Mock duck

Yield: 4 servings

Measure Ingredient
1 \N Onion;chopped
½ cup Celery;chopped
½ cup Mushroom;chopped
1 tablespoon Butter
¾ cup Dry bread crumbs
½ teaspoon Savory,dried
¼ teaspoon Thyme,dried salt & pepper
1 pounds Round steak
1 tablespoon Vegetable oil
¾ cup Beef stock

"Today a nonstick frypan works well, but just as in the 30s, a black cast iron one is great, too. Thicken the gravy with flour if desired.

... With the prairie sloughs dried up and little snow in the winter, there were very few wild birds in the worst years of the 30s.

Stuffed, thinly pounded less-tender cuts of beef made an adequate substitute. Some books called for flank steak, other for round steak.

Veal birds are similar, Rouladen, a German dish, is made with meat spread with mustard and wrapped around dill pickle spears. And in many regions of Canada, venison, moose and caribou were used in place of beef. In Newfoundland, savory seasons the stuffing and salt pork tops the meat rolls.

In a skillet, cook onion, celery and mushrooms in butter until softened. Remove from heat; stir in bread crumbs, savory, thyme, salt and pepper to taste and just enough water or stock to moisten.

Pound meat into ¼ inch thickness. Cut into 4 or 5 serving pieces; spread with stuffing almost to edges. Roll up each from widest sides; secure with string. In skillet, brown rolls in oil. Add stock; cover and simmer for 1 hour, turning and basting occasionally, or bake in 325F oven for 1 hour. MAKES: 4 or 5 servings SOURCE: The Thirties chapter in _A Century of Canadian Home Cooking_

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