Multipurpose Meat Paste Recipes

facebook share image   twitter share image   pinterest share image   E-Mail share image

GRANNY WISTRAND'S MEAT PASTE

An old meat paste recipe that was given to my mother in the 1950's. It is very easy to make and goes well on crackers as pate or on sandwiches. I recently made it as my grandson who is 14 months won't swallow lumpy food and I found this to be an excellent way to get him to eat a little meat.

Provided by Kiwi Kathy

Categories     Lunch/Snacks

Time 3h5m

Yield 4 jars, 20 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 9



Granny Wistrand's Meat Paste image

Steps:

  • Chop the steak and bacon.
  • Place all ingredients in a bowl
  • Place bowl in large pot with water that comes approximately half way up the sides of the bowl.
  • Cover with lid and steam for 3 hours.
  • Mince or blend all ingredients until smooth.
  • Pour into jars and seal with melted butter or sealing wax.
  • Store in fridge .

Nutrition Facts : Calories 69.2, Fat 7.2, SaturatedFat 3.8, Cholesterol 16.1, Sodium 220.8, Carbohydrate 0.5, Fiber 0.1, Sugar 0.2, Protein 0.7

1 lb beef steak
1/4 lb bacon, lean
1/4 lb butter
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon mace, ground
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon nutmeg, ground

MULTIPURPOSE MEAT PASTE

A cornerstone of Vietnamese cooking, this smooth meat paste is the most important recipe in the charcuterie repertoire and forms the base of three sausages in this chapter. It is also used to make meatballs (page 86), acts as the binder for Stuffed Snails Steamed with Lemongrass (page 42), and may be shaped into dumplings similar to French quenelles and poached in a quick canh-style soup (page 61). This recipe, which calls for chicken rather than the traditional pork, is my mother's modern American approach to gio. Chicken, a luxury meat in Vietnam that is affordable here, is easier to work with and yields a particularly delicately flavored and textured paste. Additionally, chicken breasts and thighs are readily available at supermarkets, while pork leg, the cut typically used, isn't. A recipe for the pork paste appears in the Note that follows.

Yield makes about 2 1/2 pounds

Number Of Ingredients 7



Multipurpose Meat Paste image

Steps:

  • Slice each breast and thigh across the grain into 1/4-inch-thick strips. When cutting the breast tenders, remove and discard the silvery strip of tendon. Keep any visible fat for richness, but trim away any cartilage or sinewy bits, as they won't grind well.
  • To make the marinade, in a bowl large enough to fit the chicken, whisk together the baking powder, tapioca starch, sugar, fish sauce, and oil. Add the chicken and use a rubber spatula to mix well. Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 8 hours or up to overnight. The chicken will stiffen as it sits.
  • Remove the chicken from the refrigerator and use a spoon to break it apart. Working in batches, grind the chicken in a food processor until a smooth, stiff, light pink paste forms. (This step takes several minutes and the machine will get a good workout.) Stop the machine occasionally to scrape down the sides. When you are finished, there should be no visible bits of chicken and the paste should have a slight sheen. Using the rubber spatula, transfer each batch to another bowl, taking care to clean well under the blade.
  • The paste is ready to use, or it can be covered and refrigerated for up to 3 days. For long-term keeping, divide it into 1/2- and 1-pound portions (a scant 1 cup paste weighs 1/2 pound), wrap in a double layer of plastic wrap, and freeze for up to 2 months.
  • To make giò the old-fashioned way, you must first hand pound the meat and then add the marinade ingredients. Use a large Thai stone mortar and pestle, which can be found reasonably priced at Asian restaurant-supply and housewares shops. My 9-inch-wide mortar has a 5-cup capacity bowl that is 6 1/2 inches wide and 4 inches deep. The 8-inch-long pestle is about 2 inches wide at the base. Select a pestle that fits your hand comfortably. (Stone pestles, heavier than the wooden one mentioned in the chapter introduction, make pounding easier.)
  • To minimize physical strain, I sit on a low kitchen stool and put the mortar on a solid table or box, with the rim of the mortar slightly below my knee. You may also sit on the floor with the mortar between your legs. Place a thick towel under the mortar to protect the work surface. Regardless of your setup, you want to sit astride the mortar and efficiently use your upper body strength to work the pestle. It takes about 35 minutes to produce a full batch of paste, so you may want to halve the recipe. To yield giò that is close to the traditional version, pound pork (see Note, above), which works better than chicken. The beef mixture used for making Beef, Dill, and Peppercorn Sausage (page 161) is also a good candidate for hand pounding.
  • Cut the meat into 1/4-inch-thick strips as instructed in the recipe. Blot the meat dry with paper towels to prevent it from sliding around the mortar.
  • In a small bowl, whisk together the marinade ingredients. Set aside near the pounding station. (Hand-pounded giò doesn't traditionally call for leavener and starch, but I find that they guarantee a silkier result that is neither too dense nor too firm.)
  • Put about 1/2 pound of the meat (or a quantity you find manageable) in the mortar and start pounding with a steady rhythm, pausing only to remove any gristly bits that come loose. After about 4 minutes, the meat should have gathered into a mass and, perhaps, even stuck to the pestle, allowing you to use the pestle to lift the meat from the mortar and pound it down again. Keep pounding for another 2 minutes to make the meat cohere into a smooth mass that resembles a ball of dough. Use a rubber spatula or plastic dough scraper to transfer the meat to a bowl. Repeat with the remaining meat.
  • Add all the marinade ingredients to the meat, stirring with a fork until the marinade is no longer visible. In batches, pound the meat for about 3 minutes longer to combine all the ingredients well. You should hear a suction noise as air is mixed in. The finished paste will feel firm and look ragged, and small nuggets of meat will be suspended in the paste. Transfer the paste to a clean bowl and repeat with the remaining meat.

