Beef Tongue

Beef tongue is often seasoned with onion and other spices, and then placed in a bowl to boil. After it has cooked the skin is often removed and the rest of the tongue is served. The preparer often uses pickled tongue because it is already spiced. If cooked in a sauce, it can then later be reused as a sauce for meatballs or any other food item. Another way of preparing beef tongue is to scald the tongue in hot water and removing the skin. Then roast the tongue in an oven similar to a roast beef, including using the pan drippings to prepare gravy. In Belgium beef tongue will usually be prepared with mushrooms in a Madeira Sauce. Beef tongue is commonly prepared pressed and served cold.

Steak & Kidney Pie

The steak and kidney pie is a typical British dish with a filling of diced beef steak and beef (ox), lamb’s or pig’s kidneys in a thick sauce. It is often, but not always, a one-crust pie, which means that the filling is covered but not completely enclosed by the pastry. Besides being made fresh in a kitchen or a restaurant, food processing firms offer this foodstuff frozen in a box, or canned (in a tin). Large cans even come in the size and shape of regular pie pans. The sauce typically consists of beef broth, flavoured with salt, pepper and parsley, onions, and thickened with flour, cornstarch or beurre manié.

Tenderloin or Fillet Steak

The tenderloin runs along either side of the spine, and is usually harvested as two long snake-shaped cuts of beef. The tenderloin (not to be confused with the short loin) is sometimes sold whole. If the short end of the tenderloin is cut into portions before cooking, that portion is known as filet mignon, or the fillet, from the French boneless meat (mignon meaning “small” as true mignons are cut from the smaller tail end of the tenderloin). The fillet is considered to be the most tender cut of beef, and the most expensive. The average steer or heifer provides no more than 4 -6 pounds of fillet. Because the muscle is non-weight bearing, it receives very little exercise, which makes it tender.

Oxtail

Oxtail (occasionally spelled ox tail or ox-tail) is the culinary name for the tail of a beef animal. Formerly, it referred only to the tail of an ox, a castrated bull. The oxtail of a steer typically weighs 2 to 4 lbs. (1-1.8 kg) and is skinned and cut into short lengths for sale. Oxtail is a bony, gelatinous meat, and is usually slow-cooked, often stewed or braised. It is a good stock base for a soup. Oxtail is the main ingredient of the Italian dish coda alla vaccinara. It is a popular flavour for powder, instant and premade canned soups in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Oxtail Stew is a favourite British dish, often taking several hours to cook in order to tenderize the oxtail.

Chateaubriand Steak

The Chateaubriand steak is a recipe of a particular thick cut from the tenderloin, which, according to Larousse Gastronomique, was created by personal chef, Montmireil, for Vicomte François-René de Chateaubriand, (1768–1848), the author and diplomat who served Napoleon as an ambassador and Louis XVIII as Secretary of State for two years. This dish is usually only offered as a serving for two, as there is only enough meat in the center of the average fillet for two portions. At the time of the Vicomte, the steak was cut from the more flavourful but less tender sirloin and served with a reduced sauce made from white wine and shallots moistened with demi-glace and mixed with butter, tarragon, and lemon juice.