Spiced beef biltong
Strips of beef marinated in vinegar, salt, and coriander, then air-dried until firm and flavor-concentrated. Sliced thin for snacking: salty, deep, slightly spicy.
Strips of beef marinated in vinegar, salt, and coriander, then air-dried until firm and flavor-concentrated. Sliced thin for snacking: salty, deep, slightly spicy.
In this vast country, you never arrive anywhere in an hour, and a foresighted man carries his dried meat. Biltong, you see, does not betray you: neither the heat of the Karoo nor the endless roads spoil it. You rub the meat with salt and crushed coriander seeds, splash it with a dash of vinegar, and let the wind patiently do its work. A strip in your pocket, and you can last the day — I know something of that, I who have traveled much, sometimes without being able to say where I was going.
- •Beef in strips (along the grain) — a nice piece (base)
- •Coarse salt — generously (curing, preservation)
- •Toasted coriander seeds — a handful (signature spice)
- •Vinegar — a dash (acidity, preservation)
- •Pepper — to taste (spice)
Spiced beef biltong
Strips of beef marinated in vinegar, salt, and coriander, then air-dried until firm and flavor-concentrated. Sliced thin for snacking: salty, deep, slightly spicy.
Why this dish? An iconic South African dried meat, biltong accompanies the long roads of the country that Mandela traveled so much, from the Transkei hills to the journeys of the underground. A protein reserve that fears neither heat nor time.
In this vast country, you never arrive anywhere in an hour, and a foresighted man carries his dried meat. Biltong, you see, does not betray you: neither the heat of the Karoo nor the endless roads spoil it. You rub the meat with salt and crushed coriander seeds, splash it with a dash of vinegar, and let the wind patiently do its work. A strip in your pocket, and you can last the day — I know something of that, I who have traveled much, sometimes without being able to say where I was going.
Ingredients (period version)
- Beef in strips (along the grain) — a nice piece (base)
- Coarse salt — generously (curing, preservation)
- Toasted coriander seeds — a handful (signature spice)
- Vinegar — a dash (acidity, preservation)
- Pepper — to taste (spice)
Ingredients
- Beef rump or silverside — 800 g (base)
- Coarse salt — 60 g (curing)
- Toasted and crushed coriander seeds — 3 tbsp (signature spice)
- Cider or brown wine vinegar — 100 ml (acidity, preservation)
- Crushed black pepper — 1 tbsp (spice)
Method
- Cut the beef into strips about 2 cm thick, along the grain.
- Sprinkle with vinegar and let stand for 30 minutes, then drain.
- Mix salt, coriander, and pepper, and thoroughly coat each strip.
- Marinate in the fridge for 4-12 hours, then pat off excess salt.
- Hang the strips in a dry, airy place (or in a dehydrator at 35-40°C) for 3-6 days, until firm but still pliable in the center.
- Slice thinly across the grain to serve.
How it was made : Drying meat with salt and vinegar, inherited from pre-refrigeration preservation techniques, turned a slaughtered animal into a transportable supply for weeks. Coriander and vinegar not only season: they protect the meat from insects and rancidity.
The contemporary twist : Served on a charcuterie board, sliced very thin, with a handful of dried fruit — the South African road-trip snack elevated to tapas.
Sources : Anna Trapido, Hunger for Freedom (2008) · References on South African culinary heritage (biltong tradition)
Nelson Mandela · Charactorium
