Friday 7 December 2007

Not suitable for vegetarians

This is a gratuitously carnivorous post. You have been warned.

Somerfield's had some reduced joints of beef yesterday. £0.79, too good to miss. Came home, and roasted it. Now the instructions on the pack conflicted mightily with the instructions in my never-fail cookbook, so I split the difference. And in due course, carved up a beautifully squelchily medium rare roast. Not being inclined to faff around with roasting potatoes and sorting out a pile of vegetables and Yorkshire Puddings, I sliced open a couple of bread rolls and made a roast beef sandwich.

Yum.

Moist, tender, mildly pink. I retreated to the sitting room, beef sarnie in one hand, book in the other. Took a few mouthfuls, completely delicious. And then noticed that the bread itself had taken on a nicely pinkish tinge, and that there were drops of blood spattering the book. Returning to the kitchen I discovered the remains of the joint now sitting in a large pool of blood which had seeped across the kitchen counter and under the sugar bowl.

So did I
a) heave mightily and send the sandwich northwards?
b) return the remainder of the joint to the oven to cook a little longer?
c) finish the sandwich taking care to catch the blood on the plate rather than on the book?

Mmmm protein.
Tia

3 comments:

  1. euuuuuuuuuuurrrrgh why didn't I heed the warning?!

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  2. Oh deffinitely C Bef is mant to be eaten more rare than cooked isn't it???
    sounds good!
    hugs

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  3. LOL! I'm thinking first "C" and then "B". Because we all know it's not really blood, it's just the juices of the meat!!! Right? At least that's what my dad always said! :-)

    Alesha

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