I have every intention
of having a more healthy January, cutting out canapés until next
year, climbing more mountains (one of my resolutions!) and eating
more salads and vegetables. I couldn't face the thought of any more
meat last week, and I'm fully engaged in experimenting with Chinese
cookery with the help of Fushcia Dunlop, which, handily, is very vegetable focused. But sometimes you're just cold and tired and
feeling a little bit frail, you need help, you need the comfort of a
slow cooked rich warm stew. There is just no escaping it. This is my
current favourite to help me along in times of need...
A lovely slow cooked
stew using oxtail and beef shin, cheap cuts of meat that become sticky and
melty after hours of cooking, shredded and pulled apart in a rich red
wine sauce with buttery polenta and sweet sharp red cabbage. I think
people are often nervous of unusual cuts in the butchers, knowing
what exactly to ask for, prices per weight instead of per piece,
worrying you're going to be handed far too much or far too little. I
have started to be more adventurous, with both success and failure. I
won't be cooking devilled kidneys again in a hurry, but oxtail and I
are friends now and really enjoy hanging out together!
These amounts will
serve 2 generously. Chop 2 carrots, 2 sticks of celery and an onion,
add to a pot, with some thyme, parsley and a bay leaf. I used a mix
of oxtail and shin, you can use both or just one or the other; the ox
tail adds a real stickyness to the stew but you don't get a huge
amount of meat from it, what you do get is delicious, but I'd go for
both. Use about 5 pieces of ox tail, approximately half a whole tail,
then about 500g of beef shin. I got mine from the Grainger market and
it was lovely looking meat, dark red and rich... Cut it into big
chunks.
Add the meat to the pot
with the vegetables and herbs along with a big piece of orange rind,
then cover the whole lot with cold water and bring it to the boil.
Don’t add any seasoning at this point as you reduce the sauce quite
a lot later. For the first 5 minutes skim off any foam or brown scum
from the surface, then leave to simmer for 3-4 hours, until the meat
is melty and soft.
While that is simmering
make the braised red cabbage. Shred quarter of a red cabbage finely,
then add it to a pan with a diced cooking apple, and half a diced
onion, about 250ml of cider, 3 tablespoons of balsamic vinegar and
100g of brown sugar. Some orange zest and a teaspoon of allspice, 15g
of butter and some salt and pepper. Then leave to simmer very gently
with the lid on for an hour, taste to see if you want it sweeter, or
with more vinegar after about 10 minutes when everybody in the pan has got to know
each other.
When it is ready remove
the meat from the pan and leave to cool. Leave a few bits in with the
vegetable and you can have this for lunch the next day, it makes a
lovely beef broth, with a bit of seasoning and a little bit of meat
shredded into the stock. When the meat has cooled enough to touch
pull the oxtail off the bone and put apart the large chunks of shin.
Ladle about 4 ladles of
stock into another pan, and add ¼ bottle of red wine, then boil to
reduce until you have a thicker sauce, then add the meat back into
the sauce. You can add some wild mushrooms at this point also, I've soaked dried ones and stirred them into the sauce on one occasion, delicious. Serve with buttery polenta and braised red cabbage.
The meat is rich and
soft in its red wine sauce, with the buttery warm soft polenta and
sharp sweet red cabbage it is a match made in heaven.. It'll warm you
up a treat over winter and into miserable January...
Looks great - beef shin is one of my favourite things to cook with at the moment, so definitely need to get some oxtail to try with it when im eating meat again!
ReplyDeletehow long are you being veggie for? I'm doing a vegetarian supperclub in Feb so have been eating a lot less meat while I test everything!
ReplyDeleteWe really oxtail, had a braised ruby beal oxtail this week. This recipe looks great
ReplyDelete