Grandma's Mince Meat
Submitted by matthewl
Old-fashioned mince meat with calf tongue, suet, dried fruit, candied citrus, brandy and whiskey. The traditional pie filling, aged in a crock for at least 7 weeks for deep holiday flavor.
YIELD
100 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
0 minREADY
4This is mince meat the way it was made before the modern shortcuts: real meat (calves’ tongues), real suet, real fruit, real liquor, and real time. The recipe makes an enormous batch (this is a Pennsylvania Dutch holiday tradition where every neighbor gets a jar) and asks for a minimum 7-week rest in a crock before using. That long aging is what transforms the harsh raw mixture into the deep, complex, almost wine-dark filling that makes proper mince pie a Christmas centerpiece.
The meat is the part that confuses modern cooks. Yes, real mince meat traditionally contained meat. Calves’ tongues, finely chopped, dissolve almost completely into the fruit during the aging process. Their savory background note is what differentiates traditional mince from the meatless commercial version, which tastes flat and one-note by comparison.
The brandy and whiskey aren’t just for flavor. They’re preservatives. Three quarts of strong liquor is what keeps this preparation safe at cool storage temperatures for weeks, and the alcohol carries the spice oils from the cloves, cinnamon, allspice, and nutmeg into every fruit and meat fiber.
The directions specify baking only between two crusts, never as an open-face filling. The top crust is essential. It traps the moisture and aromatics during baking, concentrating the flavor instead of letting it evaporate.
Pro Tips
- Use beef suet from a butcher, not vegetable shortening or store-bought suet substitutes. Real suet is what gives mince its silky, melty texture.
- A glazed earthenware crock is traditional. A large food-safe glass jar works in a pinch.
- Stir every few days during the aging period to redistribute the alcohol and prevent dry spots on top.
- This makes a huge batch. Plan to give it away as gifts in small jars or freeze portions in zip-top bags.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Chop the calves’ tongues very fine, add sugar, raisins, currants and citron. Mix all together. Chop apples fine (do not mash) and add to calves’ tongues. Add spices and suet, remaining fruit, almonds and salt, and mix thoroughly.
Pour over this the fruit juices and rind, the brandy and whiskey. Put mixture into a crock with a lid.
Place a cloth over the top of the crock and put on lid. Put in cool place for 3 weeks. Then add more salt and spices if needed. Let stand at least 4 weeks before using.
When using as filling for pies, always bake between 2 crusts.
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