Mays Man Catching Pot Roast
- 1 whole Roast (Chuck, Bone In Or Other 'pot Roast' Meat)
- 2 whole Carrots, Chopped Roughly
- 1 whole Onion
- 2 cartons (32 Oz. Carton) Beef Stock
- 1 carton (32 Oz. Carton) Chicken Broth
- 2 cloves Garlic, Or More To Taste
- Salt And Pepper, to taste
- 1 bag (about 24 Oz. Bag) Baby New Or Fingerling Potatoes
- Extra Virgin Olive Oil
- Powdered Garlic, To Taste
- Salt And Pepper, to taste
- 1 bunch Baby Carrots
- 1 Tablespoon Butter
- 1 dash Sugar
- 13 cups Butter
- 13 cups Flour
- Sliced Mushrooms (optional)
- Cook the meat: get a big pot, put the meat (chuck bone-in roast is what I usedask the butcher if you need help) in when its searing hot (with a few tablespoons of oil) and sear until its got some good browning action on each side.
- Then fill the pot with 2 carrots cut in a few pieces, a quartered yellow onion, and liquid to cover.
- The liquid should be 2/3 beef stock, 1/3 chicken broth.
- (Thats not exactjust chicken broth would work, too.)
- Also sprinkle in a few cloves garlic, and a few tablespoons (3 at most) of salt and pepper.
- Now reduce to a low heat OR bake in a 325-degree oven for a few hours.
- How many hours?
- Usually mine go 3-4 hours unless its a BIG roast, then it could be take up to 6 hours.
- You want the meat to feel and look tender.
- Poke it with a fork and see if it shreds right up in your hand.
- You also want the bone(s) to literally have fallen out (or to fall out when you touch them).
- Do not try to rush thisthe tough cut needs TIME.
- Save the liquid.
- I put mine into a pitcher, but a big bowl would do.
- SAVE ALL THAT LIQUID!
- (Well, put it through a strainer first, then save.
- Dump the carrot + onion + junk that pops up.)
- Pull the meat: heres where the problems start.
- Do NOT get out a knife.
- If the meat is tough and you need a knife, heres your clue: its NOT DONE!
- You can use a fork, tongs, or just your fingers.
- I try to pull in chunks that are a hearty bite in size, but sometimes youll have tiny bits and thats okay, too.
- THROW OUT any bone, connective tissue, or grody.
- Dont serve up yuck to your guestsif a person has to pick out yucky stuff out of their pot roast dinner, you didnt do it right!
- If youre not going to serve this right away, just put it into a Tupperware with about 1/4 cup of liquid from cooking and refrigerate.
- Most of the time I cook and pull the meat the day before.
- Dont add salt or seasoningthats where your gravy will come in.
- The potatoes: I like to cut baby or fingerling potatoes in half and roast them in the oven (at 400 degrees) until brown on top.
- I arrange them so that the cut side is facing up and drizzle with a bit of extra virgin olive oil and sprinkle with salt, pepper, and garlic powder (dont go crazyjust make sure a bit of each spice is on each potato).
- It takes about 30 minutes and should be done right before serving.
- The carrots: this is new for meand oh DANG, is it good.
- These are cleaned baby carrots that were grilled in a cast iron pan with 2 pats of butter plus a sprinkle of SUGAR.
- I just kept rollin them around that butter until they started to get all caramelized and yum.
- Total time on heat is about 6 minutesagain, do this right before serving.
- The gravy: this is what separates the girls from the women.
- Gravy is so easy to make, and the only talents you need are the ability to stir and patience.
- Im gonna have to do a whole gravy post some day.
- For now, heres the basic idea: start with equal parts flour and butter in a pan that can hold 8+ cups of fluid on medium heat.
- I usually go with about 1/3 cup each (flour/butter) but how much you use depends on the amount of gravy youre making.
- Ive heard 1 tablespoon of roux (flour + butter) will thicken a maximum of 1 cup broth/liquid.
- I find its less than that, though.
- SO!
- Stir, stir, stir until its all melty and nice.
- Then SLOWLY add in about 1/2 cup at a time of that reserved liquid from the cooking of the meat.
- (Feel free to skim the fat off the top, or use it!
- Either way is fine.)
- Dont add more until its all soaked up.
- For a while, its going to keep looking like a flour-y ball o goo.
- Dont speed up.
- Dont rush it.
- Just keep SLOWLY adding SMALL amounts of fluid.
- This will keep you smooth as silk, and prevent too much liquid from being added.
- Then when you feel like it looks good, add a healthy pinch of salt and pepper and reduce to low heat.
- Keep adding liquid if needed as it thickens further.
- When you taste test, use a tiny bite of the pot roast to dip into the gravy.
- This will give you a better read on what its going to taste like and if it needs more salt or pepper.
- Gravy additives, coloring, or anything else are UNWANTED!
- Get them awayyou do not need it.
- It takes me about 20 minutes to make gravy just right.
- Bottom line?
- The tears of pleasure from food nirvana are WORTH IT.
- Mushrooms: optional but awesome (and I hate mushrooms!).
- Get a pan hot, put a bit of oil, and brown up some sliced mushrooms.
- Then dump into the gravy and let them float around while you pull everything else together.
- If meat was prepped day before, throw it all into a big pan on medium heat and well, heat it up.
- I throw in a splash of broth/stock just enough to coat the bottom of the pan so that things stay nice and moist.
- Put some potatoes and meat down, drizzle with gravy, serve, and enjoy!
- (If theres any left, dump it all together in a Tupperware and reheat in a pan or microwave.
- Itll be yum.)
whole roast, carrots, onion, cartons, chicken broth, garlic, salt, new, extra virgin, powdered garlic, salt, carrots, butter, sugar, butter, flour, mushrooms
Taken from tastykitchen.com/recipes/main-courses/mays-man-catching-pot-roast/ (may not work)