Neat's Tongue (To Serve Hot or Cold)
- 1 each ox tongue pickled, 4-5 pounds
- 2 each onions
- 2 each carrots
- 2 each celery stalks
- 1 x bay leaves
- 1 x parsley leaves
- 1 x rosemary leaves
- 12 each black peppercorns
- 1 x madeira wine if serving tongue cold
- 1 x gelatin, unflavored if serving tongue cold
- 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 300F (150C) (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 to 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 to 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.
onions, carrots, celery stalks, bay leaves, parsley, rosemary, black peppercorns, madeira wine, gelatin
Taken from recipeland.com/recipe/v/neats-tongue-to-serve-hot-or-co-46220 (may not work)