I don’t know how the weather is where you are, but it’s been
deep into fall here. There was a week or so of Indian summer, but the rest of
the season has been rainy and cold or windy and cold. This is the time to start
thinking about warm comfort food. Chicken and dumplings, macaroni and cheese, vegetable
soup, and soup beans with cornbread all meet the specifications. But one of the
best comfort foods, to my way of thinking, is Irish stew.
| Ingredients laid out and ready to cook |
In Appalachia, it’s proper to stew any kind of meat
available. Domestic meats like beef, lamb, and pork are all made into hearty
stews. Hunting in the fall is an Appalachian cultural fixture. Many businesses
close on the first day of deer season because they know there won’t be enough
employees at work to operate, and even fewer customers. Any game you can shoot
or trap has been made into a stew. When the economy is tough, you will see more
wild game stews. I know there is a yuck factor for folks who weren’t raised on
this food, but venison, elk, bear, squirrel, and raccoon have all been used for
delicious stews. In hard times and in poor neighborhoods, you will even run
into the occasional groundhog or possum stew.
In addition to the meat, stew uses any number of vegetables.
The common ones include potatoes, carrots, and onions. But mountain stews often
include turnips, celery, peas, corn, and tomatoes. In the days before the chestnut
blight killed off our native Chestnut trees, chestnuts were also commonly
included. Many herbs and spices are routinely included in a stew. Common ones
include parsley, sage, rosemary, thyme, turmeric, cinnamon, and garlic. If the
meat is lamb, mint is often used.
Although genuine Irish stew is most often prepared using
lamb, I don’t often get to fix it that way in my home. My wife just doesn’t
like lamb. I usually fix mine with beef and that’s the way I’ll present the recipe
here. I’m calling it Irish stew because my only departure is to use beef. A good
Irish stew generally uses Guinness Stout in the stewing liquid. I use it, but I
just don’t tell my wife because she’d probably refuse to eat it before she gave
it a chance.
Preparation time: 30 minutes
Cook time: 3 hours
Start to finish: 3 1/2 hours
Ingredients (Mise en Place)
·
2 pounds of beef stew meat
·
1 tablespoon vegetable oil like Canola
·
1 bottle Guinness Stout
·
Beef stock as needed
·
1 bay leaf
·
1 sprig fresh rosemary
·
1 sprig fresh thyme
·
2 pounds potatoes (recommend Yukon Golds or New
Reds)
·
1 large yellow onion
·
1 1/2 pounds carrots
·
1 teaspoon Kosher salt
·
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
·
All-purpose flour to thicken the stock if
necessary
Directions
| Browning the meat in batches |
Heat a large (6 quart or so) Dutch oven on medium to medium
high heat with the tablespoon of oil added. Brown the meat in the pan in
batches so the meat doesn’t steam. Cook each batch until the meat is evenly
browned. Remove each batch with a slotted spoon to a bowl and reserve. When the
last batch is browned, leave it in the pan and add the reserved meat back to
the pan. Add the bottle of Guinness and enough beef stock to just cover the
meat. Add the bay leaf, rosemary, and thyme. Turn the heat to high until the
liquid starts to boil, then reduce the heat to low, cover the pan and let simmer
for 2 hours.
Some cooks put the liquid in the pan to start with, add the
meat raw, and bring to a simmer. I would discourage this practice. Conventional
wisdom says that browning, or searing, the surface of the meat seals in the
juices. This is not true, but searing does, however, produce new and complex
flavor compounds as the sugars and proteins in the meat react under high
temperatures and the surface color deepens. This browning reaction is known as
the Maillard reaction and it makes the flavor of the stew much richer. It won’t
happen if you just poach the meat.
While the meat is simmering, medium chop half of your
potatoes (about 3/4 to 1 inch cubes) and cut the other half into larger pieces.
I don’t bother to peel my potatoes because I use Yukon Golds and the skin isn’t
a problem, plus I like the flavor and texture of the skins. If you’re using a
potato with a thicker skin like a russet, you might want to peel them although
it’s not necessary. Finely chop about 1/4 of the onions and cut the rest into larger
pieces. Place the finer pieces of onion in a bowl, cover, and reserve until just
before the stew is finished. Peel the carrots and cut into 1/2 inch to 3/4 inch
pieces. When the meat has simmered for two hours, remove the bay leaf,
rosemary, and thyme. Then add all the potatoes, the large pieces of onion, the
carrots, and the salt and pepper to the pan. Bring back to a simmer and cook
for another hour. By cutting the potatoes into small and large pieces, your
broth will thicken as the smaller pieces cook more quickly and release their starch into the stew.
At this point, check the meat to be sure it’s tender enough
for you. If not, you can simmer it a little longer. Also make sure your broth
is thick enough for you. If not, add 3 or 4 tablespoons of all-purpose flour
and let the stew cook until the broth thickens up. Add more salt and pepper if
you think it needs it. As soon as the stew is ready, add the smaller pieces of onion,
remove from the heat, and let the pan rest for 15 minutes or so, just long
enough to take the bite out of the newly-added onion.
Serve the stew in bowls with buttermilk biscuits from the
previous recipe. If you are so inclined, you could also prepare dumplings and
cook them on top of the stew just before serving. Other side dishes could
include a red cabbage salad or pickled red cabbage.
Cooking Notes
| Ready to eat! |
Prepare the recipe the way I’ve laid it out here first. As
you eat it, think about what other flavors you would like in your stew that I
haven’t provided with these ingredients.
If you don’t like the idea of Guinness in the stew, leave it
out. Add 1/4 cup of Worcestershire sauce instead and use more beef stock to
make up for the loss of liquid volume.
If you want to make a more traditional Irish stew, use lamb
instead of beef. If you use lamb, you might want to garnish the dish with some
freshly chopped mint.
Make this a more mountain style stew by using turnips instead of potatoes. Trust me, they are delicious.
Try this recipe as a pork stew sometime. Add some corn with
the other vegetables.
There are enough permutations and combinations of
ingredients here to keep you having a different, comforting stew all winter
long.
No comments:
Post a Comment