Mom'S Chuck Roast - My Favorite!
- 3 -4 lbs chuck boneless chuck roast (well-marbled and at least 2 inches thick)
- 1 tablespoon Kitchen Bouquet
- 3 garlic cloves, chopped
- 1 -2 tablespoon canola oil
- 2 tablespoons Wondra Flour or 2 tablespoons flour
- water
- 3/4 cup milk
- salt and pepper, to taste
- Cut off the vast majority of the fat from the (NOT previously frozen) roast. For me, this usually results in maybe 4-5 variously sized pieces of usable meat culled from one roast.
- Place a layer of oil (to coat bottom) in a cast iron skillet on the stove over medium-high and while that's heating ----.
- ---- poke holes part way through each piece of roast meat with a knife tip a few times on each side. This simply provides more surface area for the flavor to cling to. Rub all meat surfaces well - first with Kitchen Bouquet, then with the chopped garlic.
- When the skillet is hot, add meat and sear on all sides until well-browned, about 2 minutes on each side or whatever achieves the nicest deep brown.
- Add water to almost cover roast (maybe 1/4" below top of roast) - somewhere between 1 and 2 cups.
- Continue to heat until water just starts to bubble, then reduce heat to low or simmering, cover and braise for 2 to 2 1/2 hours. Braising cuts down the connective tissue in tougher cuts of meat.
- At the end of cooking time when meat is tender, remove lid and boil water and juices in skillet until volume reduces by almost half.
- Turn off heat and move all of the meat pieces to a plate. Cover with foil to keep warm.
- Remove oil from juices with a gravy separator. This is VERY important to making successful gravy. Doing it by hand with a spoon or bulb baster is a tedious job, so I just ordered a Trudeau gravy/fat separator to make life easier. ;).
- Return about 1 cup of the separated water/juice/gravy fluid to the skillet heated to medium-high.
- Mix the Wondra with just enough water to make a thinnish paste. While whisking FEVERISHLY, ~slowly~ pour the thin paste into the sauce to combine and prevent lumps from forming. Wondra flour in the tall blue can works Wondra-fully and is made for this purpose. (Hey, any opportunity I have for making stupid puns shall not go wasted.).
- For the next few minutes, continue whisking as though your very life depended on it, even after the Wondra/flour has incorporated into the sauce. Then, still whisking, slowly add the milk.
- When gravy is heated through, it's ready to pour over hunks of roast beast and boiled tater slices! Season *after* tasting as it may already be just fine. However, I highly recommend some finishing salt to bump that puppy right over the edge of heaven! Saltistry's "herb grey" is absolute bliss.
- Oh, and for leftovers, might I suggest a beef version of Breakfast Pork Hash (Recipe #170376?) :).
chuck roast, kitchen, garlic, canola oil, wondra flour, water, milk, salt
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/moms-chuck-roast-my-favorite-342144 (may not work)