hours. Next, make a pickle of
| Garlic, chopped | ½ | oz. |
| Shalots | 1 | oz. |
| Juniper berries | 2 | oz. |
| Jamaica pepper | 2 | oz. |
| Sal prunelle | 3 | oz. |
| Water | 1 | gal. |
| Bay salt | 2 | lb. |
| Treacle | 2 | lb. |
Boil fifteen minutes, and skim, and when cold pour it over the head and tongue, placed in a deep straight-sided earthen vessel, where it must remain, being turned every second day, and well covered with the pickle for a month; at the end of fourteen days take out the tongue, boil up the pickle, adding one pound more salt, and pour it again on the head cold. When taken out of pickle, wipe both the head and tongue dry, and with a sharp knife cut through the rind from the nose to the base, in lines two inches apart, but not severing the flesh. You may now remove any superfluous fat from the base, but not interfering with the lean part; rub all over with dried oatmeal; peel the tongue, and skewer it inside the head, close the sides with string, and smoke it in brown paper for three weeks, with
| Oak sawdust | 2 | parts |
| Beech and birch chips | 3 | parts |
| Fern or grass turfs | 1 | part |
Store it in malt cooms, and when wanted let it be baked.
WESTPHALIA HAMS.
Get your legs of pork—each about sixteen pounds weight—cut in shape like those imported, viz. longer and more narrow than usual, inclining to a peak at the large end, and flattened between boards weighted down upon them. But since they may be cured at home far finer flavoured, and of infinitely far superior quality in the feeding, this attempt at deception is optional. The following is a good mixture, with which let the meat be rubbed well, and turned daily for three days:
| Saltpetre | 1 | oz. |
| Sal prunelle | 1 | oz. |
| Coarse sugar | 1 | oz. |
| Bay salt | 1 | oz. |
| Juniper berries, bruised | 2 | oz. |
Then let them lie in this way, only turning them for ten days more, when you will boil up the ingredients, adding
| Best pickling vinegar | 1 | pint |
| Water | 1 | pint |
and when cold turn it to the meat, and baste with it a fortnight longer. You may now take them up and dry them well. They must hang in a current of fresh air for a week or more, and then be smoked a month with oak lops, fern, and grass turfs.
WESTPHALIA HAMS ECLIPSED.
Take a fine thick leg of pork, of about sixteen pounds weight, and mix
| Saltpetre, finely beaten | 1½ | oz. |
| Coarse sugar | 10 | oz. |
| Rock or common salt | 4 | oz. |
| Bay salt, beaten fine | 5 | oz. |
with which rub the meat in all parts once a day, and turning it for four days. Bring a pint of pickling vinegar to the boiling point, with one ounce of sliced shalot in it, and when cold add it to the meat, which must be turned daily for a month; then take it out of pickle, hang it to drip twenty-four hours, turn the ham end for end twice a week at least, smoke it a month with oak lops, fern, beech chips, and turfs.
EXCELLENT HAMS OF HIGH FLAVOUR.
Hang a leg of well-fed pork, weighing about eighteen pounds, as long as the weather will permit; take
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Sal prunelle | 2 | oz. |
| Juniper berries, bruised | 2 | oz. |
| Black pepper, bruised | 1 | oz. |
| Bay salt, bruised | 2 | lb. |
Rub this mixture well into all parts of the meat, and let it lie, being rubbed and turned twice in three days and nights; then add rock salt, or if you cannot get it, then common salt two pounds, and let it lie a month, turning it every other day. Then wipe it dry, and put a nice clear covering of bran or pollard all over the joint, and smoke it a month, turning it now and then in the chimney while the juices are settling. The fuel must be oak lops, sawdust, and beech chips. If you have no store chest with malt, corn, &c., you must have your resource in a paper bag, as is often the case. Do not let your meats hang near a kitchen fire from the ceiling; they will inevitably be rancid if you do, and to avoid the flies in summer time, brush your meats over once a fortnight with three drops of creosote in a pint of water.
A NORFOLK CHINE.
