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ROAST BEEF
1 roast of beef, sirloin or rib
Salted water
Paste of flour and water (optional)
The best pieces for roasting are the sirloin and rib pieces. The
latter are oftenest used by small families. Make your butcher remove
most of the bone, and skewer the meat into the shape of a round. If
you roast in an oven, it is a good plan to dash a small cup of
boiling water over the meat in first putting it down, letting it
trickle into the pan. This, for a season, checks the escape of the
juices, and allows the meat to get warmed through before the top
dries by said escape.
If there is much fat upon the upper surface, cover with a paste of
flour and water until it is nearly done. Baste frequently, at first
with salt and water, afterward with the drippings. Allow about a
quarter of an hour to a pound, if you like your meat rare; more, if
you prefer to have it well done. Some, when the meat is almost done,
dredge with flour and baste with butter--only once.
Remove the beef, when quite ready, to a heated dish; skim the
drippings; add a teacupful of boiling water, boil up once, and send
to table in a gravy-boat. Many reject made gravy altogether, and
only serve the red liquor that runs from the meat into the dish as
it is cut. This is the practice with some--indeed most of our best
housekeepers. If you have made gravy in a sauce-boat, give your
guest his choice between that and the juice in the dish. Serve with
mustard, or scraped horse-radish and vinegar.
From Common Sense in the Household by Marion Harland, New York,
1871
Comment: Note the fact that Mrs. Harland lists "an oven" as a
possible device which her readers might be using for beef roasting.
This marks her as a very progressive and up-to-date cookbook author,
as stoves with ovens suitable for roasting (as opposed to bake
ovens) were just coming into widespread use during the Civil War
era. (Culinary historian Karen Hess has a rule of thumb that new
cooking techniques, recipes, etc., have usually been in fairly
widespread use for at least ten years before they are ever mentioned
in a published cookbook.)
The default was still the open hearth, with roasting done on a spit
before the fire with a pan underneath to catch drippings. This is
still regarded by many as the ideal way to roast meats of any sort,
considering oven "roasted" meats to be better named as either baked
(if an open pan is used) or boiled (if cooked in a lidded vessel.)
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