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KIDNEYS
Kidneys, cut lengthwise
Flour
Butter
Parsley
Pepper
Salt
Cut them through the long way, score them, sprinkle a little pepper
and salt on them, and run a wire skewer through them to keep them
from curling on the gridiron, so that they may be evenly broiled.
Broil them over a very clear fire, turning them often till they are
done, they will take about ten or twelve minutes, if the fire is
brisk; or fry them in butter, and make gravy by putting in a
tea-spoonful of flour; as soon as it looks brown, put in as much
water as will make gravy; they will take five minutes more to fry
than to boil.
Obs-- Some cooks chop a few parsley leaves very fine, and mix them
with a bit of fresh butter and a little pepper and salt, and put a
little of this mixture on each kidney.
From The Cook's Oracle by William Kitchiner, MD, New York, 1829
Comment: Again the English origins of Dr. Kitchiner's book show
through. There, dishes such as "steak and kidney pie" are popular
and unremarkable. While nobody in the US even today bats an eye at a
menu listing "liver and onions" or the like, the eating of kidneys
has been rare except when they are discreetly hidden under another
name like "giblets." It is still possible to find kidneys,
particularly pork ones, for sale in stores, particularly in the
South. Otherwise one interested in trying this dish will have to
make the acquaintance of a butcher.
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