Meat Loaf
- 2 cups freshly made bread crumbs
- 1 onion, chopped fine
- 2 eggs, slightly beaten
- 2 pounds ground beef
- 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
- 1 1/2 teaspoons dry mustard
- 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
- 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
- 1/4 cup milk
- Preheat the oven to 350 F. Butter a loaf pan.
- Combine all the ingredients in a large bowl; your freshly washed hands are the best tools for the job.
- Pat into the loaf pan and bake for 45 minutes.
- Omit the Worcestershire sauce and mustard; in place of the milk, use 3/4 cup of juice from a can of tomatoes and add 1/4 cup minced parsley plus 1/2 teaspoon basil, crumbled.
- Pat into pan and cover with 3/4 cup of the tomatoes from the can, roughly chopped, or 3/4 cup tomato sauce.
- Omit the Worcestershire sauce and add 1/2 cup grated cheese.
- Meat Loaf with Bacon.
- After patting the loaf into the pan, cover with 4 strips uncooked bacon.
- Instead of 2 pounds ground beef, use 1 pound ground beef mixed with 2/3 pound ground veal and 1/3 pound ground pork.
- Red wine may be used instead of milk if desired.
- Bake 1 hour.
- Instead of using a loaf pan, pack the meat into muffin tins or Pyrex baking cups, top each with a square of bacon, and bake for only 25 minutes at 400 F. Turn out and serve with tomato sauce.
- For general purposes, use white bread, though whole wheat or rye crumbs add a robust touch to sturdy dishes like this.
- Do not use bread that is stale or the crumbs will have a stale taste.
- To make the 2 cups called for here will take about 4 slices of bread.
- Dry out the bread in a 250F oven, and use some of the crust, if you wish.
- After drying the bread, tear it into pieces and pulverize it in a blender or food processor.
- Or spread the pieces on a large piece of wax paper and crush with a rolling pin, going back and forth until the bread is reduced to crumbs.
- If you store bread crumbs in the refrigerator for more than a short period of time, they may become moldy.
- It's best to put them in the freezer, wrapped tightly in a plastic bag, where they will keep and taste fresh for several weeks.
- If you buy packaged bread crumbs, avoid the seasoned variety.
- Yes, with your hands.
- Mixing things with your (washed) hands is the best way to feel things and memorize them.
- Your fingers memorize recipes as much as your mind.
- You come to know what the texture of a given mixture should be, something you wouldn't learn if you had a piece of equipment between yourself and what you're doing.
- The same goes for tasting, though you should avoid tasting raw meat.
- It's amazing the number of times I've saved a dish, correcting something I've forgotten, by tasting at every stage.
- This is particularly important, for example, in cake batters.
- Meat loaf is one of those things dishes that can taste even more flavorful the next day.
- Try crumbling it and adding it to a simple pasta dish.
freshly made, onion, eggs, ground beef, worcestershire sauce, mustard, salt, freshly ground pepper, milk
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/meat-loaf-40041 (may not work)