There is something incredibly comforting about a nice hearty stew on a cold day. I have been having such great cravings that I went out and bought a pot specifically for stews, braises, soups and roasts. I had been thinking about it for while but caved recently when the urge to cook slow dishes reminiscent of leisurely weekend home cooking. I wanted a pot that would be the source of many great family memories over the years; one that when the children, grandchildren and the hubby see it being pulled out, will know they are in for a real treat. I knew I was going for cast iron and especially an enamelled one because I did not want the hassle of seasoning raw cast iron after every use or the limitations re- not being able to cook acidic foods.
There was a toss up being Le Creuset and Staub but in the end, Staub won for a few reasons. It provides better searing with the black rough enamel, has a heavier lid which seals the pot into a real oven, and self basting spikes on the lid provide more juicy meats as steam condenses and drips back on to food. Plus Staub is the brand of reference to chefs all over the world, including mine. Like Le Creuset, they have many beautiful colours and a great and lasting finish and I couldn’t seem to narrow it down to less than 5 colours that I adored. I wanted one that would stand the test of time, that I could see myself passing on to our offspring or grandchild, so I took The Chef’s advice and stuck to black. Somehow, this reminds me of my granny’s Potjie cooking on wood fires in the hilly interior of the Mocho Mountains in Clarendon- and man was her food sensational!
Stewing as a cooking method
If there is one cooking method that is famous in Jamaica, it is stewing. Our world famous oxtail stew and curried goat are only two of many dishes, but many of which are stewed. We stew everything! Seafood… we stew; chicken- we stew that too- in fact we will soon post a recipe for a Chicken Stew that reminds us of a good Jamaican Brown Stew Chicken- the Pinoy favourite, Chicken Adobo.
We love stew. Who doesn’t? What’s not to love about gelatinous, fatty cuts of meats cooked slowly with aromatic vegetables and herbs, slowly rendering theri fats and production mouth-wateringly juicy pieces of meat?
Traditionally, the toughest, most inexpesive cuts are used for the longer cooking, lower heat stews while softer, more expensive cuts like tenderloin and steaks are cooked quicker over higher heat.
The problem with old fashioned stews is that they take several hours just to cook and sometimes, like this past weekend when I made this dish, you just dont have all day. So what do you do when you want a stew but dont have all day? Cheat! This isn’t your exam finals, it just another day in the life of a busy person. So if you must, here is how you can cheat on a stew without being caught.
There are two ways to cheat:
1. Use a pressure cooker to cook the beef. This could shorten the cooking time by at least an hour. You will sear meats and then add cooking liquid and pressurize until tender then add your vegetables for another 3 minutes or so. You may have to thicken more with cornstarch at the end with this method. This only works if you have a pressure cooker. But since we placed a really cool one on special order, 2 until it arrives, we will use the second method when we are in a hurry.
2. Use quicker cooking cuts. Since the meat is the longest cooking part of the stew, this will save you lots of time! The trick is not to cook them for long but cook them quickly by searing on each side and removing and setting aside. That will give you the nice caramelized sticky bits on the bottom of the pot called fond, which add flavour to the stew base. You will then use pre-made stock as the cooking liquid to enhance the flavour since you are not rendering stock from the slow cooking process as you normally would in a traditional stew. Use fish stock for seafood stew, and either chicken or beef stock for beef stew.
What are the quick cooking beef cuts
Generally, these would be your steaks. I am not suggesting you use the most expensive prime fillet mignonette (tenderloin) cut or prime grade wagyu rib eye… but if you want to and it’s well within your means, go ahead. There are cheaper steak cuts though- and you can use any one of them. Cuts like Babette/flank/flap, Ny strip, sirloin, chuck steak and anything that your favourite butcher has on sale are really great for this recipe.
Quick Beef Stew:
Scroll to the bottom for printable recipe or look at the steps below. Use 1 steak per person, 1 potato per person and one carrot over person.
How to make beef stew as cheap as possible:
You can add more or less vegetables as desired or to build up the meal so that 1 portion of meat could serve two persons. Cabbage is also a great inexpensive and low-carb vegetable that adds bulk.
How to make this beef stew recipe keto:
To make this recipe keto, you can leave out the flouring of the meat and not have a rue. Instead, you could thicken with a xanthan gum runny paste. You would also have to leave out the potatoes and carrots and use less onions to keep carb counts low.
Step-by-Step pictorial and process:
Ingredients: Steak (whichever cut you wish, we used a bavette), brown onions, fresh thyme, chicken or beef stock, flour for rue and meat, olive oil (not extra virgin), salt and pepper, carrots, potatoes, cabbage, capsicum/bell/sweet peppers, green beans. You may add or delete whatever veggies you wish.
Method: Sear tougher root veggies like potatoes and carrots on medium heat to caramelize but not cook thoroughly. We are building levels of flavour with this process.
Caramelize Onions adding a pinch of salt at end then removing from pot.