1 pound boneless, skinless chicken breasts
1 1/4 pounds boneless, skinless chicken thighs
1 tablespoon baking powder
2 tablespoons tapioca starch
1 tablespoon sugar
5 tablespoons fish sauce
3 tablespoons canola or other neutral oil

CLASSIC SILKY SAUSAGE

Giò lua is the most widely eaten of all the Vietnamese charcuterie. A kind of Vietnamese mortadella, the smooth, light-colored sausage is sliced and tucked into baguette sandwiches (page 34), eaten with regular or sticky rice, or presented as part of a charcuterie assortment with pickled vegetables. Cut into matchsticks, it is used as a garnish for bún thang, a popular Hanoi noodle soup (page 217). Although giò lua is stocked in the refrigerated food aisle of nearly every Vietnamese deli and market, I make mine at home. It's easy. All you need is some meat paste, which may be freshly made or thawed, a piece of banana leaf, and some foil. You shape the paste into a log, wrap it in the foil and then in the leaf, and then boil it. The finished sausage will keep for up to a week in the refrigerator, but it is at its best soon after cooking, when the flavor of the banana leaf still lingers on the meat.

Yield makes one 1-pound sausage

Number Of Ingredients 2



Classic Silky Sausage image

Steps:

  • Fill a 4- or 5-quart pot two-thirds full with water and bring to a boil over high heat. Lower the heat and cover to keep warm.
  • Shaping and wrapping the paste is like rolling a very stubby cigar. Put a 12-by-18-inch piece of heavy-duty aluminum foil on your work surface with a short side closest to you. Center the piece of banana leaf on the foil. Use a rubber spatula to deposit the paste near the bottom edge of the leaf (the edge closest to you), roughly shaping it into a fat 5-inch-long log. Do not get any paste on the foil. Roll up the leaf to encase the paste, creating a cylinder 3 inches in diameter. Place the cylinder at one of the short ends of the foil and roll it up, letting the foil naturally overlap to form a silver tube. Finish by sealing the ends closed and then folding them toward the center. Because the paste expands during cooking, you need to tie the package with kitchen string to secure it. In general, a cross tie followed by another loop around the sausage-much like tying a very small roast-works well. There is no need to be fancy, but to ensure the shape and compactness of the paste, make sure the string is taut.
  • Return the pot of water to a boil. Drop in the sausage and boil for 40 minutes, replenishing with extra boiling water as needed. During cooking, the foil will darken and the sausage will puff up, push against the string, and eventually float. Don't be alarmed; it will deflate afterward.
  • Use tongs to remove the cooked sausage from the pot. Let cool completely before untying and removing the foil. Keep the banana leaf in place. Put the sausage in an airtight container or zip-top plastic bag and refrigerate until serving.

1 pound (about 2 cups) Multipurpose Meat Paste (page 158)
5-by-12-inch piece fresh or thawed, frozen banana leaf, trimmed of brown edges, rinsed, and wiped dry

ROASTED CINNAMON SAUSAGE

When ground meat or meat paste is enhanced by other seasonings and cooked in an unusual manner, rather than just boiled, it is elevated to the realm of cha, a term used for fancier charcuterie. So if the name of a dish includes the word cha, expect to be seduced. Here, the meat paste receives a dose of cinnamon, which adds a deep spicy-sweet flavor without being cloying (much as it does to many savory Middle Eastern dishes). To accentuate the perfume and color that cinnamon lends to the paste, the mixture is traditionally spread onto a large section of bamboo and cooked on a spit over a wood fire. As the bamboo spins, a chewy skin forms and a heady aroma wafts through the air. When cut from the bamboo, the ready-to-eat sausage is curved like pieces of cinnamon bark. In the States, my mom tried substituting a large metal juice can for the bamboo and an electric rotisserie for the spit. If things weren't just right, the paste slipped off the can and was ruined. The method here, which uses an inverted baking sheet, is much easier, although it doesn't yield the characteristic curved shape. The taste, however, is splendid, especially when the sausage is made with strong, sweet Vietnamese cassia cinnamon.

