Thursday, October 30, 2008

#87 Mrs Beeton's Traditional Mincemeat

Christmas is coming, and I am going traditional on your ass. First thing to be made is Mrs Beeton’s Traditional Mincemeat. According to Griggers it is better than any modern mincemeat. The main difference is that there is proper fresh suet and actual meat in it. She reckons that when she makes this recipe, the mince pies get eaten double-quick. Well we’ll see. Getting hold of fresh suet is easy, the butcher in Levenshulme sold me 2 and-a-half pounds of it for only a quid! Bargain! Also, I got the chance to use the mincer attachment for my Kitchen Aid for the first time; it was very good, and now I intend to mince everything. I like a good mince, I do (but you probably knew that already…). I haven’t had the chance to eat any yet, but it’s very easy to make, as long as you have the ability to stir.

The amounts are quite big in the recipe, so I’m giving you what I did which is half of Good Lady Beeton’s instructions:

Mix together 8 ounces of seedless raisins, 12 ounces of currants, 6 ounces of minced, lean rump steak, 12 ounces of fresh, chopped suet, 8 ounces of dark brown sugar, 1 ½ ounces of dried mixed peel, ¼ grated nutmeg, 12 ounces of apples that have been peeled, cored, and grated and the zest and juice of half a lemon. When all has been incorporated, mix in 2 ½ fluid ounces of brandy. Spoon the mincemeat into sterilized jars. (To sterilise jars, place jars and lids in oven set to 110°C for 35 minutes). This recipe made enough for four big jars. Leave for at least two weeks…


FYI: Mincemeat recipes go back as far as the Fifteenth Century, and pretty much any meat was used for mincemeat - Sixteenth Century recipes use heart or mutton and bone marrow instead of suet. It's probably one of the few surviving Elizabethan dishes still made today.


…to be continued.

4 comments:

  1. Do you cook the ingredients before canning?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nope! No cooking required...the sugar content is high enough to preserve the meat and fruit (apparenly!)

    ReplyDelete
  3. We just had your mincemeat in puff pastry mince pies with clotted cream & it was fantastic!
    Not too sweet but with great depth of flavour. You can't taste the meat but it tastes completely different to shop bought stuff. Still have another 3 pies to eat tomorrow and 2 thirds of a jar in the fridge. Whoo hoo! We (my friends Ritchie & Val plus me) give it a solid 8.5 out of 10. Thanks! XX

    ReplyDelete
  4. It's pretty good isn't it!? There's another recipe for a mincemeat pudding - I'll be doing that very soon..

    ReplyDelete