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HASHED VENISON
Cold cooked venison
1 small or button onion
Parsley
Thyme
Pepper
Salt
3-4 whole cloves
1 tbs. currant jelly
1 tbs. catsup, either tomato or mushroom
1 tsp. anchovy sauce
Browned flour for thickening
The remains of cold roast venison--especially a stuffed
shoulder--may be used for this dish, and will give great
satisfaction to cook and consumers.
Slice the meat from the bones. Put these [bones] with the fat and
other scraps in a saucepan, with a large teacupful of cold water, a
small onion--one of the button kind, minced, parsley and thyme,
pepper and salt, and three or four whole cloves. Stew for an hour.
Strain and return to the saucepan, with whatever gravy was left from
the roast, a tablespoonful currant jelly, one of tomato or mushroom
catsup, a teaspoonful of anchovy sauce, and a little browned flour.
Boil for three minutes; lay in the venison, cut into slices about an
inch long, and let all heat over the fire for eight minutes, but do
not allow the hash to boil. Stir frequently, and when it is smoking
hot, turn into a deep covered dish.
Common Sense in the Household by Marion Harland, New York, 1871
Comment: It is interesting that a recipe calling for venison would
pop up in a book from 1871, when cooking writers earlier in the
century noted that the meat was beginning to vanish from city
marketplaces as settlements expanded and "the frontier" was pushed
farther and farther west. The advent of the railroad and
refrigerated cars for shipment of produce and meat may have caused
the change. On the other hand the recipe might simply have been
cribbed from another, earlier book, a custom just as common in the
cookbook-writing world then as now. The "catsup" called for here,
even the tomato version, is not quite the same sauce as we know it
today, but everything else is quite straightforward.
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