Take the chine of a well-fed hog of ten score weight, deprived of the rind, and what fat may be considered superfluous, and rub it in all parts effectually with
| West India molasses | 1 | lb. |
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Laurel leaves, shred | 1 | oz. |
| Bay leaves | 1 | oz. |
and let it be rubbed and turned daily for a week. Next boil together the herbs used above, and
| Marjoram | a | handful. |
| Thyme | a | handful. |
| Juniper berries, crushed | 1 | oz. |
| Rock or common salt | 1 | lb. |
| Water | 3 | quarts |
Skim it well, and when cold, pour it to the meat, and mix with the first pickle. Take care that the pickle completely covers the chine. Handle it attentively three weeks, and wipe it dry. It must be well coated with bran first, and pea-flour over that, and smoked with
| Oak lops | 2 | parts |
| Dried fern | 2 | parts |
| Beech or birch chips | 2 | parts |
for a fortnight or more. One half of it will be exceedingly good, if coated with the gelatine composition, and kept three months; the other half may be baked, and eaten cold.
LEICESTERSHIRE SPICED BACON.
Many persons are prejudiced against spiced bacon, generally because they may have been deceived in the quality of that purchased at the shops; too often indeed is the spicing resorted to that it may cover defects which would have been too glaring if merely salted. (See Note, No. 3.) Take a middle of well-fed large pork, and divide it into pieces that will suit your salting tub; rub them well over, both sides, with warmed treacle, and let them lie for a week, being rubbed and turned every day; then take a mixture of
| Bay salt, beaten fine | 3 | lb. |
| Saltpetre, beaten fine | ¼ | lb. |
| Allspice, ground | 2 | oz. |
| Black pepper | 1 | oz. |
and rub the meat well with this on the fleshy side only, for a week, after which turn the pieces every other day for a fortnight longer. You may then dry it with cloths, and suspend the meat in a current of air, being turned end for end every third day; and when ready, lay on a nice coat of bran or pollard, and smoke with oak and beech for a fortnight, and finish it by adding peat to your smoking fuel for a week longer. This will be superior bacon.
SMOKED PORKER’S HEAD.
Take the head of a dairy-fed porker, seven score weight, lay it open, take out the tongue, gullet, eyes, &c., and wash it five minutes in salt and water. Rub it well all over with coarse sugar and sliced onions, and let it remain in a deep dish forty-eight hours, the tongue may be cured as a neat’s tongue. Make a pickle by boiling
| Bay leaves, powdered | ½ | oz. |
| Saltpetre | ¾ | oz. |
| Bay salt or rock salt | 1 | lb. |
| Allspice, ground | 2 | oz. |
| Water | 1 | quart |
Skim it well, and when cold, pour it over the head in a deep straight-sided earthen vessel; so let it lie three weeks, being turned and basted with the pickle every other day. Take it up now, wipe it dry, place the tongue in, and stuff all the cavities with a stuffing of onions fried in olive oil or sweet lard, and dried sage powdered; bind the cheeks close together with tape, and smoke it three weeks with beech chips two parts, fern two parts, peat one part, oak sawdust one part. It must be kept in same packing as hams, tongues, &c., and in two months it will be excellent, baked and taken cold.
BATH CHAPS, OR CHEEKS.
Chose your cheeks from pigs not more than eight score weight. Split open, carefully take out all the offal, and for every stone of fourteen pounds of meat, allow
| Saltpetre | 1 | oz. |
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Bay salt or rock | 1 | lb. |
| Pepper | 1 | oz. |
Rub the cheeks thoroughly and daily for a week; then turn them in the pickle for a fortnight more, when you may take them up, dry and wipe, and coat them nicely with warmed coarse oatmeal, and hang them to dry for a week. Smoke them a month, or only dry them in your chimney by a gentle heat. Oak and grass turfs must be the fuel made use of.
DUTCH BEEF.
