Daily Archives: October 26, 2008

Made 4 Each Other

I’m a big believer in opposites attracting. Jim’s brilliant, analytical, plans major/minor purchases only after Consumer Reports and exhaustive comparison shopping and believes that anything one wants to contribute as a volunteer is worth a paid position.

I’m smart, emotional, non-shopper/impulse buyer, and was the perpetual volunteer to the point that I spent every evening at a community meeting and weekends helping stray animals.

I thought of this topic because of a good friend and roommate during my first job. She was a work associate. In the end she French-braided my hair, which I could do nothing with. Also lent me silk scarves and tied them for me. I folded napkins in interesting shapes and did the bulk of party planning/cooking. It worked out perfectly. When she broke out and went to D.C., I really missed her. Several days later she asked if I could come down to visit for the weekend. Why? I lived in D.C. so we could go out and have fun in a new place because I’d lived near the District for three years and had seen all the monuments!

So we went to a funky outdoor market and bought a ton of Maryland blue crabs and cooked them up with Old Bay seasoning and served them with mallets on her new kitchen table lined with butcher paper like a proper Washingtonian would do. She also introduced me to the Scottish Games and was a Highland dancer, whom we always persuaded to do the Sword Dance at our legendary parties.

What happened? Last year we spent time in Scotland! Here’s to opposites. Now I have some lovely Ferragamo scarves (one of a dog made of Mums) but tying them is beyond me. No, Jim makes hurricane kits for us, doesn’t tie scarves. Thanks, though. Cheers, Dee

Stew Season

The cool air is coming our way. Tonight we have two windows all the way open and no A/C. Yea!!! While I love the smell of beef stew cooking, I don’t like it when cooking odors linger for days or weeks due to constant air conditioning so we used a fan to blow out air and now just have the windows open for a cool breeze to make it good sleeping weather.

This afternoon I put together a version of beef carbonnade, a mixture of beef, onions, bacon and beer. Ingredients needed include the above plus salt and pepper, and thyme. I made it in a covered casserole and took the cover off for the last hour so that it could reduce a bit (probably used a bit much liquid). I like to serve it over egg noodles but if you prefer rice, go for it.

I only made enough for two. Crazy, I know, but Jim’s not much for leftovers and when I make a large pot roast, after 2-3 days in the frig I either give it to the dog or if it’s a weekend, shred it and make hot sandwiches (that way it doesn’t look like leftovers). If I were smart I should have made double and froze a batch, but the freezer is quite full. Dog food and constantly breaking ice maker, I know.

So for two:
1 pound (I did about 18 oz) chuck steak, cut into even bite-sized cubes about 1″x1″
2 medium onions, halved, peeled and thinly sliced
4 slices good bacon (I used applewood smoked from the butcher), cut in 1/4″ sticks
1 bottle of brown ale (thereabouts, I used too much, saving two T to taste
salt, pepper, thyme
1/2 c flour

I started by putting a heavy skillet on the stove and starting the bacon to brown with just a tsp or two of neutral oil. Prep the onions, adding as the bacon has given off its fat and is just beginning to brown. Add salt and pepper, about 1 tsp of dried thyme. Stir, letting everything get cooked and soft while you work on the meat.

Toss the beef cubes with the flour and if you’ve too much flour, shake out into a sieve. Remove the cooked onions and bacon to a colander over a bowl. Add oil to the pan and start browning the beef on all sides (salt, pepper and a pinch of thyme). Add up to 2 tsp bacon fat from the bowl for flavor. When the beef is browned, turn down the skillet a bit and add enough beer to almost cover. Stir to get the good browned stuff off the bottom of the pan.

At this time you can cover the pan and simmer for at least 90 minutes until beef cubes nearly fall apart. What happens to me with an electric stove is that if I put it at 2 it boils, at 1 it doesn’t do anything so I decided what the heck, I’ll do it in the oven!

I took a 2 qt Pyrex covered casserole, added the stew, covered it and placed it in a 325 degree oven. Twenty minutes later it wasn’t simmering so I turned it to 350, then 325, then 300. I cooked it for nearly 2.5 hours and it was melt-in-your-mouth tender. The best in perhaps fifty tries.

This recipe is different every time I make it but, trust me, it was the best, even though I used (and washed) a lot of dishes.

As to the beer, I don’t think Bud would do. Newcastle Brown Ale is something you might find in a larger bottle in a higher-end grocery. Today I used Saint Arnold’s, from Texas’ first microbrewery. Cooking for two, it took less than one bottle and I could have probably gotten away with using 2/3 or 3/4 bottle but it’s always nice to sop up extra gravy with a slice of fresh French bread!

Try it and let me know what you think! I love summer cooking but seasonal cooking is what awakens our taste buds and lets us know the leaves are turning, well, not here but somewhere, and that there is comfort food around the corner. Cheers! Dee