Because life is a cabernet.
Chicago has had a very chilly start to May, especially over the past few days, and this weekend I found myself with a crazy craving for beef stew. On Saturday, I built our beautiful new kitchen island, so I decided that Sunday would be the day I put it to good use and make a glorious pot of stew. Having just drooled over a DVR-ed episode of Barefoot Contessa where Ina Garten makes a food-porn-o-rific batch of Parker’s Beef Stew, I used her recipe as inspiration for this one. And of course, I added paprika to my recipe, because I can never make a beef stew without paying at least a little homage to goulash (the absolute king of stews, in my humble opinion). I give you, cabernet beef stew.
INGREDIENTS
1 – 1/2 lbs stew beef, cubed (I like mine cut into small, bite-sized pieces)
1/2 cup potato starch flour (all-purpose flour is fine here, too, but you’ll need a bit more of it)
salt and pepper
olive oil
4 carrots, peeled and sliced
3 stalks celery, washed and sliced
1 small sweet potato, cubed
1 medium onion, chopped
3 bay leaves
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 bottle of cabernet sauvignon*
2 cups stock (I used homemade chicken stock)
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
3 canned whole tomatoes, chopped, plus a tbsp or two of canning liquid
2 sprigs fresh rosemary (or about 1 tsp dried rosemary)
1 tsp paprika
1 cup frozen peas
marjoram, for garnish
*Note: the flavor of the cabernet sauvignon is quite strong here. If that doesn’t sound good to you, I recommend cutting back to about a quarter bottle of wine.
Just the Recipe link: Cabernet Beef Stew
DIRECTIONS
In a mixing bowl, stir together potato starch flour, salt, and pepper. Drop a few pieces of meat in at a time and toss to coat. Shake off the excess and set aside, until all the meat is coated in flour.
Heat a Dutch oven or other large pot over medium high heat and add olive oil. Working in batches, brown the meat on all sides. Remove the browned meat from the pan and set aside.
Preheat oven to 300 F.
Add carrot, celery, sweet potato, and onion to the Dutch oven, along with bay leaves. Cook about 8 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Add garlic and cook two more minutes. Remove vegetables from the pan and set aside.
Pour red wine into the pan, along with the rosemary and paprika, and stir to deglaze, making sure to loosen all the brown bits from the bottom.
Add stock, Worcestershire sauce, and tomatoes. Then add the meat back to the pot, followed by the vegetables.
Give it a stir, cover the pot, and bring to a low boil. Then place it in the oven and cook for 2-3 hours, until the meat is fall-apart tender or until you can’t wait any longer. I ended up turning the heat down to 275 F about 20 minutes in, to keep the stew at a low bubble instead of a more active simmer.
Once the stew is done cooking, remove from the oven. Turn off the oven at this point – we’re done cooking.
Stir in frozen peas and re-cover the pot. They’ll defrost and cook in the heat of the stew.
Serve with warm, crusty bread, and if you like, sprinkle a bit of marjoram on top.
Your latest looks sooooo GOOD, just like your previous recipes . Thank you
Yes it turned out delicious! Now I’ll have to think of a summer stew for us to make together soon :)
We must have swapped weather conditions with you this year. Here in Portland, Oregon it’s been hot. Last week it was 85 all week. I’m thinking along the lines of salads and fruity cocktails outside, but that stew looks amazing!
It’s so funny how much weather affects what foods we want – it’s humid and hot here again, and now making this stew sounds totally crazy. Moving on to guac season!