Most Popular

Beef Stew People

  • Share This Post
  • Pin It
  • 0
  • Sparkle (
    )
     

I worked at the market yesterday, and I think that thirty hours later I am just starting to thaw. It never quite got above 35 degrees, and while all the happy tourists lucked out with a sunny crisp day for looking at their precious leaves, that is just too damned cold to stand in one place for five hours handling wet salad. But it was the market, and even a frozen farmer's market is better than no market at all.
I was working with a woman yesterday who I know just a bit. She is very accomplished in the realm of some great things, but is also very easy to talk to- an excellent combination of attributes, I think. So, there we are, talking about celeriac as we wait for the eager vegetable buyers to arrive, and she says, "What would I do with celeriac?"
And you know I like these kind of questions.
"Well," I began, trying not to let my voice get high as it does when I answer recipe queries. "Any kind of soup or stew. Or roast it up. But if you really want to make it shine, it has got to be beef stew."
"Oh," she sighed. "I wish I was the kind of person who makes beef stew."

Now, I have to say that with the things this woman is creating in her life, if she is at work too late in the day to make a pot of beef stew, I forgive her entirely. In fact, I'll bring her some of mine.

But this got me thinking. For most people, there are things that we make and the things that we don't. Usually this has something to do with what our mothers made, but sometimes it's more random- a friend gave you a recipe for baked mac and cheese in college, you made it, and now you're someone who makes baked mac and cheese. So often I think that those things that you don't make have a bit of mystical allure, and they usually seem harder than they really are. (Unless the thing that you don't make is croissants, and then it really is that hard). And this might just be where the cooking rut occurs.

Oh, the joy of realizing how attainable one of those unattainable dinners really is. And before you know it, there are so many things to cook that it might even be hard to nail it down.

Are you someone who makes beef stew? Or do you think you might like to be?

We have to go back to my frozen market for a moment. I only bring you back there so that you can fully experience the chill in my bones, and so that you can know that this story really has a happy ending, and that there was left over beef stew waiting for me when I got home. A big bowl over noodles, a bitter arugula salad, and couch where I fell fast asleep until Joey and the girls came home from their Saturday capers.

A Beef Stew Formula

I know, formula? Here I am promising to make a beef stew maker out of you, and I give you a formula instead of a recipe? But beef stew is like that- what you've got in your fridge will work out for you. As long as you brown your beef, it will all be okay

(for four people plus a bit leftover, maybe)

2 lbs stew beef
1 cup flour (I have to leave this out now due to the wheat free girl, but if you can, use it)
2 Tablespoons paprika
1 Tablespoon salt
lots of fresh ground pepper
several glugs of olive oil
about 2 cups of liquid- this can be beer, red wine, beef broth, chicken broth, or in a pinch, water

then there are the vegetables... if you've got them, you'd want to start with:

2-3 carrots, peels and cut into chunks
2 ribs celery, sliced
1 large onion cut into boats (are you with me here? I'm not sure of the terms, but cut your onion in half and then into long boat shaped strips)
3 potatoes, peeled and cup into bite sized chunks

or if life is more exciting where you are:
1/2 celeriac root, peeled and cut into chunks
2 kohlrabi bulbs, peeled and cut into chunks

(if you're going for the exciting vegetables, sub them in for the potato or some portion of the potato)

And most importantly, 1

  • 0
  • Sparkle (
    )
     

Comments