Friday, October 5, 2007
Stewed Terrapin
Stewed Terrapin (Using four terrapins)
Photo: Bobbytee
Not Recommended. This recipe is being reported for strictly historical reasons. It requires the stewing of the terrapins while alive (like most shelled creatures, e.g.: lobsters, mussels...). What seems like a cruel practice - even barbaric - possibly comes down to us from antiquity or even prehistory - when human survival was the prime objective. This recipe probably has its origins before there were even inventions/institutions like grocery stores, credit and money. Besides, the terrapin might be endangered in your locale - it might even be illegal to trap and kill them in your area. Again, this recipe is Not Recommended.
The terrapins must be alive. Plunge the terrapins alive into boiling water, and let them remain until the sides and lower shell begin to crack - this will take less than an hour; then remove them and let them get cold. Take off the shell and outer skin, being careful to save all the blood possible in opening them.
If there are eggs in them put them aside in a dish; take all the insides out and be careful not to break the gall, which must be immediately removed or it will make the rest of the flesh bitter. It lies within the liver. Then cut up the liver and all the rest of the terrapin into small pieces, adding the blood and juice than have flowed out in cutting up. Add 1/2 pint of water and sprinkle a little flour over them as you place them in the stew pan.
Let them stew slowly for ten minutes, adding salt, black and cayenne pepper, and a very small blade of mace. The add a gill of the best brandy and 1/2 pint of the very best sherry wine; then let simmer over a slow fire very gently.
In about ten minutes or so, before you are ready to dish them, add half a pint of rich cream, and 1/2 pound of sweet butter, with flour to prevent boiling. Two or three minutes before taking them off the fire, peel the eggs carefully and throw them in whole. If there should no eggs use the yolks of hen eggs - hard boiled. Serve warm.
Health and Safety Warning: Remember, the terrapin can be a prime vector for salmonella.
FROM: MA'S COOKIN' Mountain Recipes, Ozark Maid Candies, 1966, Osage Beach, Mo.
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