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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I've cooked a beef stew a number of times over the past few months and a
couple of times the meat was "dry" and a little tough when eating it. does the searing have anything to do with it? The question is did I not cook it enough, or did I cook it too much. The recipes call for 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 hours. Bill S ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! >100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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![]() "Bill" <wls%intac.com> wrote in message ... > I've cooked a beef stew a number of times over the past few months and a > couple of times the meat was "dry" and a little tough when eating it. does > the searing have anything to do with it? No but browning the meat adds a lot of flavor. >The question is did I not cook it enough, or did I cook it too much. The recipes call for 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 hours. > Bill S The likelihood is that the meat you used was very very lean like a round steak or bottom round roast. This type of beef tends to be as you say "dry" as there is not enough fat in the beef to keep it moist. Next time try using "Chuck" or a cut with some marbling. Dimitri |
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Bill <wls%intac.com> wrote:
> I've cooked a beef stew a number of times over the past few months and a > couple of times the meat was "dry" and a little tough when eating it. does > the searing have anything to do with it? The question is did I not cook it > enough, or did I cook it too much. The recipes call for 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 > hours. What cut of meat did you use? It would help to know the full recipe. |
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Bill wrote:
> I've cooked a beef stew a number of times over the past few months and = a > couple of times the meat was "dry" and a little tough when eating it. d= oes > the searing have anything to do with it? The question is did I not coo= k it > enough, or did I cook it too much. The recipes call for 2 1/2 to 3 1/2 > hours. My guess you be that you boiled it. Boiling it makes the meat tough and = dry. Best bet is to brown the meat, saut=E9 some garlic and onion, celery, diced ca= rrots and mushrooms. Add beef broth and let it *simmer*. Do not boil. I prefer to= do the simmering part in the oven at about 300 degrees for a few hours. If you = want to thicken the sauce, remove the meat before you add the thickener and boil= , then return the meat to the sauce. |
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at Thu, 08 Jan 2004 22:46:14 GMT in
>, wls%intac.com (Bill) wrote : >I've cooked a beef stew a number of times over the past few months and a >couple of times the meat was "dry" and a little tough when eating it. >does the searing have anything to do with it? The question is did I not >cook it enough, or did I cook it too much. You probably cooked it at too high a temperature, or with too much water. Good stew really needs to be on a very low setting - so that it never boils, and at most, simmers occasionally. Adding too much water also has the effect, paradoxically, of drying out the meat - the water simply leaches out liquid which then evaporates. I almost never add any water to a stew - that from the vegetables and the meat is usually more than enough. As for temperature, I put mine on the lowest burner on the stove at the lowest setting. There's always one burner that has the least heat - find out which one it is on your stove and use it. As other posters have mentioned, it's also possible you were using one of the super-lean cuts, like round (not a good choice for stew) or tenderloin (an extravagant waste for stew). These dry out very easily. You can correct for this, to some extent, by adding a fatty meat like bacon, but this only goes so far and, of course, changes the flavour. The times you quote I don't think of as nearly sufficient, especially at the low temperatures I recommend, for a good stew. 12 hours or more is better. I have a pot of stew on the stove right now that I started at midnight last night, and I don't expect to eat it until after midnight tonight. That gives it all sorts of time to develop and also to cook thoroughly. In 3 hours, parts of the meat and vegetables were still almost raw at the temperatures I use. -- Alex Rast (remove d., .7, not, and .NOSPAM to reply) |
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(Bill) wrote
> >I've cooked a beef stew a number of times over the past few months and >a couple of times the meat was "dry" and a little tough when eating >it. All things being equal if you had some successes and some failures it was likely the cuts of meat you used. If you are buying generic "stewing beef" then there is no way to ascertain which cuts are in the mix as those are scraps. You'd do well to purchase particular whole cuts (ie, various cuts of chuck and round) and cut it up yourself until you find something you like and that works for you... buying mystery meat is just plain ****ing stupid... tantamout to drinking the dregs of left over drinks from the party the night before... likely you'll drink what someone ****ed in a cup, no different from mystery meat. ---= BOYCOTT FRENCH--GERMAN (belgium) =--- ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- Sheldon ```````````` "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." |
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