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Beefsteak Smothered in Onions (Filet Braise Aux Ognons)

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats American 2-tnt, Beef, Creole/caju 1 Servings

INGREDIENTS

3 lb Round steak
6 Onions; sliced fine
1 tb Lard
1 tb Flour
2 tb Vinegar
2 Sprigs bay leaf
2 Sprigs thyme
3 Sprigs parsley; chopped
1 Clove garlic
1 pt Water
Pepper and salt; to taste

INSTRUCTIONS

Beat the round steak well with the rolling pin or steak hammer; cut off the
outer skin and press the meat back into shape. Place the lard in the deep
frying pan and let it melt. Then lay in the sliced onions, and over these
the beefsteak, which has been well seasoned with salt and pepper and
dredged with the flour. Cover closely. Let it simmer over a hot fires for a
few minutes and then turn the steak on the other side. After three minutes,
add the vinegar, chopped parsley, thyme and bay leaf and a clove of garlic.
Turn the steak, letting the flour brown well, and keep the pot closely
covered. When brown pour over one cup of water, or a pint, which will be
sufficient to cover the meat. Bring this to a brisk boil and set the pot
back where it can simmer gently for about two hours.
This introduction precedes the recipe:
Smothered Steak (Filet Braise)
Braising or smothering meat is a mode of cooking little understood by the
Americans, but which has been brought by the Creoles to a high state of
perfection. By this process the meat is just covered, and no more, with a
little water, or with a strong broth made form animal stock or the juices
of vegetables. The pot is covered with a closely-fitting lid and is put on
a slow fire and allowed to simmer slowly for two or three hours, just short
of the boiling point. By this slow process of cooking, tough meats are
rendered juicy, tender and very agreeable to the palate, while the covered
pot enables the meat to retain all its flavor.
The great secret in smothering meat is to let it cook very slowly,
simmering, however, all the time , so that the heat may thoroughly
penetrate and render tender and juicy the coarse fiber of the meat. When
tender, put the beefsteak into a platter, cover with the onions and gravy,
and you will have a delicious and delicately flavored dish.
This is a Dover reprint, 1971, p. 81
Recipe by: The Picayune Creole Cookbook, 2d ed., 1901 Posted to TNT -
Prodigy's Recipe Exchange Newsletter  by Lou Parris
<lbparris@earthlink.net> on Jul 17, 1997

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