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Meats British Meats 8 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 Pickled ox tongue, 4-5 lbs.
2 Onions
2 Carrots
2 Celery stalks
Bay leaves
Parsley
Rosemary
12 Black peppercorns
A little Madeira
Gelatine powder
1988 ped for you by Karen Mintzias

INSTRUCTIONS

Rinse the tongue and then soak it in plenty of cold water for at  least
12 hours.  Change the water once or more during this time. Next  day
choose a heavy-based saucepan or flameproof casserole that will  hold
the tongue snugly.  Put the tongue into it, cover with cold  water,
bring to the boil and skim.  Taste the water; if it is very  salty, tip
it away, add fresh water and bring to the boil again.  Add  the chopped
vegetables, peppercorns and a bouquet of bay, parsley and  rosemary.
Cover tightly and cook very gently on top of the stove or  in an oven
heated to 300 F (150 C) gas mark 2 for about 4 hours until  the tongue
is so tender that a skewer will go through the root end  like butter.
Lower the temperature as necessary; the meat will be  best if barely a
bubble breaks the surface of the liquid as it cooks.  Skin the cooked
tongue while it is still hot. Then cut away the fat  and gristle from
the end and remove all small bones if the butcher  has not already done
this. Skim off all the fat from the cooking  liquor and save it for the
sauce and for soups.  IF THE TONGUE IS TO BE SERVED HOT, carve it in
thin slices while it is  still hot and arrange it prettily, overlapping
slices like tiles, on a  large warmed serving dish. Pour some good hot
sauce over it, cover  the dish with foil and place in the oven for
about 10 minutes to heat  through. The spiced Kumquat Sauce recipe is
one of my favourites and  I like to serve extra in a sauce boat.  IF
THE TONGUE IS TO BE SERVED COLD, mould and glaze it while still  warm.
Curl the tongue to make it fit a small round container with  straight
sides. Traditional tongue-presses usually measure about 5-6  inches in
diameter; a cake tin or souffle dish of similar size will  do just as
well.  To glaze, melt 2 teaspoons gelatine powder in 1 tablespoon
water, then  blend in a scant 1/2 pint tongue cooking liquor (seasoned
and reduced  as necessary for good flavour), and give it a little oomph
with 1-2  tablespoons Madeira.  Pour over the tongue as much of the
liquid  jelly as is needed to fill gaps. Press the tongue down with a
saucer  or plate which fits just inside the tin, weight it down heavily
and  leave overnight in a cold larder until meat and jelly are set.
Chill  any left-over jelly separately so that it can be diced and used
to  garnish the tongue when it is served.  Unmould the tongue on to a
flat dish for serving. Decorate it and  accompany it with a fine sauce
such as a classic Cumberland sauce or  Piquant Parsley and Caper Sauce.
Source: Philippa Davenport in "Country Living" (British), December
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 23
Calories From Fat: 1
Total Fat: <1g
Cholesterol: 0mg
Sodium: 24.4mg
Potassium: 143.6mg
Carbohydrates: 5.3g
Fiber: 1.4g
Sugar: 2.5g
Protein: <1g


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