Season beef with salt and pepper, then dredge in flour and shake off excess then sear in pot for no more than 2 minutes each side.
This is what it should look like. Set it aside as well as the root vegetables and caramelized onions.
Creat a rue by adding 1 tablespoon of flour to hot oil and stirring constantly, cooking the flour in the process.
Add your stock to the pot. The amount you add depends on how much veggies you will be cooking. Add enough to just cover veggies.
Return potatoes and carrots to pot. Add thyme. Stir to incorporate rue, fond and all the flavours.
Cover pot and cook until potatoes and carrots are almost done.
Add the rest of the softer vegetables and stir. Cover and cook for 3 minutes. Slice the steak into bite sized pieces and add to pot and stir. Cook for another 2 minutes. Garnish with caramelized onions. Serve immediately.
CHEF AND STEWARD NOTES: If you wish to cook a more traditional stew, use a tougher cut with more gelatine like shank, oxtail, chuck, brisket, round,etc. You would have it cut up in small pieces and continue to cook the meat after searing it by adding the cooking liquid to it and covering. You would add the other vegetables only after the meat is cooked. Bavette steak is a less common cut also known as flank or skirt steak and is a very meaty flavourful cut. It toughens when overcooked so it is best to follow directions here if using it in a stew-type dish. It is used in Mexican dishes like fajitas, and Asian Stir Fries.
Other beef recipes on this blog:
Budget-friendly Cottage Pie (often wrongly labeled ‘Shepherd’s Pie’).
Homemade Jamaican Beef Patties
Mexican Beef Burritos and Salsa
Flavourful Jamaican Chinese Pepper Steak
Beef Stew
This is the quickest Beef Stew recipe you will ever find and there are some chef secrets involved to cook a whole stew in 30 minutes on the stove top without a pressure cooker! A must have and share recipe for every home cook and college student.
Ingredients
- Bavette/ Flap/ Flank Steak (or whichever STEAK cut you wish, we used a bavette)
- 2-3 Brown onions,
- 2 sprigs fresh thyme,
- Chicken or beef stock,
- Flour for rue and meat,
- Olive oil (not extra virgin),
- salt and pepper to taste
- carrots,
- potatoes,
- cabbage,
- capsicum/bell/sweet peppers,
- green beans.
- (You may add or delete whatever veggies you wish).
Instructions
- Sear tougher root veggies like potatoes and carrots on medium heat to caramelize but not cook thoroughly. We are building levels of flavour with this process.
- Caramelize Onions adding a pinch of salt at end then removing from pot.
- Season beef with salt and pepper, then dredge in flour and shake off excess then sear in pot for no more than 2 minutes each side.
- This is what it should look like. Set it aside as well as the root vegetables and caramelized onions.
- Create a rue by adding 1 tablespoon of flour to hot oil and stirring constantly, cooking the flour in the process.
- Add your stock to the pot. The amount you add depends on how much veggies you will be cooking. Add enough to just cover veggies.
- Return potatoes and carrots to pot. Add thyme. Stir to incorporate rue, fond and all the flavours.
- Cover pot and cook until potatoes and carrots are almost done.
- Add the rest of the softer vegetables and stir. Cover and cook for 3 minutes. Slice the steak into bite sized pieces and add to pot and stir. Cook for another 2 minutes. Garnish with caramelized onions. Serve immediately.
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Kaitlyn says
This looks so fresh & delicious. I’m so accustomed to doing stews with beef broth so thanks for using chicken broth to get me out of my rut! 🙂
Chef and Steward says
Kaitlyn, yes, there is no need to be purist except for when dealing with a seafood stew. Plus chicken stock is always in the pantry but beef stock may run out!
Alex says
Really good step by step receipe! Thank you, have to do it now!
Baker Street says
Great step by step instructions. Thanks for sharing.
Alyssa says
Great post! I have a few nice, heavy bottom stock pots in storage and I’ve been debating if I want to purchase one here. Thanks for the tips about Staub, because I would have automatically gotten Le Creuset. I do love all of the pretty colors of the pots too. I think the same thing, I want things to pass down, but I usually can’t resist the colors 🙂 Hope you’re having a great week!
Chef and Steward says
Happy to help you make sense of the debate. Mind you the coloured Staubs are beyond sexy and are enamelled for longevity so either way- black or coloured, you would still be fine. Are you coming to Dubai soon?
Didi says
Those stock pots are also on my dream kitchen wish list! And yes, I always listen to the Chef’s advise, especially if you have Chef family members like me sister!
Excited to see your recipe of the adobo! 🙂 Of course 🙂
Chef and Steward says
Didi, thanks for reminding me about the Adobo. I luvs me some Pinoy food! Hope you are enjoying your knife or are you still just polishing it and admiring it daily :)?
Tiffany says
No meat for me… but I spread some buzz love nonetheless! 😀
Chef and Steward says
Thanks for the support Tiffany. Fabulous work on changing the farming laws in the US. Wish you every success!