It's only a small one
Discussion
Looking for a small bit of beef, I'm the only one who will eat it, and the butcher persuaded me to buy a thin round piece of well matured topside or maybe silverside I forget.
Anyway I have to cook it now, any ideas?
Butcher said wrap in foil, put in liquid and roast for 20 mins.
I'm thinking dear on a pan, add some stock and cover in foil, roast for 20.
Or I could have chicken like everyone else.
Anyway I have to cook it now, any ideas?
Butcher said wrap in foil, put in liquid and roast for 20 mins.
I'm thinking dear on a pan, add some stock and cover in foil, roast for 20.
Or I could have chicken like everyone else.
Go with the advice above.Next time, get yourself a decent steak and fry that. Like this:
https://www.thepauperedchef.com/article/the-butter...
cbmotorsport said:
Topside/silverside is a cheap roasting cut...I've never had a bit that I've actually liked.
I've had plenty of good topside. We get rolled topside joints from my local decent butcher. It's good value (I pay 10.99 a kilo) so goes a long way and it's also good flavour and texture. I reckon the trick is to not overcook it and aim for medium/medium rare. I roast (well seasoned) at 200-220C for 20 mins, then turn down to 160 till the internal meat temp (with a thermometer) reaches 45-50C, then and leave to rest for a bit. Carves very juicy like this.
As above say, if you're cooking for one then a steak may well be just as easy, but I'd imagine a 4-500 gramme joint would give you enough for a nice roast and delicious leftovers for a bit more than a fiver.
As prand describes the only way I like topside cooked is rare, sliced very thinly and served in a sandwich with horseradish sauce.
I use topside at work as its the only way I can get a roast beef lunch in on budget, unfortunately school dinners do quite stretch to a rolled rib
I normally have 3 x 4-5kg joints, oil and season, blast at 275 for 15 minutes, remove from the oven and cool the oven down, then cook at 120 until a core of 55. Chill overnight and carve.

I use topside at work as its the only way I can get a roast beef lunch in on budget, unfortunately school dinners do quite stretch to a rolled rib

I normally have 3 x 4-5kg joints, oil and season, blast at 275 for 15 minutes, remove from the oven and cool the oven down, then cook at 120 until a core of 55. Chill overnight and carve.
Not quite beef but with easter coming up a nice bit of rolled lamb rump makes a decent roast for one or two and quite a cheap cut. My butcher usually chops the end off a leg and never more than £9-10. Keep the fat cap on as that helps
make it alovely tender cut.
Sear it in a pan to get some colour on it then I lay it on top of some halved shallots & bulb of garlic and thyme or rosemary and in to the oven 180c for 30-40mins or until done (58c for pinkness) then rest it under some foil while you make a gravy from the shallots and garlic.
Goes well with dauphinois.
make it alovely tender cut.
Sear it in a pan to get some colour on it then I lay it on top of some halved shallots & bulb of garlic and thyme or rosemary and in to the oven 180c for 30-40mins or until done (58c for pinkness) then rest it under some foil while you make a gravy from the shallots and garlic.
Goes well with dauphinois.
Gassing Station | Food, Drink & Restaurants | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff


