fivemack: (Default)
[personal profile] fivemack
Do not follow this recipe, it makes a bland and insipid stew

Acquire a quantity of beef bones from the butcher. Roast them in the oven for about half an hour, then stick them in a large saucepan with 2pts water, one onion quartered, one carrot roughly chopped. Ignore on low heat for four hours, turn off and leave overnight. Discard the bones, strain the stock.

Take one pack of Asda casserole beef; roll the bits in seasoned flour (flour + two sprinkles mixed herbs + a bit of ground pepper) and fry them in olive oil until brown on both sides. Put them in a casserole.

Chop five medium boiling-potatoes into bits about the size of the beef bits, chop four normal carrots into bits which are carrot-cylindrical and as long as they are wide. Put them in the casserole

Chop one onion into small bits, fry them in the pan you fried the beef in until well-fried. Deglaze the pan with a bottle of beer (I used Hobgoblin), transfer the beef-with-onion-in to the casserole. Add about half the stock.

Stick in the oven at 180C for an hour and a half, notice that the liquid is still very watery, add two tablespoons of cornflour mixed up with water, stick in the oven for 45 more minutes. Eat with peas and complain about the bland insiptitude. The texture's good, the meat lumps look right, but the flavour has escaped the meat and somehow not ended up in the gravy.

Date: 2008-06-12 10:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] naath.livejournal.com
I'd do it in a pan not the oven; dunno if that changes the taste, and simmer for a lot longer.

Making your own stock is fantastic; remember you can also make lots at once and freeze some (to lower the effort density of stock). Stock can be improved by using more variety of veg it in (obviously that has to be strained out).

My mum puts those small, skinless sausages (I forget what they are called :-( but I guess they come in packets, or you could chop up normal sausages into the same kind of size as the carrot pieces) into stew, also turnip (er, sweed, the yellow one) chunks and celery. Possibly adding some gravy powder would strengthen the taste of the stock.

Salt is a good idea but add it to-taste at the end, over salting things is a common problem.

March 2024

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24 252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 30th, 2026 02:44 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios