My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

For related content, visit our food content hub.

Food/Recipes

Beef stew

15 replies

sparklefarts · 05/01/2020 09:43

Does anyone have a fool proof tasty beef stew recipe?
Anytime I've followed a recipe is ends up a bit bland, but I don't know why!

OP posts:
Report
AvengingGerbil · 05/01/2020 09:47

Jamie Oliver’s ‘Jools’s favourite beef stew’ is dead easy and always works.
If your stew is bland, you probably need to put more salt in it!

Report
wowfudge · 05/01/2020 09:53

Yes - coat the meat in flour then brown the beef in a casserole suitable for use on the hob and in the oven. Take the meat out and put on a plate. Then add some more oil to the pan and cook chopped onion, chunked up carrots and crushed garlic in it until the onion is softened but only lightly browned. Add a tablespoon of tomato puree and cook it for a couple of minutes. Deglaze the pan with a glass of red wine (optional) and beef stock - I use the Knorr Rich Beef concentrate, but fresh stock or Stock Pots are fine. If you don't have beef stock the use chicken or veg stock instead. Put the meat back in and add a bouquet garni sachet if you have them or a couple of bay leaves and some sprigs of thyme. Add salt and pepper - go easy on the salt as the stock already has it. Put the lid on and cook in lowish oven for around three hours or at a low simmer on the hob. I do variations on this in a slow cooker - where I just bung everything in - or in the pressure cooker but let the pressure release naturally or the meat will be tough.

Report
AvengingGerbil · 05/01/2020 09:54

Actually, I lie. He’s changed that recipe and now it is more of a faff. The original was:
Fry onion. Add carrots/other root veg you have lurking. Toss beef if seasoned flour. Add it to the veg (no frying needed!). Cover with liquid - either stock or a bottle of red wine + water if needed. Some dried thyme goes well. I usually chuck in a beef stock cube/stockpot to boost the flavour. Bung in oven for a couple of hours.

Report
wowfudge · 05/01/2020 09:55

Don't put flour on the meat if using a pressure cooker - you need to thicken the sauce after the stew is cooked.

Report
sparklefarts · 05/01/2020 09:57

Thanks all!

I have a fair bit of beef so will probably try all ideas

OP posts:
Report
wowfudge · 05/01/2020 09:59

Another variation is to pot roast a piece of brisket. I use the slow cooker for this and put a couple of sticks of celery, a halved onion and a couple of carrots on the bottom, put the beef on top, add wine, stock, herbs and seasoning and cook on low for six to eight hours. The meat will put apart with a fork at the end of the cooking time and you can remove the fat. Use a stick blender to blend the veg with the stock and sieve. Mix the gravy with the meat.

Report
wowfudge · 05/01/2020 10:01

Just make sure you multiply the other ingredients by how much meat you have - so an onion per pack of beef pieces, etc. Stews are often improved by leaving them to cool once cooked and reheating the next day to eat.

Report
margaritasbythesea · 05/01/2020 10:03

Nigella's beef stew with thyme anchovies is a family favourite. You don't taste the anchovies btw, they just make it very rich. I don't use marsala in it as I never have any and i just put in as much red wine as I happen to have. I'll get a link for you

Report
margaritasbythesea · 05/01/2020 10:04
Report
sparklefarts · 05/01/2020 12:28

Thank you! Will let you know how they go

OP posts:
Report
sparklefarts · 05/01/2020 12:29

If o have frozen some diced beef as it was purchased on use by date , do you think it'll be ok to cook in the slow cooker once defrosted or do I need to get it to temperature quicker?

OP posts:
Report
wowfudge · 05/01/2020 12:30

It'll be fine cooked in the slow cooker.

Report
whatsleep · 05/01/2020 16:01

I always add sweet potato to beef stew, then once it’s cooked mush it up into the gravy.... it makes it lovely and thick and tasty 😋

Report
Notthebloodygym · 05/01/2020 23:08

I always keep individual portions of wine (around 100-150 ml) in the freezer for this sort of thing.

Report
Teddyreddy · 06/01/2020 13:59

This is the nicest beef stew I've made so far pinchofnom.com/recipes/cumberland-pie/ . You obviously don't have to bake it as a pie, and I just use normal oil and cheese rather than the low fat alternatives the recipe suggests. I suspect the reason it tastes so good is the beef stock pots rather than cubes.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.