Morning

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Steak and kidney pudding

by Antony Worrall Thompson
from Food and Drink

Serves 6-8

Preparation time less than 30 mins

Cooking time over 2 hours

Ingredients
675g/1½lb chuck steak, cut into 2.5cm/1in cubes
225g/8oz ox kidney, cut into 2.5cm1in cubes
1 small onion, peeled and finely chopped
large pinch celery salt
salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 tsp fresh thyme leaves
2 tbsp plain flour
150ml/¼pt fresh beef stock

For the Suet pastry:
400g/14oz self-raising flour
200g/7oz beef or vegetarian suet
½ tsp salt
freshly ground black pepper
290ml/½ pint cold water



Method
1. Place the steak and kidney into a large bowl. Stir in the onion, celery salt, pepper, salt and thyme leaves. Toss together lightly and set to one side.
2. To make the suet pastry, sift the flour and the salt into a large bowl. Add the suet, salt and pepper. Lightly mix and add the water a little at a time.
3. Cut through the dough using a round bladed knife as if you were making scones.
4. Using your hands mix to form a soft dough.
5. On a lightly floured work surface roll out the pastry into a round disc approximately 0.5-1cm/¼-½in) thick. Cut out about a quarter of the pastry mixture for the lid and set aside.
6. Use the remainder of the pastry to line a well buttered 1.75l/3pt pudding basin, leaving at least 1cm½in of the pastry hanging over the edge.
7. Add the flour to the steak and kidney mixture and stir gently. Place the batches of the meat mixture into a sieve (with a glass bowl underneath) and shake to remove any excess flour.
8. Spoon into the pudding basin lined with the pastry. Do not push the meat filling into the basin and add the fresh beef stock nearly 2/3rds to the top not covering the meat completely.
9. Place the pastry lid over the filling and fold the border over. Press the pastry together securely to seal.
10. Cover the pudding with a double piece of buttered foil, pleated in the middle. Tie in place with string.
11. Steam the pudding on an upturned plate in a large saucepan filled with hot water for 5 hours, topping up with water occasionally so as not to boil the water in the saucepan dry.
12. To serve, turn out the pudding onto a large warm plate. Cut a wedge of the pudding and place on a serving plate with mashed potatoes and a spoonful of peas.

Quote (Beefy Steve @ Jan. 26 2006,09:38)
Eyup!

Don't forget the SUET :p :p :p

Steve

D@MN!! I ALMOST had forgotten it... :D

D -- fighting the urge to wretch uncontrollably...

Hey…

Ain’t this great… We got a receipy Board up here… :laugh: :cool: :p

Love IT…

Bill…

I was just surprised to see that there is such a thing as “vegetarian suet.” :)

Quote (Guest @ Jan. 26 2006,23:42)
I was just surprised to see that there is such a thing as "vegetarian suet." :)

A poor imitation!! Along the lines of a Linda McArtney "Meat Pie"

Beefy... I just bought some Suet this morning. I feel Spotted Dick coming on ( But I'll probably clear up if I keep applying the cream)

Of course you can use Suet to make dumplings for your Beef Stew also...It's a wonderfully useful thing!
:p

Actually this thread is tormenting me, after being on a diet for over 3 months.

I JUST WANT A BUTTERFINGER CANDY BAR THE SIZE OF TEXAS! :D

Holy crap Yaz! You couldn’t scrape all the goo outta your teeth in 100 lifetimes if you ate BF bar THAT big!

Suicide - eating two jumbo Butterfinger bars or a bag of Oreo cookies in the car BEFORE going in for a teeth cleaning.

D

Anyway, back to the scotch…

Friday night… just picked up the kids from youth club… listening to Eight Days a Week by those Liverpool boys, on my cordless 'phones… (2:44 of bliss, love those harmonies)… and drinking a nice single scotish malt…

OK, 8 days has finished now…

“Here comes the sun”. What a fantastic song, fantastic arrangement, and how come all that pick-hitting-guitar-noise has been inaudible on Beatles songs for 40 years but I can hear it now… especially on MY songs… (check 0:36 in the channel with the capo’d guitar for a really good example.)

Ok, scotch finished now…

Bliss…



:slight_smile: