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Wtf do I do with 10kg of beef?!

15 replies

dontletthemugglesgetyoudownn · 11/11/2021 04:17

I went to the pub earlier with DH and they had a meat raffle Hmm and he decided to enter it and we won 10kg of highland beef. In various steaks, we have a chateaubriand, fillet, Chuck (?), shoulder, various cuts of steak, loads of braising steak, brisket and some mince.

Please throw some good hearty recipes at me that I can batch cook or at least part cook bits of. I'm about to be moved to start doing 13 hour days and nights in icu again, I cannot be fucked faffing about at 9pm but I've got a week so if I can get a plan together (roughly) we don't need to eat it all now obviously but I guess the more planning I do the better.

Best £5 he's ever spent!

OP posts:
TasteTheMeatNotTheHeat · 11/11/2021 04:21

www.jamieoliver.com/recipes/beef-recipes/beef-stew/

Jamie recommends lean stewing beef, I just use chuck

dontletthemugglesgetyoudownn · 11/11/2021 04:25

@TasteTheMeatNotTheHeat thank you! That looks lovely! I could make a big batch of that and take it to work with me Smile

OP posts:
chatw0o0 · 11/11/2021 04:28

Stick the brisket in the oven low 'n' slow and use in lunches, salad, burgers etc. Should be able to leave it unattended (so to speak).

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TasteTheMeatNotTheHeat · 11/11/2021 04:28

It's absolutely gorgeous! The cooking time sounds long but it needs it. I usually make it very early in the day and then when it's had it's 4 hours I put the lid on it and switch the oven off and leave it in there to slow cook for another couple of hours.

WildExcuses · 11/11/2021 04:29

Let husband sort it out! 🤷🏻‍♀️

Cook and feed the foxes with it.

ImustLearn2Cook · 11/11/2021 05:00

Ooh you are so lucky Smile This is a recipe I saved that I am yet to cook:

Pot Roast

Author: Nagi

Prep: 15 mins

Cook: 8 hrs 20 mins Total: 8 hrs 35 mins Mains, Slow Cooker Western

Servings 8

www.recipetineats.com/slow-cooker-beef-pot-roast/

Ingredients

  • 2 kg / 4 lb beef chuck roast , rolled (Note 1)
  • 1 tsp each salt and pepper
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 onion (large), cut into large dice
  • 5 garlic cloves , peeled and smashed (Note 2a)
  • 5 carrots , peeled and cut into 2.5cm/1" pieces
  • 3 celery stalks , cut into 4 cm / 1.5" pieces
  • 1 cup (250ml) dry red wine (sub with beef broth)
  • 3 cups (750ml) beef broth , salt reduced
  • 1/3 cup (50g) flour (plain / all purpose) (GF - Note 2b)
  • 1 tsp dried rosemary
  • 1 1/2 tsp dried thyme
  • 750g / 1.5 lb potatoes , peeled and cut into 2.5 cm / 1" pieces

Instructions

  • Pat beef dry with paper towels. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper all over.
  • Heat oil in a skillet over high heat. Brown aggressively all over - a deep dark brown crust is essential for flavour base! Should take about 7 minutes.
  • Transfer beef to slow cooker.
  • In the same skillet, add onion and garlic. Cook for 2 minutes until onion is browned.
  • Add wine, reduce by half. Transfer to slow cooker.
  • Mix together flour and about 1 cup of the broth. Lumps is fine. Pour into slow cooker.
  • Add remaining broth, carrots, celery, rosemary and thyme into slow cooker.
  • Cover and slow cook on LOW for 5 hours. (45 min pressure cook on HIGH, Note 3a for Oven and Stove)

  • Add potato, slow cook on LOW for 3 hours. (10 min pressure cooker on HIGH, Note 3b)

  • Remove beef. Rest for 5 minutes, then slice thickly.
  • Adjust salt and pepper of Sauce to taste. 

  • Serve beef with vegetables and plenty of sauce! Bread also terrific for mopping up sauce - try these No Knead Dinner Rolls, No Yeast Irish Soda Bread or these fabulous Cheese Muffins.


Recipe Notes:

  1. Beef chuck is a slow cooking cut of beef. It sometimes comes rolled and tied with string (like pictured in mine). But it also comes much thicker, shaped like a normal roast cut, and this cut isn't required to be rolled and tied like mine. Both work great.

Recipe as written suited to beef 1 - 2kg / 2 - 4 lb. Works for wide range of weight as you need a certain amount of liquid to partially submerge the beef. Yet the cook time remains the same because it's driven by beef thickness, rather than weight. Feel free to reduce / increase vegetables to your beef size, and also add other vegetables.