Take ten pounds of any part of prime beef that has a moderate share of fat attached, the thick flanks suit well. Displace the skin, and rub the meat all over with foots of coarse sugar one pound, and let it lie three days and nights, turned daily. Take then
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Common salt | 1 | lb. |
| Sal prunelle | 1 | oz. |
| Garlic, minced | 1 | oz. |
| Juniper berries, crushed | 1 | oz. |
| Vinegar | ½ | pint |
with which mixture rub your meat well five days, and then turn it in the pickle every three days for a fortnight more. Bind broad tape around it as a collar, rub pea-flour over it in all parts, until it is thoroughly coated therewith, and smoke it a month with oak lops, sawdust, and beech or birch chips. It should be kept in store two months at least, and then put into boiling water over the fire, done moderately, and cut when cold.
HAUNCH OF MUTTON AS VENISON.
Get your butcher to leave the tail attached to a leg of fine fat wether mutton, which you may hang as long as ever the weather will permit. Carefully remove the outer skin, and rub half a pint of pure olive oil well into all parts of it, lying in a deep dish. Put into a jug
| Three large heads of garlic, sliced | ||
| Bay salt, | a | teaspoonful |
| Allspice, bruised, | ¼ | oz. |
| Six dried bay leaves | ||
| Or nine green ones | ||
| Seven or eight sprigs parsley | ||
| Seven or eight sprigs thyme | ||
| White peppercorns, | ½ | oz. |
Pour a pint of good vinegar, nearly boiling, over these, cover the jug close, and let remain till next day. Then add this pickle to the meat, and rub it well in for half an hour, not disturbing the fat if possible; slice six large onions, and strew them equally over the meat, turn it every day twice, and keep always the onions well on the uppermost part. Continue this for five days, then take it up, wipe it dry, and rub it for half an hour with a pound of West India molasses, made hot. Next day wipe it clean, and roast it as venison. Serve with red-currant jelly liquefied.
THIGH OF MUTTON L’DIABLE.
Take a short thick leg of prime mutton, that has been well kept, and rub it well in all parts with pounded bay salt for half an hour, then immerse it in cold water for a minute, and wipe it quite dry. Mix well
| Table salt, | 1 | large tablespoonful |
| Black pepper, ground, | 1 | teaspoonful |
| Cayenne pepper, | ½ | oz. |
| One clove garlic, minced | ||
| Treacle, | ½ | lb. |
Rub the joint freely with this until it has disappeared. Divide the flesh down to the bone for three inches above the knuckle, and lay in three shalots, and half a head of garlic minced very fine, and close the skin neatly over it. Set aside on a dish until the next day, when rub it again with what liquor may have arisen, and put it down to roast before a brisk clear fire. Smear six ounces of sound fat bacon with a spoonful of tar, stick it on the prongs of a long toasting fork, and when the meat is about half cooked, hold the bacon over the fire until it blazes, then transfer it over the meat, and baste it with the liquid fire until the bacon has melted all away. The mutton when cooked will have a peculiar appearance, and a flavour highly esteemed by many persons. To be served hot with a spoonful or two of tomato, or any other favourite sauce.
WELSH MUTTON HAMS.
Take a couple of legs of prime Welsh mutton, rub them well with treacle made hot, and put them away in a deep pan until the next day. Make a pickle of
| Thyme | 1 | handful |
| Marjoram | 1 | handful |
| Bay leaves | 1 | handful |
| Laurel leaves | 1 | handful |
| Saltpetre | 1 | oz. |
| Black pepper | 2 | oz. |
| Bay salt | 2 | lb. |
| Water | 5 | pints |
boiled an hour and well skimmed, and when cold to be poured over the meat, and to be rubbed every day, and turned for three weeks. Then take them out of pickle, rub them well in all parts with strong vinegar for one hour, when wipe them dry, and hang them up in a current of air until well dry. Then give them a thorough coat of bran or of oatmeal, and smoke them with
| Oak sawdust | 2 | parts |
| Peat | 1 | part |
| Beech | 2 | parts |
| Turfs or fern | 1 | part |
for three weeks or more. Store them in malt cooms and pulverised charcoal, and in three months they will be very good.
