We were recently invited to a gathering to farewell a friends daughter. She is going over seas to live and work for a few years. We were asked to bring a pot luck. I took along my slow cooked Chilli Con Carne, it always goes down well. That's not what I'm here to share, but I will one day. At the farewell party there was a platter with the most beautiful soft roasted beef nestled on a bed of mash. YUM! The next day I reached out to the guest who brought it along and he was kind enough to share.
The following is what he sent to me.
Hi Lou lol the recipe is pretty much Steve surprise (I'll be surprised if it works)
What I did for last night:
1.5 kg beef ribs
In the slow cooker on low for 11.5 hours
Put them in at 0615
Salt pepper mixed herbs over the ribs mainly on the meat side
Bay leaves (4)
Rosemary sprigs one for each rib bone
Ribs sitting on Swede slices about 1 cm thick
Tin of watties basil tomates half on top and half around the Swede and half a tin of water into the base.
I also added a touch of chilli powder as it was cold
Let it do its thing and then mashed the Swede and tomatoes as the base and sliced onto the plate. I reckon you could use red wine in place of the water and it would add to the gravy
It changes each time I do it depending on what I have available ie mushrooms courgette, etc
Like most slow cooker meals it looks pretty simple and also versatile.
Inspired I decided to have a go myself. I started at 07.15 though.
I placed thickly sliced swede into the bottom of my slow cooker. Popped a 1.5 kg lump of topside roast on top of that. (I don't have ribs and as I have just put half of a home grown cow into my freezer I wasn't going shopping for them). I sprinkled on plenty of salt, pepper, an Italian seasoning and a little beef stock powder. Then I decided to add some sliced carrots around the beef. Next I poured in a pottle of Uncle Ruffies tomato sauce (Look on my recipe tab above for that). A little water, two huge cloves of garlic and some bay leaves and rosemary. Then as Steve says, I let it do it's thing.
I came back to it a few hours later after taking a frosty walk, completing my chores the grocery shopping and visiting a friend for a cuppa and a catch up. I decided it could do with a little more liquid so added the suggested red wine. Then I let it do it's thing for a few more hours while I cross stitched.
Later I strained off some of the fluid to make a gravy, adding some flour to thicken it. We pulled out the bay leaves and rosemary stalks and mashed the veges. Tony carved the beef and we plated up with plenty of gravy and some steamed broccoli on the side.
YUM!
I forgot to take photos of course and to be honest my version did not look as pretty as Steve's. But it did taste good and it was oh so soft. I've done pot roasts in the slow cooker before but it was nice to be reinspired.
So there you have it. Steve's Surprise pot roast.
9 comments:
Does sound delicious! xx
Oh I am definately going to give this a try Lou- my mouth is watering reading it. I don't have ribs either so I will be trying your version !
Oh yum that sounds so delicious. I'll have to add the beef & swede to shopping this week to try it out. :)
Oh that sounds delicious and it would easily freeze in meal sized portions for one. Thank you for the inspiration.
Yummo! Perfect for the cold weather.
As Janice said. Great for a cold day and easy cooking too.
Sounds delish and perfect for this chilly weather. Thankyou for sharing.
i had to search on swede to find out what it is and (of course) as soon as i entered the word, the internet went down and when it came back up and told me that swede is rutabaga i realized that i've never eaten rutabaga, either - snort ... maybe it's too early (and too hot) to read recipes? anywho, thanks for giving me something that is NOT bad political news to read this morning...
I love how Steve shared his recipe - as if he was talking ...LOL
Cant best a slow cooker for tender meat - I may try topside too - ribs are a bit messy for some...not mentioning names...LOL
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