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| Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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http://www.cwb.com.au/Wholesale_no_o...n/girello.html This seems to be what we call "nuar" (FR "noix" ?) in Turkish. All of the muscle fibres are longitudinal and parallel. There is very little fat. Is there an accepted English name for this cut? -- Bob http://www.kanyak.com |
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Opinicus wrote:
http://www.cwb.com.au/Wholesale_no_o...n/girello.html This seems to be what we call "nuar" (FR "noix" ?) in Turkish. All of the muscle fibres are longitudinal and parallel. There is very little fat. Is there an accepted English name for this cut? Looks like a fillet to me. The cut you slice up to make fillet steak. -- Kate XXXXXX R.C.T.Q Madame Chef des Trolls Lady Catherine, Wardrobe Mistress of the Chocolate Buttons http://www.katedicey.co.uk Click on Kate's Pages and explore! |
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"Opinicus" wrote in message ... http://www.cwb.com.au/Wholesale_no_o...n/girello.html This seems to be what we call "nuar" (FR "noix" ?) in Turkish. All of the muscle fibres are longitudinal and parallel. There is very little fat. Is there an accepted English name for this cut? -- Bob http://www.kanyak.com It could be eye of the round or tenderloin. Nope according to the chart it comes from the leg. Hmmm. MoM |
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Interesting. We get something called a "Gerello" which sounds very similar
indeed only with every scrap of fat and tendon trimmed off. Also known as a "Virginian Roast", which is also (possibly) Eye of Silverside. If it is eye of silverside, you're looking at the bit that goes into Pastrami. That's all I can dig up. There's no fat or sinew on them and just seems to be a long strip of muscle fibre. Usually pretty tasteless, IMHO, but that might be due to lack of fat. Turning it into pastrami sounds great to me. "CHI-MUM" wrote in message . .. "Opinicus" wrote in message ... http://www.cwb.com.au/Wholesale_no_o...n/girello.html This seems to be what we call "nuar" (FR "noix" ?) in Turkish. All of the muscle fibres are longitudinal and parallel. There is very little fat. Is there an accepted English name for this cut? -- Bob http://www.kanyak.com It could be eye of the round or tenderloin. Nope according to the chart it comes from the leg. Hmmm. MoM |
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"Oracle" wrote... Interesting. We get something called a "Gerello" which sounds very similar indeed only with every scrap of fat and tendon trimmed off. Also known as a "Virginian Roast", which is also (possibly) Eye of Silverside. If it is eye of silverside, you're looking at the bit that goes into Pastrami. That's all I can dig up. There's no fat or sinew on them and just seems to be a long strip of muscle fibre. Usually pretty tasteless, IMHO, but that might be due to lack of fat. Turning it into pastrami sounds great to me. "CHI-MUM" wrote ... "Opinicus" wrote http://www.cwb.com.au/Wholesale_no_o...n/girello.html This seems to be what we call "nuar" (FR "noix" ?) in Turkish. All of the muscle fibres are longitudinal and parallel. There is very little fat. Is there an accepted English name for this cut? -- Bob It could be eye of the round or tenderloin. Nope according to the chart it comes from the leg. Hmmm. MoM From whence the "Round" in US parlance cometh... Ther pictured cut is at least in the Southwestern US known as the "Eye of Round", neither tender nor with fat enough for most preparations, even to lean for most slow cooking. Hereabouts, its principal and best use is for the most favored of all beef dishes, "Chicken Fried" or "Country Fried" Steak, the first usually involving dipping in a batter mix prior to frying, often in deep fat, the second, more classic dipped in seasoned flour, then a milk (w/maybe egg) wash, then re-floured, and often "fried" in "shallow" fat rather than a deep fryer or skillet full of grease. #2 makes better "cream gravy" (w/more specks, bits and pieces) than do deep fried versions. Thin slices of eye round are tenderized or for classic cooks pounded with the edge of a heavy plate prior to flouring and frying/pan-frying. The cut, carefully handled, works for some versions of the US standard, "Swiss Steak", and can be carefully and extensively larded to produce very flavorful results, but is the effort worth it? It's actually a dryer tougher cut than the "Chuck Eye", but some places, sliced very thinly, tenderized and very quickly sauteed in a bit of butter, it makes a passable "Poor Man's Minute Steak". TMO |