Yield makes 1 scant pound

Number Of Ingredients 3



Roasted Cinnamon Sausage image

Steps:

  • Position a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 375°F. Invert a baking sheet and cover the bottom with heavy-duty aluminum foil.
  • Put the paste in a bowl and sprinkle on the sugar and cinnamon. Mix vigorously with a rubber spatula to distribute the dark specks of cinnamon evenly.
  • Transfer the paste to the prepared baking sheet. Use the rubber spatula to spread the paste into a 1-inch-thick rectangle (to mimic the bamboo) or disk. Wet the palm of your hand with water and rub it in a circular motion to smooth the top. Wet your fingers and smooth the sides. To prevent the paste from puffing up too much and cooking unevenly, use a skewer or toothpick to poke holes in it, spacing them about 1 inch apart and making sure to touch bottom.
  • Bake the paste for 25 to 30 minutes, or until the top is dry and light brown and a skewer or toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean. During baking, a puffy, shiny skin forms. Remove from the oven and let cool completely. As the sausage cools, the skin deflates, crinkles, and darkens.
  • To serve, cut the sausage into 3 long sections and then crosswise into 1/4-inch-thick slices. Store left over sausage in an airtight container or zip-top plastic bag in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.

1 pound (about 2 cups) Multipurpose Meat Paste (page 158)
2 1/2 teaspoons sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

STEAK PASTE

Another recipe from my Mother-in-law. This is a lovely old fashioned meat paste to spread on sandwiches. My husband and his oldest 2 sons absolutely loved this in days gone by. The recipe does not state what type of steak to use. I have made this several times with a cheaper cut and it just lovely. (Not sure of quantity this makes as I haven't made it for a long time. Also depends on the size jars you use. I will amend this when I make it again and can state how much it makes) Also note: Recipezaar wants to change the ingredient of "Anchovy sauce" to anchovies, sauce. This is actually a sauce that you can buy here in Australia.

Provided by busyozmum

Categories     Lunch/Snacks

Time 4h

Yield 2 cups

Number Of Ingredients 6



Steak Paste image

Steps:

  • Remove any fat from the steak.
  • Place meat into a double-boiler and cook for 4 hours.
  • Place meat (and juices) into blender with butter and blend to a paste. Add other ingredients and blend to mix.
  • Place into sterilized jars. Store in refrigerator.

500 g steak
2 tablespoons anchovies, sauce
125 g butter
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne

People also searched

More about "multipurpose meat paste recipes"

HOW TO MAKE THIS MULTIPURPOSE MEAT PASTE - YOUTUBE
Web Nov 22, 2017 52. 5.8K views 6 years ago #sweetrehabkitchen. This Multipurpose Meat paste is a great recipe to learn. This paste can be used to make meatballs, fried meat cakes, as a filling in...
From youtube.com
Author Nicola Song
Views 6.1K
how-to-make-this-multipurpose-meat-paste-youtube image


HOMEMADE POTTED BEEF | MOORLANDS EATER RECIPES
Web 06/06/2022. Homemade Potted Beef is a traditional British food that’s so simple you won’t believe how delicious it is. All you need to make it are …
From moorlandseater.com
5/5 (33)
Category Appetizer, Snack, Lunch
Cuisine British
Total Time 4 hrs 10 mins
  • Put the beef in an ovenproof dish which has a lid. Season sparingly with salt and add pepper to taste.
  • Lay the butter slices over the beef to cover. Put the lid on the dish - if the lid isn't tight-fitting, put a piece of foil over the dish before putting on the lid.
  • Put the dish in the oven and cook until the beef is very soft (3-5 hours). After 1 hours remove the lid, stir, then replace the lid and return to the oven until done.


