Category Archives: Beef

Travel

Its been a while. I’ve been on a couple of little trips and as always I’ve snapped away.

Scotland-Inverness

The beautiful highland cattle.

Africa-Morocco

A happy butcher.

France- Somewhere

I always love the range of butchers shop fronts in France. They seem very welcoming to me, I took lots of pictures but wont bore you with them all.

Horse Butcher.

Foie Gras Farm-France

Its been a little while since my last post but I’m back on the blog so keep your eyes open. Bacon Jam etc…….

Charlie the Butcher.

Bag of Meat

Well, meat is making the front cover of music albums. Yes it’s true. The Victorian English Gentlemens Club have released an album called “Bag of Meat”

I’ve not listened to the album but it has good reviews.  I hope it’s a chopping good album. Sorry it’s the best I could think of.

Charlie the Butcher.

Talking tripe

There’s not a lot going for tripe with its name being used to talk about nonsense. No more than a handful of restaurants ever serve it.

Various types of tripe

Beef tripe is usually made from only the first three chambers of a cow’s stomach: the rumen (blanket/flat/smooth tripe), the reticulum (honeycomb and pocket tripe), and the omasum (book/bible/leaf tripe).

Cow's stomachs

The reason is that it is a hugely misunderstood ingredient. Elsewhere in the world, tripe has retained its gastronomic dignity. The Chinese have a score of ways of cooking it, the Italians and Spanish adore it and the French have such classic dishes as tripe à la mode de Caen which is treated as a culinary masterpiece.

This is in contrast to the collapse of tripe eating in Britain. It was at its most popular from late Victorian times to the 1950s, when it was a tasty, cheap and nourishing source of animal protein.

The decline in the popularity of tripe coincided with growing economic prosperity from the mid-1950s onwards. As poverty declined an ingredient associated with poorer times was rejected.

This falling off in retail sales in the late 1950s and early 1960s, came at a time when there was no restaurant culture in Britain which might have been able to introduce it to new audiences or at least save it from near-extinction.

It sounds fanciful today, but 30 years ago there was a restaurant chain in the north of England which featured tripe almost as a signature dish. The romantically-named United Cattle Products (UCP) restaurants had cold tripe salads, tripe and onions and steak and cowheel pie permanently on the menu. Sadly, neither the company nor its restaurants survived.

Tripe has remained a popular ingredient with the older generation who enjoyed it in harder times, but for a younger audience tripe is a bit of a curiosity or simply a pet food.

Tripe dressing

One inevitable result of the decline of interest in tripe eating in the UK is the decimation of the tripe dressing industry, (dressing being the quaint term for the practice of boiling and preparing cattle stomachs for sale as tripe).

 

Most major towns used to have at least one tripe dresser,
but now there are noThose were the daysmore than a handful left in Britain, mostly in the north of England where tripe eating is still popular.

 

 

 

 

A surviving tripe shop in Leeds Market

There are very few places where you can buy it these days but ask at your local butcher.

 

 

 

 

British cooking of tripe has remained loyal to a very small number of recipes, most commonly lightly cooked in a thickened, white onion sauce. This dish is always served with creamed potatoes and a dusting of fine-ground white pepper.

Less common is tripe fried with bacon; creamed tripe with a toasted potato topping in cottage pie style; or, creamed tripe with celery instead of onions.

Tripe has also been eaten cold in England, served simply with sliced tomatoes or a full salad. Brown malt vinegar is sprinkled on the tripe to give some acidity.

All is not lost for tripe. A very slow, but steady increase in its use in restaurants, most noticeably among those pushing down the rustic route, has begun.

Tripe is a versatile ingredient and will absorb other flavours yet still retain its own character.

Click here for an interesting range of tripe recipes and here for a traditional tripe and onions recipe.

Charlie the Butcher

National Butchers Week 2011


Happy National Butchers Week to everyone. National Butchers Week was set up by the Meat Trades Journal to provide the retail butchery sector with a platform to promote their business. The aim of the week is to raise the profile of the trade among consumers, promoting butchers as a beacon of excellence for all things meat, and as a potential career to young people. Please pop along to your local butchers for a look because many will runnning special events of promotions.

We, as a trade, offer great service, advice, skills and knowledge. Go on, treat yourself to a steak this week and support your butcher. But remember even when it’s not National Butchers Week, support your local butcher. To find your local shop check it out here

There is a full article here and you might just recognise someone.

You can also check it out on Facebook here

Charlie the Butcher

The Gambia

With the weather turning and the dark nights drawing closer and closer, it was time for a holiday. So off to The Gambia I went. If you fancy a sunny, different, smiley and happy holiday, Gambia is the place to go.
My holidays are always like a “bus man’s holiday” dragging my poor girlfriend along with me I always plan a little meat related trip. When you say Gambia and meat it’s a little different to Australia and meat or the USA and meat. So after a quick thumb through the Rough Guide,  Albert Market in the capital Banjul was the place to check out.
We found a guide and asked him to take us to the meat market, so off we headed through little lanes turning left and right via great spice and fish stalls. We finally got to butchers’ row. It was a buzzing place with lots of shouting and cutting. I got behind the block and to the butchers’ amazement showed off a little bit of skill and also had a great little chat about the trade.
As you can see I met the coolest butcher ever the guy in his shades. I’m thinking it’s the way forward so watch out !

If you are ever in Banjul pop by the Albert Market and have a butchers.

Charlie the Butcher.

