I have some new butcher
friends, they popped up to say hi on Twitter a while ago now and
invited me to go and have a look round their place, which I gladly
accepted. I've always been interested in butchery and have long
harboured intentions of taking some kind of course one day, to learn
the basics at least...
Freeman’s started as
a family business in South Shields in 1953 and is still run by the
grandson's of the founder, albeit as a much bigger operation in the
middle of Team Valley these days. Robert showed me round, to where
the meat arrives, how it's labelled and tracked so they know exactly
which farm every piece has come from, which abattoir it was
slaughtered in and when it arrived with them. Into the giant
fridges with huge cuts of meat hanging from rails, followed by a
demonstration from butcher Darren of how to cut out a sirloin steak
and how to cut a Barnsley chop. I had a lovely time, and sadly
couldn’t stay long enough to see more, but will definitely
return...
So as if that wasn't
good enough already, this week Robert turned up with a Christmas meat
hamper for me... Christmas come early! This is the first year that
they have sold hampers on line, you can have a look at the whole range here, from little ones to huge ones, full of turkey, gammon,
topside of beef, duck, pork loin, sausage meat and pigs in blankets.
All delivered to your door for free, if you order before the 21st December.
So this weekend I
roasted the beautiful piece of topside beef. I crushed a tablespoon
of black peppercorns and bashed them up in a pestle and mortar with a
tablespoon of mustard powder, a teaspoon of dried thyme, a teaspoon
of salt and a teaspoon of celery seeds, then mixed it all with 2
tablespoons of olive oil and spread it all over the outside of the
meat. I roasted it at 190°C
for 47 minutes... That is 12 minutes per 450g for medium rare, mine was
possibly more on the rare side but that's how I like it. Make sure
you rest it properly, covered in foil for 30 minutes. I served it
with a big dish of Pan Haggerty potatoes, the little pigs in blankets
and lots of vegetables, followed by an apple and walnut crumble. It
felt almost like Christmas...
Looks lovely, I might try it for Christmas day to break tradition!
ReplyDeleteYes that would be good, I'm breaking tradition with duck this year!
ReplyDeleteAnna x