EASY BEEF PASTIES | MEAT & POTATO PIES | ALL SHE COOKS
Web Mar 14, 2016 This recipe is really easy to prepare: ground beef, potato, carrots, onion and garlic. Toss in some dried oregano and pepper and the filling is ready. You'll want to prepare the dough about an hour before …
From allshecooks.com


MULTIPURPOSE MEAT PASTE (GIò) RECIPE | EAT YOUR BOOKS
Web We’ve helped you locate this recipe but for the full instructions you need to go to its original source. If the recipe is available online - click the link “View complete recipe”– if not, you …
From eatyourbooks.com


MULTIPURPOSE MEAT PASTE RECIPES
Web Steps: Chop the steak and bacon. Place all ingredients in a bowl. Place bowl in large pot with water that comes approximately half way up the sides of the bowl. Cover with lid and …
From tfrecipes.com


MEAT PATTIES - MEAT STUFFED PUFF PASTRY - VEENA …
Web Feb 26, 2013 Puff pastry filled with ground beef then baked until golden. You can make these ahead of time or freeze them for later. Table of Contents. Why make these patties. Ingredients and substitutes. Step by …
From veenaazmanov.com


ONE POT CREAMY TOMATO BEEF PASTA | RECIPETIN EATS
Web Aug 14, 2023 One pot creamy tomato beef pasta. By: Nagi. Published: 14 Aug '23 Updated: 16 Aug '23. 144 Comments. Recipe v Video v Dozer v. This is a beef pasta cooked with Italian seasonings in a creamy tomato …
From recipetineats.com


THE BEST MEAT SAUCE - JO COOKS
Web Feb 16, 2023 The secret? It’s simple, simmer it for a long time, this way you will extract more flavor from the meat and spices. Why You’ll Love This Meat Sauce. Brown the meat well. Take the time to cook the ground …
From jocooks.com


SPAGHETTI MEAT SAUCE RECIPE - NATASHASKITCHEN.COM
Web Mar 5, 2019 #Pasta. #ground beef. Jump to Recipe. Spaghetti Meat Sauce is beefy, juicy and so satisfying. It comes together fast so it is perfect for busy weeknights, and it’s freezer friendly. Meat sauce has all of the …
From natashaskitchen.com


MAGIC MEAT SAUCE RECIPE - BELLY FULL
Web Feb 19, 2024 Onion and garlic are blended in beef broth then simmered with ground beef, tomato paste, and a few other seasonings to create this Magic Meat Sauce for pasta, a layer in lasagna, or even as a topping for …
From bellyfull.net


EASY BEEF PASTIES - BAKING MISCHIEF
Web Aug 20, 2021 Brush egg wash around the edges of your pie crust to help seal it and spoon beef mixture over slightly less than half of the dough, leaving a 1/2-inch border. Fold dough over the filling and use a fork to …
From bakingmischief.com


MULTIPURPOSE MEAT PASTE RECIPE - MAGGIE'S RECIPES
Web Meat paste has been used for centuries as a way to preserve meat and add flavor to dishes.
From maggies-recipes.com


BEEF PASTIES RECIPE - COOK IT REAL GOOD
Web Mar 7, 2021 Quick and easy. A great way to repurpose leftover savoury mince. What's in a pastie? Traditional Cornish pasties are pretty simple. They generally use beef mince / ground beef, onion, swede and potato. …
From cookitrealgood.com


HOW TO MAKE VIETNAMESE MULTIPURPOSE MEAT PASTE (CáCH LàM …
Web Mar 4, 2021 For more recipes https://boriville.blogspot.comMusicYouTube Audio LibraryYou had to beVacation Uke
From youtube.com


AUTHENTIC CORNISH PASTY RECIPE - THE DARING GOURMET
Web Jan 22, 2020 They can only contain beef, potato, Swede (rutabaga), onion, salt and pepper. No other meat, no other vegetables, no other seasonings allowed. The ingredients must be raw when the pasties are assembled …
From daringgourmet.com


PASTIES (HANDHELD MEAT PIES) - THE WOODWORKING BAKER
Web Feb 18, 2018 They are passed down through my grandmothers Welsh heritage. Pasties are also a regional favorite in many parts of the United States. I have read of festivals …
From thewoodworkingbaker.com


HOMEMADE SPAGHETTI MEAT SAUCE (THE BEST) - TWO …
Web Feb 26, 2021 Step by step instructions. Tip. Shortcuts. Make Ahead. Recipe FAQs. What to serve with spaghetti meat sauce. Homemade Spaghetti Meat Sauce (The Best) Ingredients – tailored to your taste. …
From twokooksinthekitchen.com


17 MISO RECIPES FOR UMAMI LOVERS - FOOD & WINE
Web 4 days ago 17 Robust, Complex Miso Recipes, From Pasta to Dessert. Give a savory, umami upgrade to seafood, ribs, salad, pasta, cocktails, and desserts with each type of …
From foodandwine.com


TEX MEX PASTE RECIPE - THE FORK BITE
Web Apr 24, 2023 Step-by-step instructions: Tips for customizing your Tex Mex paste. Classic Tex Mex dishes with a twist: Fusion recipes for the bold and adventurous: Perfect …
From theforkbite.com


Related Search