An Evening of Meat

On Monday 1st November me and my good friend Ben Greeno of supper club Tudor Road http://bengreeno.wordpress.com/ will be hosting ‘An Evening of Meat’.  It was decided over a couple of drinks and we both thought it would be a great idea to share our skills and passion. Ben is a very talented chef and over the last few years he has spent his time working around Europe, including two stints at Restaurant Sat Bains and two at Noma in Copenhagen where he was the first cook employed at the then unknown venture.  You will experience a wide range of different cuts of meat, a butchery demonstration and be talked through each course by Ben and myself.  We will be using unusual meat cuts complemented along the way with matching drinks.  Over the evening you will be served six courses along with matching drinks,  it will cost £80 per person.  Spaces are limited to 10 people.  For bookings please email tudor.road@hotmail.com

Hopefully see you on the 1st.

Charlie the Butcher.

Reviews

http://cheesenbiscuits.blogspot.com/2010/09/ben-greeno-at-tudor-road-hackney.html

http://lizzieeatslondon.blogspot.com/2010/09/ben-greenos-supperclub.html

Lady Gaga

Lady Gaga and meat. You would think they are miles apart. Well …. read on.

Gaga is a little wild, but this time she has gone one step crazier. She decided to pose on the front cover of Japanese Vogue magazine covering her body in beef steaks. Gaga told Q Magazine “For my next album I’d like it to be about meat and I want to be wearing a bacon bikini. Also I want my records to smell of sausages or pork.”  So watch out next time you are in HMV !  She is one crazy cat.  I was thinking of a meat outfit. The ideas I came up with were pork steaks for shoes, slices of back bacon for a vest and if fancy dress is call for then ox tail for a tail. Any other clothing items that you can think of please post them!

Charlie the Butcher.

Monkey Gland Sauce

With the World Cup in full swing I was reminded that my visit to South Africa earlier in the year gave me a little useful knowledge of the local food.

My most memorable meal was at Nelson’s Eye Steak House. If you are ever in Cape Town it’s a must.  It’s a proper steak house. It is said that the legendary Monkey Gland Sauce was first made in a Cape Town hotel and it was at the “Eye” that I first had Monkey Gland Sauce.

First I was wondering is it the real thing ?!  But it’s not so don’t worry.

No monkeys or their glands are involved at any stage.

It is, however, different from your standard pepper or blue cheese sauce.

Monkey Gland Sauce is a kind of sweet and sour chutney style, sticky sauce that tastes quite fruity. If you want to get in the World Cup spirit and fancy something different give it ago.

Ingredients

  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 1 chopped onion
  • 1 tbsp paprika
  • 1 tbsp ketchup
  • 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 2 tbsp mustard
  • 1 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 bottle of South African beer or Windhoek.
  • 1 tbsp beef stock
  • salt and pepper
  • half a cup of fruit chutney is sometimes added
  • 10ml grated ginger root is sometimes added

Step 1
Melt the butter and over a medium heat add the onion until pale in colour.

Step 2
Add the ketchup, Worcestershire, mustard and sugar.

Step 3
Simmer to thicken it.

Step 4
Add the beer and stock.

Step 5
Simmer to thicken the sauce will take about 10 mins.

Step 6
Enjoy with a nice aged steak or springbok if you can find it. It’s a lovely meat and if you ever see it give it ago!

Charlie the Butcher.

South of England Rare Breeds Centre

Rare breed meat is a rare thing. It’s great to see it becoming more popular in butchers’ windows and on restaurant plates. With some old breeds almost lost through intensive farming programmes and only a handful of some breeds left it is time to keep on supporting the farming of these beautiful animals. But it’s all well and good asking for Old Spot Pork or Longhorn Beef but if you can’t relate to these animals now is your chance.
With summer in England here, or maybe not, it’s a great chance to visit some of the Rare Breed Centres dotted around the place. It was a smashing weekend recently and I was visiting Rye in Sussex for the weekend. Rye is a lovely place and whilst there I decided to visit the South of England Rare Breed Centre . Well what a great introduction to rare breeds this place is. They have a small selection of rare breed cattle including Longhorns and White Park along side Old Spot and Berkshire pigs and the famous Tamworth Two! They also have a pig race which is much fun. It’s a real chance to get up close to theses rare breeds and a smashing day out. So get yourself down to your local rare breed farm.
I’m currently in Glossop, Derbyshire, working at the amazing J W Mettricks Butchers as part of my Gary Baker Award. So, sorry for the lack of updates but lots of tales to follow.

Charlie the Butcher.

Dripping cake

Well,  after my earlier blog about dripping and with a Monday off work, it was time to make something with my delicious dripping …. so dripping cake it was.

It is a old traditional English cake and uses dripping instead of butter and eggs. My thinking is that as dripping obtained from a beef roast, it is therefore a by-product of a roast and much cheaper than butter and eggs and once upon a time more common. So a clever spark one day used it and came up with dripping cake or drippers as sometimes called. The cake recipe is very easy and is lovely. So here goes ….

Ingredients

  • 150g brown sugar
  • 90g dripping
  • 225g wholemeal flour
  • 225g water
  • 1 big handful of raisins
  • half a small handful of flaked almonds
  • 1 pinch of cinnamon
  • 1 pinch of nutmeg
  • 1 tsp of baking powder
  • 0.5 tsp of bicarb soda

Step 1
Melt the sugar, dripping and water. Bring to a boil and simmer for 5 mins. Preheat the oven to 180.

Step 2
Sieve the flour, make a well add the dried stuff, then add the dripping mixture.

Step 3
Mix well.

Step 4
Line a loaf tin, add the mixture.

Step 5
Bake for 40 mins or until a knife comes out clean. Then allow to cool on a wire rack and enjoy with butter or clotted cream.

Charlie the Butcher.