DRIED MUTTON, AS IN THE ARDENNES.
| Dried garden thyme | 1 | oz. |
| Dried marjoram | 1 | oz. |
| Dried bay leaves | 1 | oz. |
| Juniper berries, bruised | 2 | oz. |
Put these into a stone jar with a pint of fresh rendered goose oil, and let them digest three weeks. Take a leg or loin of prime mutton fresh from the butcher, rub it well in all parts, with the herbs and part of the oil prepared as above, and lay it in a vessel covered close; to be turned and rubbed every day for three weeks; then hang it up in a cold dry air three days more, when add to the herbs
| Coarse salt | 1 | lb. |
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Black pepper | 1 | oz. |
| Saltpetre | 2 | oz. |
Rub the joint then with the whole mixture, and let it lie; if a leg, for fourteen days; if a loin, nine days, turning it every day. Take it out, wipe it dry and rub all parts with warmed bran or pollard, and suspend it again in a dry air previous to enclosing it in a paper or calico bag for a month, then pack it in malt cooms and charcoal. If preferred smoked, we cannot provide you with juniper bushes for that purpose, and with which the “Ardennes” abounds, we must therefore substitute
| Oak lops | 1 | part |
| Beech chips | 2 | parts |
| Fern | 2 | parts |
| Peat | 1 | part |
TO PICKLE A TONGUE.
Take out the gullet and rough root of a neat’s tongue, eight pounds weight; rub it well with common or rock salt three days, then take
| Foots of sugar | ¼ | lb. |
| Saltpetre in powder | ½ | oz. |
Rub well with this, out of the pickle, then return all to the first brine, and keep it close covered three weeks, turning it every day. It will be fit to be cooked if wanted, but if to be smoked, treat it with the drying process, and when ready, smoke it with
| Oak lops | 2 | parts |
| Fern | 2 | parts |
| Peat | 2 | parts |
This is intended for tongues for general purposes. There follow some excellent pickles for higher flavours.
HAMBRO’ PICKLE FOR BEEF AND PORK.
| Rock salt | 3 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | 1½ | oz. |
| Sal prunelle | ¾ | oz. |
| Black pepper | 2 | oz. |
| Foots of sugar | 1¾ | lb. |
| Water | 2 | gall. |
Boil fifteen minutes, skimming well; pour into a vessel, and the next day it will be fit for use. This is appropriate for beef, hams, and tongues—for family use, hotels, and refreshment rooms, &c. &c. A moderate-sized round of beef should remain in it fourteen to sixteen days.
PICKLE FOR PORK.
EXCELLENT FOR A QUARTER OF A YEAR.
For a whole porker weighing not exceeding five score pounds. The pieces adapted for pickling being at hand, put a layer of finely beaten rock salt at the bottom of your powdering tub, which must always be particularly clean and sweet, and better if fumigated with sulphur the day before it is used, then place the thickest of the meat, then a layer of this mixture:
| Rock salt | 2 | lb. |
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | ½ | lb. |
| Sal prunelle | ½ | lb. |
then again meat, and alternately to the finish, and filling all the spaces with common or rock salt. In a week, if a pickle does not rise up so as totally to cover the pork, boil as much of similar ingredients, and, when cold, pour it gradually and evenly over the meat, and leave it. You can take thin pieces out in a fortnight if wanted in haste, but it will be preferable if not disturbed for a month. The water requisite for the second brine depends upon what brine was produced by the first salting.
PRESERVATIVE PICKLE.
This is proper for cured meats in general, and is recommended for imparting a mild and excellent flavour.
| Rock or common salt | 1 | lb. |
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | ¼ | lb. |
| Water | 1 | gall. |
SUPERIOR PICKLE FOR PORK.
| Rock salt or common salt | 3 | lb. |
| Bay salt | 3 | lb. |
| Saltpetre | ¼ | lb. |
| Loaf sugar | 2 | lb. |
| River or rain water | 3 | gall. |
Boil and skim well. Apply cold. Small delicate pork will be ready in a week.
