All the way back in November, I was asked
to cater for a dinner party; a very special one because it had the most
interesting brief. A seven-course dinner was required where each course
represented a different time in history.
For the Georgian course, I went straight to
my favourite book from that time period The
Experienced Housekeeper by Elizabeth Raffald (1769). Flicking through the
pages, I happened upon a recipe To dress
a Leg of Mutton to eat like Venison. It required you to ‘[g]et the largest
and fattest leg of mutton you can get cut out like a haunch of venison as soon
as it is killed, whilst it is still warm.’ It then goes on to tell you to ‘remove
the bloody vein’ and then marinade the thing in wine, dry it, and to roast it
in pastry. I was intrigued, but it was obviously unachievable. Looking in other
books, I found many versions of it, sometimes roasted, sometimes braised, but
always marinated in red wine (and often in the blood of the beast too!). I knew
the recipe looked familiar, and it finally dawned on me that a recipe for it
appeared in good old English Food by
good old Jane Grigson.
There’s a 4 day marinating time for this
recipe, so plan ahead if you fancy making it – and I really suggest you do; see
my review of the recipe below.
Start off by making the marinade: dice up 5
ounces each of onion, carrot and celery, chop 3 cloves of garlic
and brown them in a couple of tablespoons of oil, such as sunflower or rapeseed. Take your time over this and
get them good and brown; the veg won’t be in the final dish, but its flavour
will be. Let it cool.
Now mix the cooled, browned vegetables with the following:
2 good sprigs of thyme
4 sprigs of parsley
2 sprigs of rosemary
8 crushed juniper berries
8 crushed coriander seeds
10 crushed black peppercorns
3 tsp salt
1 (UK) pint red or dry white wine, or dry cider
¼ (UK) pint of red or white wine vinegar
(and, though not on the ingredients list, cider vinegar, if going down the
cider route)
Now tackle the meat. Use a full leg of lamb or mutton, I went for the latter. It was huge, so I increased all the
above values by a half. All you need to do it score the fat into a diamond
pattern, like you would do for a ham. Find a large, deep dish or pot and place
the lamb inside and pour over the marinade. Make sure the whole leg gets the
marinade on it, so turn it over a few times. Keep the leg somewhere cool – a fridge,
or a nice cool cellar or pantry – and cover it with foil. Turn it twice a day
for four days.
When the four days is up, get a new set of
vegetables ready. Slice 2 onions, 2 carrots, 2 leeks and chop 2 sticks of celery.
Also chop up 8 ounces of unsmoked (‘green’)
streaky bacon. Brown all of these in
a couple of ounces of butter.
Spread the vegetables over the base of a deep roasting tin, place the leg on top and strain the marinade over it. Top up the marinade liquid with veal stock so that it comes up two-thirds of the way up the tin. You don’t actually need to use veal stock; chicken stock or water would do, I am sure. However, if you want to make your own, look here for my recipe for it from the other blog). Cover with more foil.
Spread the vegetables over the base of a deep roasting tin, place the leg on top and strain the marinade over it. Top up the marinade liquid with veal stock so that it comes up two-thirds of the way up the tin. You don’t actually need to use veal stock; chicken stock or water would do, I am sure. However, if you want to make your own, look here for my recipe for it from the other blog). Cover with more foil.
You have two choices now: either bring the whole thing slowly to boil and simmer gently for 2 hours on the hob, or bring to simmer and pop it in a cool oven instead, 150⁰C will do it. If you are using mutton, you need to cook the leg for another hour or even 90 minutes. Turn the joint over after one hour and in the final thirty minutes, ladle out 2 pints of the cooking liquid and boil it down hard to make a concentrated, richly flavoured stock.
When the cooking time is up, remove the leg
and put it into another roasting tin and turn the oven up to 220⁰C. Roast for a
good 20 minutes and baste well with the concentrated stock to achieve a nice
glaze.
Jane suggests serving with gravy made with the pan juices and reduce stock and the usual lamb/mutton accoutrements. See here for a post all about that. I actually served it with a 'Lenten Pie', from Raffald's book. At some point I will blog each course on the other blog.
Jane points out that you do this recipe
with a leg or pork and magically transform it into wild boar.
#404 Lamb
(or Mutton) to Eat as Venison. Oh my goodness, this may simply be the
single most delicious thing I have ever cooked! First of all, it tasted exactly
like venison; beautifully gamey, but with the moist succulence you would expect
from lamb or mutton. It was transformed! There must be some kind of witchcraft afoot.
I was amazed, and luckily so were my diners! I cannot recommend this more
highly, absolutely bloody brilliant. 10/10.
2 comments:
Woo, I've been putting this one off forever on the grounds that it couldn't really work, so now I feel empowered to have a go! I first saw the idea in one of Elizabeth David's books (I think in Mediterranean Cookery, but I'm not sure), and since her recipes are not, shall we say, 100% reliable, I gave it a miss. Jane is more trustworthy, especially when tested by the redoubtable Neil :D
Get it made, Jonathan! It's just so delicious. We can trust Jane with this one...
I know what you mean about Elizabeth David's recipes being hit and miss!
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