It's seriously and officially Winter in Indianapolis. That means it's time for slow-simmered stew! Sunday, Tam braved the elements, with a promise to bring home "stew fixings." I didn't press for details -- it's more interesting that way.
She returned with a half-pound of Italian sausage, a pound each of steak tips and oxtail, a huge rutabaga, several turnips, a bag of carrots, a whole fennel,* a couple of onions, sliced shiitake mushrooms and a big carton of crushed tomatoes.†
So, here's the procedure for turning all of that into supper:
Set
the meat out before you start cooking; put salt and pepper on the steak
tips (or stew meat) and oxtails and let 'em get less cold.
I started by cooking the half-pound of (loose) sausage with a little Italian spice mix and fresh-ground mixed
pepper while I peeled and cut up the rutabaga, which was huge. As I
cut it into 1/2" cubes, I put them in a bowl and sprinkled a little
ground chipotle and sea salt with garlic on each layer. Don't go
overboard!
The sausage is cooked like ground
beef for sloppy joes, you just keep breaking it up, When the sausage
was cooked, I removed to a bowl it with a slotted spoon, covered it and
set it at an angle. So there's grease in the pan; the rutabaga goes in,
maybe with a little sesame oil for smokiness. You'll get some more
grease from the sausage after a few minutes, just pour it over the
veggies. Cover and make sure the heat's not too high. (Once you get
the last of the grease from the sausage, set the meat somewhere to keep warm.)
As the rutabaga cooks (and the more you cook it, the better), peel
the turnip and cube it, then add it to the pot and stir everything
around. After it has cooked down some, you can add a little water (and
deglaze, the spatula is your friend and that goodness needs to get
cooked into the vegetables), but not enough to cover. Then cut up the
carrots, 1/2" cubes, and add them. You're sauteing all this as you go.
The photo shows this point in the process.
(About here is where I should have put in the oxtails, salted and
peppered, but I hadn't noticed them. Get them well-browned on all
sides. I added them with the steak tips and it went fine.)
Wash and cut up the fennel bulb -- a little bigger then 1/2 cubes,
since the layers will fall apart. You can wash some of the feathery
bits and add them in small clumps, if you'd like.
Dice the onion and add it, too -- I put 3/4 of it in now and saved some back, on a whim.
Add the mushrooms right after the onion. Follow package
directions. Most of them need to be rinsed off. Chop them up if
needed.
Cook all that down, while cutting up
the green and red bell pepper. Use something with heat here if you
would prefer. They go in last. Peppers are kind of delicate and shouldn't be overcooked.
Add the stew
beef (half pound to a pound) and brown it. Once it's well-browned, add
the sausage back in and some beef broth (I use Better Than Bullion,
which is not cheap but worth the price. A little dab dissolved in
boiling water will do you, read the directions); deglaze, get it
simmering, add the tomatoes and then cover. (My biggest stewpot and one
of the saucepans have clear covers. Handy as can be for keeping an eye
on the food.)
You might want to grab out the
biggest oxtail right before you add the tomatoes. Haul it out and set
it on the cutting board and let it cool a little. The go after it with a
small, sharp knife and pointy kitchen shears, removing meat and
discarding fat and small bits of gristle. Toss the meat in, and put the
bone back in once you have it as picked clean as you can manage. Don't
worry if you missed some. Fish out another section of oxtail -- Tam
bought three good-sized ones -- let it cool enough to handle, and give
it the same treatment. You will probably do this at least twice for
each section. Keep returning the bones to the pot: there's all manner of
good stuff in there that you want cooked into the stew.
It's done when the rutabaga and turnip is soft and the oxtail bones are as clear of meat as you can get them.
This will easily serve six. Or two people for several days. It
generally gets better after a day in the fridge and reheating -- and
leave those oxtail bones in if you can!
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* Not everyone is familiar with this. It's kind of like celery, turned way, way up. Stalks with feathery green leafy parts emerge from a large bulb. The taste is distantly root beer-like but not overpowering, and works way better in savory dishes than you might expect.. As far as I know, the whole thing is edible, though people generally use the bulb and feathery parts.
† Our favorite brand recently stopped using cans in favor of lined cardboard boxes. I was doubtful, but it's fine.
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