For tips and tricks, click the button to read more.
The update has pictures of browning the meat in a pressure cooker and the "jiggle top" in operation.
To start, Dad allows the choice grade chuck to age in the refrigerator for a few days. Covered in kosher salt and wrapped in towels (changed daily) excess moisture evaporates from the beef allowing Dad to get a good sear.
Meet Mr. Beef. |
Once aged, below, the beef loses its shiny patina. A dull, almost satin, sheen is evidence that the beef is ready and will brown quickly.
Mr. Beef, after his water weight loss, is ready for browning. |
Below, Dad covered the meat in cooking spray and earned an excellent sear in less than ten minutes. He seared and deglazed the pot, reserving the fond for use in the gravy.
Mr. Beef sports a nice tan. |
While the photo above looks like a perfectly done steak (if you like rare anyway), if you cut into it now, it would be very tough and chewy. Of the options to cook it, Dad has found the pressure cooker to be the most effective and least time consuming. So he placed it and three cups of water into one and let the jiggle top jiggle for about 45 minutes.
Tough no longer. Mr. Beef embraces his tender side. |
He has not had good luck with vegetables in the pressure cooker. By the time the weight begins to jiggle, often the veg has turned to mush. He has found that they are best done boiled. Carrots take the longest and so get started first. Next he adds the celery followed by the onion. Dad doesn't normally make potatoes, but this dinner was for Opa, so he pressure cooked some Yukon Gold potatoes for 10 minutes.
Everyone into the pool. You too onion. |
Why doesn't he add garlic until the very end? Come New Family loyal readers! Say it with him, "Garlic turns bitter when cooked for an extended amount of time." That time is about 30 minutes and the veg above took much longer than that.
This time he added the garlic to the gravy. Opa is not as much of a fan of it as is the New Family Parents, and prefers very little gravy, and then only on his potatoes, so Dad accommodated his taste by adding only a little to the gravy. (But shhhh! No one mention that Opa went back for a second, big, helping of gravy!)
Mr. Beef and friends are ready for service. |
Day old pot roast is not nearly as good as when served the day it is made. And sometimes Dad makes a bit too much and doesn't want to chew on dry beef for days on end. So he will cube the beef and warm it in au jus making beef stew. He might include any leftover veg (there wasn't any). Making a beef stew is pretty straight forward. A recipe can easily be found online. But here is a tip you may like (and not find in the first page query results). Try adding tomato paste. Dad does this (like everything) to taste, so a precise measurement is not offered here. In the 6 cups beef and broth shown above he added about 3 ounces starting with a little at a time and working up to the point of too much tasting each new addition along the way. Then he balanced the paste with a little bit of sugar.
Above, the other ingredients are beef bullion, dried oregano, basil, garlic powder, and bay leaf.
Click to return to the blog