This was another case of cooking what we could find. We don't eat ribs very often because a picky eater in the house doesn't like barbecue sauce. But dry rub is a different matter.
This was equal parts of smoked paprika, brown sugar, and black pepper with a touch of cumin and salt. It gets rubbed on the ribs, which are then wrapped in foil and slow baked.
We skipped the optional sauce mop.
These were very tender and couldn't get much easier. The rub was sort of boring (black pepper doesn't have a real depth of flavor) but they were mild enough for my dad to be able to eat once we wiped the rub off his portion. Would definitely make again with a different rub (and Joy has others).
Julie: ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Mike: ⭐⭐⭐ (boring)
Showing posts with label Meat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meat. Show all posts
Monday, April 13, 2020
Thursday, April 9, 2020
Stracotto (Italian Pot Roast) (Page 464) with Creamy Polenta (pg 322)
Parental Warning, this article contains depictions of raw meat and graphic language describing the the use of meat products.
Stracotto in Italian means "overcooked," which is an ideal recipe in my book: How can you go wrong?
For some reason all pot roast recipes that contain classic Italian ingredients, like garlic, tomato, and red wine are labeled Stracotto. As Stracotto recipes go, this one is pretty basic-- no basil, no mushrooms, no fennel all of which I've seen in other versions. You could add any or all of that if you want. I think olives would be good too, but mom would never concede to that.
Fortunately, we have half a cow in our freezer so we had the perfect roast available. This one was small, probably less than 2 lbs with the bone and a goodly amount of fat. The recipe calls for a boneless 4lbs cut of meat, but that's a lot of meat. If you are having a crowd of meat eaters, this would be perfect.
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| Browning of the roast |
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| The Trinity |
But, this is Stracotto so it does not stop there and the wine is going in the pot instead of in your glass. The next step is the really good part-- Chop garlic, parsley, rosemary, fresh sage together to make a nice paste. It helps to have an herb garden, but if you don't you can use dried.
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| The key ingredients: chopped parsley, sage, rosemary and garlic |
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| The fabulous smelling garlic parsley and wine |
For those who are here for the meat, add the meat back in after the vegetables and wine, parsley, garlic combo has become almost dry. Throw in the rest of the wine and the tomatoes and a couple of cups of broth. If you don't have broth you could just add water, or just use the whole bottle of wine.
Put it in the oven or leave it to simmer on top of the stove for 3 hours. You could probably even go longer if you want, just make sure it doesn't boil dry. When you take it out the roast should nearly fall apart and the liquid will be thicker, but probably not thick enough for gravy, so set it on a burner with the meat removed from the pan and boil it furiously until it thickens. This takes some time, maybe 15 minutes or more. Be patient, it will thicken and when you think it can't get thicker let it go another five minutes and it will be even better.
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| Boil it furiously until it thickens |
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| The final product |
Ed, Julie and I all give this a 5/5. Ed had it two nights in a row and raved both times.
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