Showing posts with label steak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steak. Show all posts

Friday, 30 January 2015

Steak and Guinness Pie


This pie is pretty substantial and is a British classic. The recipe was taken from Jamie Oliver's cookbook, Happy Days with the Naked Chef. I made only a few modifications to this  easy classic. For the Jamie Oliver recipe click *here*  and search Steak and Guinness Pie or Steak, Guinness & Cheese Pie with a puff pastry lid. Although the latter recipe comes up on his website it may be more of an updated one so I will include the recipe from Happy Days with the Naked Chef. Which is a great cookbook by the way.  


Jamie Oliver's Good Old Steak and Guinness Pie
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680g/1and 1/2 lb stewing beef, diced
sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 heaped tablespoons flour
olive oil
1 onion, peeled and roughly chopped
1 large carrot, peeled and roughly chopped
4 sticks of celery, washed and roughly chopped
2 parsnips, peeled and roughly chopped 
1 handful of mixed herbs (rosemary, thyme and bay), leaves picked
565ml/1 pint of Guinness 
2x 400g/14oz tins of tomatoes
1x500g/1lb 2oz pack of puff pastry 
1 beaten egg

Season your beef generously with salt and pepper, sprinkle with flour and toss around until coated. Heat 2 to 3 lugs of olive oil in a large casserole-type pan and fry your meat, in two batches if need be, until golden brown. Add the onion and fry for 1 more minute, then add the carrot, celery, parsnips and herbs. Fry for a further 4 minutes then pour in your Guinness. Add the tinned tomatoes and bring to the boil. Stir around, then simmer for around 2 hours or until the meat is really tender. The sauce should be nice and thick with an intensely tasty flavour. Season. At this point you could serve it as a stew with mash, or it will keep really well for a good 5 days in the fridge (while improving in flavour at the same time).

To make the pies, preheat the oven to 190ºC/375ºF/gas 5. Put your meat filling into an appropriately-sized baking dish or dishes. I like to make small individuals pies - any high-sided round oven proof bowls are fine. Roll out your pastry, dusting with flour as you go, until 0.5cm/1/4 inch thick. Cut out 6 circles about 1cm/1/2 inch bigger than the tops of your bowls. Brush the rims of your bowls with beaten egg, then place the pastry circles on top, squashing the excess pastry down the outside of the bowls to secure. Lightly score the top of the pastry in a criss-cross fashion and brush with more of the beaten egg. Bake in the middle of the preheated oven for 45 minutes until golden and bubbling. 

Notes: I had ran out of olive oil so good thing I bought that Camelina oil, I used that instead. Dried herbs work in a pinch. I used tins of diced tomatoes. I omitted the celery and added chopped baby potatoes instead. Added a dash here and there of cumin. Buying meat from the butcher's, Acme Meat here in E-town, made a difference in just over 1 hour the beef I used was tender. 


Friday, 18 October 2013

My Week in Food



We started off the long weekend with scrambled eggs. Slices of sausages, green peppers, green onion and dashes of cumin and paprika made this a hearty breakfast. A savoury way to start the day. 


Pumpkin Pie. Next to rice pudding and bread pudding this is so comforting and smooth. This is my son's favourite therefore no holiday would be complete without it. 



Hummus with Pita. Snacking and munching. Hummus is a favourite of mine. There are so many things you can add and have with hummus, that is why it is so appealing. Just blitz some chickpeas, tahini paste, crushed garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, and a bit of water to make it all spreadable.  


I rarely and I mean rarely cook steak let alone red meat for that matter. And to be perfectly honest I wasn't quite sure on how to prepare and cook it. After much thought I decided to marinate it overnight in the following: ginger syrup, crushed garlic, honey, cumin, pepper and a pinch of salt. There were sweet hints of spiciness. Paired with Fortnum and Mason's Highgrove Spiced Fruit Chutney. Letting the contrasting flavours play with one another. 

Have a good weekend everyone! - JW