BREAST OF MUTTON COLLAR, AS VENISON.
Hang the largest breast of well-fed wether mutton you can get, as long as the weather will warrant you. Take away the outer skin, all the bones, and strew coarse sugar plentifully all over the inside flesh, and put a slate or piece of board that is tasteless—as beech, or sycamore, or poplar—upon it, with heavy weights, and let it remain so forty-eight hours. Be provided with
| Garden thyme, in powder | 1 | tablespoonful |
| Marjoram, in powder | 1 | tablespoonful |
| Eschalots, minced | 4 | tablespoonfuls |
| Nutmeg, grated | ½ | oz. |
| Bay salt | 1 | lb. |
| White pepper, ground | 1 | oz. |
| Old ale | 1 | pint |
Boil these altogether for twenty minutes. Rub both sides of the meat for at least twenty minutes, and lay it, along with its sugar or pickle, in a deep vessel, and keep up the friction for a week or nine days; then take it up, dry it with cloths, and making a layer of bay leaves and laurel in a dry tub, put the breast upon it, and cover the meat with other leaves of similar sort, and with thyme, parsley, and any sweet herbs you may have near at hand. Now take it up, wash it for five minutes in vinegar and table-beer, half-and-half, and hang it up to dry for twenty-four hours, then roll it up as a collar, and bind it tight; hang it in your chimney, but do not let much smoke enter into it, as it must be dried rather than smoked. The embers of beech chips, grass turfs, and sawdust, will effect this in a week. The half of it may be roasted, and the other part kept with your hams, tongues, &c., for six months; it will then be mellow and beautifully flavoured.
A PERPETUAL GOOSE.
Procure the heart of a prime ox—the larger the better—hang it up in a current of dry air as long as it is safe, and at the same time get a pint of newly-drawn goose oil, which put into a jar along with
| Six or eight eschalots, minced | ||
| Onions, sliced | 1 | lb. |
| Dried sage, powdered | 1 | oz. |
| Bay salt | ¼ | lb. |
| Saltpetre | ½ | oz. |
Tie brown paper over, and let it remain in a gentle heat until your meat is ready. First cut out from the heart, the pipe—blood vessel—as low down as you can, pare away the “deaf ears,” and open as wide as you consistently can, without piercing the bark or outside skin, a communication between the two upper cavities—auricles, and the two lower ones—ventricles, and take out the coagulated blood. Next rub all parts, the inside and outside, thoroughly twice a day with the oily mixture for a week, having put the meat, point downwards, in a straight-sided deep earthen vessel, and keeping the cavities all the while filled with the liquor. Now boil for fifteen minutes.
| Bay leaves, shred | 1 | oz. |
| Green laurel, shred | 1 | oz. |
| Bay salt, pounded | ½ | lb. |
| Vinegar | 1 | pint |
| Porter | 1 | pint |
| Coarse sugar | 1 | lb. |
Skim it well and add it when half-cold to the meat in the jar, mixing all well together. Mind that the meat is completely covered with the pickle, and tie paper over all, so let it be for a week, when boil up all the pickle, skimming it well, and taking care to renew what may have been lost or imbibed, and the cavities kept well filled all the time; let it be in pickle a fortnight longer, then take up, wipe dry inside and out, make a stuffing of fried sliced onions and sage leaves powdered, adding black pepper to make it pleasantly hot, and with this fill the inside of the heart as full as possible, and pressing it in from the top, make the holes secure with wetted bladder sewed over them. Let it hang up for a day or two to dry, then wrap it in brown paper and smoke it, point downwards, for a week; then take it down, rub it for half-an-hour with olive oil, and smoke it again for a week. This done, rub it again with the oil and hang it in a quick current of air for twenty-four hours, and as soon as it is dry enough to retain it, coat it securely with the gelatine composition, and keep it three months, and longer the better. Ultimately, it must be roasted, and slices cut out when cold to be broiled. It is an exceedingly beautiful treat.