So this is the Beef Stew that my mother always made when I was growing up. It's one of my favorite cold time foods, but since it makes a lot, it is great to make and then eat all week. The one thing I have not yet mastered is eating it without burning my tongue. You would think eventually I would learn. Mais non.
Serves: 5-6 people from one pot. Depends on how much you put in.
Ingredients
- 1-2 lbs of beef chunks (trim off fat and make them roughly the same size)
- 1 1/2 cups of flour
- Salt
- Pepper
- Olive oil
- 1-2 cloves of garlic (Or garlic powder for the lazy) - Mince
- 3 small onions (Or 2 larger ones) - Dice
- 2 Tbs Worcestershire sauce
- 3 cups water
- 3-4 beef bouillon cubes
- Dash of allspice or cloves
- 1 large carrot - Peel and cube
- 1 small turnip - Peel and cube
- 2 small potatoes - Peel and cube
- Frozen peas
Directions
- Put the flour, salt, and pepper onto a dinner sized plate
- Roll the beef chunks into the flour mixture. Save the extra flour mix.
- In a large pot, heat the oil on high heat and drop in the beef chunks and brown them on all sides. Add oil as needed.
- After all the beef is in, put in the onions and garlic and the Worcestershire sauce. Make sure this stuff doesn't burn and stick to the pot.
- When all the above is brown, add the water, bouillon cubes, and allspice/cloves.
- Lower the heat to very low, leaving everything at a simmer, and cover. Let everything cook for an hour, stirring every 15-20 minutes.
- After an hour, or when the meat starts to be tender, add the carrot, potatoes, and turnip cubes. If necessary, add a little water. Everything should be thin like soup.
- Let the vegetables cook 25-30min, stirring once or twice.
- Once everything is soft and cooked, add in some of the remaining flour a little bit at a time. Very small additions make everything MUCH easier to mix in. Keep adding flour until you get the desired thickness for the stew.
- 5 minutes before everything is ready, throw in the frozen peas. They don't need long.
Overall, this whole process can take up to two hours, depending on how fast everything gets soft. Since this is a stew, you could add more or change the vegetables or add some new spices, and things won't really change. Everything should be just roughly the same size to aid cooking evenness.
Right on, Scott. This looks great. You can take it work and flaunt it in front of the poor slobs who brought cold fast food to work.
ReplyDelete