OTHER BEEF CUTS: Works great with brisket too. Blade Roast will also work but note that the beef is very lean so while it will be tender like chuck, it's not as juicy inside (which you can disguise by smothering with sauce).

2a. Smashed Garlic - just use the side of your knife and smash it using the palm of your hand. The garlic will burst open but remain mostly in one piece.

2b. Cornflour / cornstarch gluten free alternative:Mix 1 tbsp cornstarch / cornflour with a splash of broth, mix then pour in per recipe, in place of flour. Once beef is cooked and removed, check liquid thickness. If you want it thicker, mix 1 tsp cornflour with splash of water and add, heat liquid (residual heat may be sufficient) and it will thicken, repeat if you want thicker.

3a. OVEN: Lid on dutch oven or similar, 300F/150C for about 2 hrs (1 - 1.5kg / 2 - 3 lb) or 3 hours (2kg / 4 lb), then add potatoes then a further 1 hour until meat is tender.

STOVE: Add 2 more cups of water, simmer covered 2 - 2.5 hrs until meat is starting to be tender, turning meat once or twice. Add potatoes then cook another 30 minutes until meat is super tender and potatoes are soft. Keep an eye on water level.

3b. I add potatoes later otherwise I find they are so soft, they basically disintegrate. If you prefer to add potatoes in at the beginning so you don't have to worry about adding them later, use red potatoes because they hold up better to the long cook time.

  1. The carrots and celery are VERY soft by the end, softer than ideal. It's unfortunate, but a necessary sacrifice because having them in the broth for the whole cook time adds great flavour to the sauce.
  1. Servings: I allow for 200 - 250g / 6.5 - 8oz uncooked beef per serving which shrinks with the long cook time. The beef pictured was a 2 kg / 4 lb rolled chuck.
  1. Nutrition per serving (480g/1lb per serving), assuming all sauce consumed.
NUTRITION INFORMATION: Serving: 481gCalories: 615cal (31%)Carbohydrates: 23g (8%)Protein: 53g (106%)Fat: 33g (51%)Saturated Fat: 13g (81%)Cholesterol: 173mg (58%)Sodium: 704mg (31%)Potassium: 1563mg (45%)Fiber: 4g (17%)Sugar: 2g (2%)Vitamin A: 6416IU (128%)Vitamin C: 15mg (18%)Calcium: 95mg (10%)Iron: 9mg (50%)
daisyducky · 11/11/2021 05:20

I love this recipe from bbc good food

www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/chinese-braised-beef-ginger

It's easy with a few ingredients & tastes delicious & authentic

purplesequins · 11/11/2021 05:58

stick everything apart from the steaks in the freezer.

sashh · 11/11/2021 06:11

Brisket - either a pot roast or a Jewish salt beef / pastrami.

Mince - burgers, meatballs, meatloaf (you may want to add some sausage meat/veal).

Fillet - steak and chips

Chuck steak - steak and kidney or steak and mushroom pudding.

You need suet pastry (the recipe is on the packet) chuck steak, mushrooms or kidney, finely chopped onion boiling water, flour and an oxo cube.

You also need a slow cooker, a pudding basin (a Pyrex mixing bowl works well and a tea towel).

Grease the pudding basin
Make the suet pastery, roll it to about 1 inch thickness, cut 1/3 away for the lid.

Line the pudding basin with the suet pastry.
Cover the beef in flour and season.
Put the beef, onion, mushroom/kidney and crublex oxo intot he pudding.

Make a lid with the left over pastry and put on the pudding, make a hole in the centre.

Boil the kettle

Fold the tea towel and put in the sc, put the pudding on the tea towel, pour boiling water in to the hole until the pudding is full, pour the rest of the water around the pudding in the sc, it should come 2 inches from the bottom, switch on and leave for 6 hours.

You can also use suet to make a sort of roly poly but with mince and onion instead of jam.

Hodgehog · 11/11/2021 08:25

Let your husband do some cooking for you with it.

Gohugatree · 11/11/2021 08:31

Lucky you Grin. I'd make beef rendang with the chuck and braising steak, batch cook bolognese and chilli with the mince. Freeze the chateaubriand, steaks and brisket until the day you want to eat it.

tired17 · 11/11/2021 08:32

Portion it up and put it in the freezer so none of it goes to waste

purplesequins · 11/11/2021 16:20

@Hodgehog

Let your husband do some cooking for you with it.
absolutely
qwerty222 · 11/11/2021 16:25

With the brisket I'd do a big batch of ragu/bolognese.

Disfordarkchocolate · 11/11/2021 17:42

I would put the brisket in the slow cooker with some beef stock, red wine, mushrooms, carrots, shallots and garlic. Eight hours or so later you will have beautiful tender beef and the best gravy in the world.

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