Firstly I went across the road to my ever smiling village butcher, Mr Happy, and enquired about the price of a nice looking pork shoulder joint in his window display. As I enquired I was also aware that I could get a hand of pork – that’s a shoulder piece with the knuckle joint on the bone for about a fiver from the butcher two miles away on the Clifton estate. They are very good value from the Clifton butchers, Paul Walker’s. So, when Mr Happy the butcher in the village smiled at me and said, £13.55, guess where I went? I don’t think he was very happy anymore.
It was a cold but nice day weather-wise and it took me over an hour to walk to Clifton and back but the thought of saving £8.55 and probably getting a bigger, considerably cheaper, fresher joint, stirred me onwards, Clifton bound. In the end I spent about nine pounds with Paul Walkers’, purchasing some nice looking braising steak and three cooking apples for an apple sauce as well as the pork hand for £4.91. I felt like a hunter gatherer bringing home the catch of the day, plus some. Ug!
Sunday saw me cooking the beef as recommended in my French cooking book and I added new potatoes, chunky chopped celery, carrots and button mushrooms to the casserole, made a wine reduction with the marinade and cooked it the oven – medium heat- for two hours and sat with a glass of wine watching Rick Stein’s French Odyssey while the house filled, once again with the delicious aromas of my weekend meals.
Rick Stein in a French railway cafe |
left over cold pork and home made apple sauce |
Madame Soufie the hunting cat. |
4 comments:
So that's what the beef photo on Flickr is....I will have to try making that at the weekend. And I cooked shoulder of pork today (Tesco meat, no butcher near where I live). I rubbed the crackling with salt, then rubbed pepper & carroway seeds on the meat, poking several cloves of garlic deep inside. Then it was covered in foil & slow roasted at 140c for 5 hours,with a final 30 mins on 200C to crisp the crackling. The meat could then be pulled apart with a fork, & was very juicy.However you cook it, pork shoulder is a delicious, fairly cheap joint of meat, full of flavour.
Forgot to say I love the photo of Madame Soufie with her tongue sticking out. Did you give her some pork?
Hi, and what a lovely blog. We are in SW France and have a smallholding which gives us a lot of our food, including meat (rabbits, chickens, and lamb / mutton. Also pork when our Tamworth pigs manage to make some babies!) After having browsed your other posts, I look forward to reading more about your cooking adventures in the future. Vera.
Thanks Karen. No pork for Madame Soufie.
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