CUMBERLAND STEAK
INGREDIENTS:
Steak of your choice, my favorite is a Porterhouse and
T-Bone steak
Sea Salt
Freshly ground black peppercorns
(Tellicherry)
Butter for frying
Wild Bill's Meat Rub
- optional
Special Butter - recipe below
SPECIAL BUTTER
INGREDIENTS:
8 oz.
butter
1 1/2 lbs. soft dark brown sugar
1/2 tsp. grated nutmeg
1/4 tsp. cinnamon
1 wine glass (3 1/2 oz.) of good rum (or 2 level tsp. of rum flavoring)
1 oz. of brandy or whiskey (or 1 tsp. brandy or whiskey flavoring)
In a frying pan over low heat soften the butter until just barely melted.
Put all the other ingredients in a bowl and mix until thoroughly blended.
Stir in the melted butter, place in a storage container, and let harden.
Fry your favorite cut of steak in butter (at a heat low enough so it doesn't
scorch the butter, but just browns it), seasoning with salt and pepper to
taste. While the steak is cooking, place thin slabs of the butter on top of
2 slices of whole wheat bread and place under a broiler until the butter is
melted and just slightly brown. Two or three minutes before removing the
steak from the pan, generously cover it with slabs of the special
butter, then serve either on top of the toast (our preference) or
with the toast on the side. The book recommends accompanying it with "a
quart of strong beer with one tablespoon of dark vinegar in the beer",
something I haven't yet tried. Herter advises that "This special
butter is also used to put into the mouths of babies for their very first
solid food", but you'd probably need to run that past a mother first."
Pix below of plated Cumberland Steak with special butter close up shot
taken on 03-21-09; served with steamed
corn on the cob, mashed cauliflower
florets garnished with fresh chopped parsley, cherry tomatoes, Texas style
garlic toast, crunchy tossed
salad and glass of
wine. The Cumberland
Steak (Porterhouse) cut with the special butter was outstanding. It
was just too pretty outside not to fire up some charcoal and did the
grill
thing instead of the frying pan. I deviated from the recipe a little
but not too far off track!
I received this recipe from long time business acquaintance Chuck Erikson,
Grass Valley, California
of whom I have never met face to face but only talked to over the telephone, mail
correspondence and with the new computer age, emails. I purchased
mother of pearl, red and green abalone shell material from Chuck when he was
in Van Nuys, California during the early 1970's. Chuck is a very
talented craftsman with a couple of U.S. Patents for a product called
Abalam. Here in Chuck's own words concerning this recipe, "Want to try
something different in a steak? This one's a killer, one you'll never
run across anywhere, but we do it quite often. The special butter
can be refrigerated in a tightly closed container almost indefinitely, and
the recipe makes enough to do perhaps 15 or so steaks. It sets up
hard, so we just use a small steel spatula or a sharp knife to shave thin
slices off the top. I suppose it would be easy enough to gently warm
the container and thus release the entire brick, which could then be placed
on a large covered butter dish to make slicing easier, but since the rum in
it is aromatic and can evaporate I prefer a sealed container. The
recipe is from "Bull Cook and Authentic Historical Recipes and Practices",
Volume II, pp. 306-307, by George Leonard Herter (founder of the famous old
Herter's sporting goods catalogue company), 1968, published by Herter's in
Waseca, Wisconsin (now out of business, and out of print). The steak
was known as a "Cumberland Steak" (after Cumberland, England, home of the
man who originated the recipe, James Rishworth aka "Jimmy the Painter) and
many years ago was a menu item at George Diamond's restaurant in Chicago.
NOTE: I purchased a used copy
of the above referenced out of print cookbook from Amazon. com and delighted
with it.
Below a few sequence pixs taken on 03-20-09 mixing a batch of the
special butter: Click on thumbnails for a larger view!
The special butter has a wonderful aromatic smell just as Chuck described
it. Pixs below of Chuck Erikson:
Chuck enjoying camping with friends with their "fruits of
the harvest" in
the camp oven over an open fire. It just doesn't get any better than
this!
Bill aka Mickey Porter 03-21-09.
LEAVING ON A SPIRITUAL NOTE
If you do not know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, please take this
moment to accept him by Faith into your Life, whereby Salvation will be
attained.
Ephesians 2:8 - 2:9 8 For by grace are ye saved through faith;
and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God: 9 Not of works, lest
any man should boast.
Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the
evidence of things not seen.”
Romans 10:17 “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the
word of God.”
Open this
link about faith in the King James Bible.
Romans 10:9 “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord
Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the
dead, thou shalt be saved.”
Open this
link of Bible Verses About Salvation, King
James Version Bible (KJV).
Hebrews 4:12 “For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and
sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of
soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the
thoughts and intents of the heart.”
Romans 6:23 “For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is
eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Romans 3:23 “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of
God;”
Micah 6:8 “He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth
the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk
humbly with thy God?”
Philippians 4:13 "I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me."