Pot Au Feu Boiled Dinner
- 2 quarts brown beef stock (page 5, and note that if youre making a stock, the beef can cook along with it), or beef bouillon and water
- Optional, for additional flavor: any beef bones and scraps, cooked or raw
- 1 large herb bouquet (see below)
- Aromatic vegetables, roughly chopped: 3 large peeled carrots, 3 large peeled onions, 1 large washed leek, 3 large celery ribs with leaves
- About 5 pounds boneless stewing beef (or sufficient bone-in meat), such as heel of the round, foreshank, neck pot roast, chuck, brisket, short ribsall one kind or a mixture
- Vegetable garnish suggestions, any or all of the following: 2 or 3 pieces each of turnips (page 29), parsnips (page 29), carrots (page 29), small white onions (page 28), cabbage wedges (page 27), boiling potatoes (page 35).
- Bring the stock to the boil in a large pot with the optional bones and scraps, the herb bouquet, and the aromatic vegetables.
- Meanwhile, tie the meat into a neat shape with white cotton twine, and place it in the pot, adding water if necessary to cover by 1 inch.
- Bring to the simmer, skim off surface scum for several minutes, then cover the pot loosely and let simmer slowly until the meat is tender when pierced with a forkcut off and eat a piece to be sure.
- If some pieces are done early, remove to a bowl and cover with a little of the cooking stock.
- When the meat is done, remove it from the pot, strain and degrease the cooking stock, correct seasoning, and return it to the pot with the meat.
- The stew will keep warm for a good hour before serving, or may be reheated, loosely covered.
- Meanwhile, cook separately whatever vegetables you have chosen in a bit of the cooking stock, and when you are ready to serve, drain their cooking liquids into a saucepan.
- Then add a sufficient quantity of the cooking liquid to make a rich stock to serve with your pot au feu.
- Slice the meat, surround with the vegetables, and baste with the stock, pouring the rest into a sauceboat to pass at the table.
- Accompany, if you wish, with French cornichons, coarse salt, and horseradish sauce (see page 51).
- OTHER MEATS.
- Include or substitute other meats in the stew, such as shoulder of pork or veal, or Polish sausage.
- Or you may wish to use a fine stewing hen, which you can include with the beef or cook separately, in this latter case using chicken rather than beef stock.
- BLANQUETTE OF VEAL.
- For 4 to 5 pounds of real pale-pink special-fed veal (see note) cut into 2-inch chunks (a combination of boneless and bone-in chuck, shank, neck, and breast), serving 6 people.
- Simmering time: about 1 1/2 hours.
- Bring the veal to the simmer for 2 to 3 minutes in a large pot of water until the scum ceases to rise.
- Drain.
- Wash off the veal and the pot, return veal to pot, then pour in veal, chicken, or turkey stock (pages 45) or canned chicken broth and water to cover by 1/2 inch.
- Add a large peeled and chopped onion, a peeled chopped carrot, a large chopped celery stalk, and a small herb bouquet minus garlic.
- Salt lightly, cover the pot loosely, and simmer about 1 1/2 hours, until meat is fork-tender.
- Drain stock into a saucepan and return meat to pot.
- Degrease cooking liquid, and boil down rapidly until reduced to about 3 cups.
- Meanwhile, make a veloute sauce (page 13) with 4 tablespoons butter, 5 tablespoons flour, and the cooking liquid, enriching it, if you wish, with a little cream.
- Simmer the veal to warm briefly in the sauce along with 24 small white-braised onions (page 28) and 1/2 pound of small simmered mushrooms (page 32).
- BLANQUETTE OF CHICKEN OR TURKEY.
- Use cut-up roasting or stewing chicken, or turkey parts, cooking them the same way.
- For a large herb bouquet, tie 8 parsley sprigs, 1 large imported bay leaf, 1 teaspoon dried thyme, 4 whole cloves or allspice berries, and 3 large cloves of smashed unpeeled garlic together in washed cheesecloth.
- Sometimes the garlic should be omitted, and you can substitute celery leaves and/or split leeks.
- Real veal is a calf either fed on mothers milk or on milk by-products.
- Free-range veal, which is actually baby beef, produces an ugly gray-brown blanquette and an inferior sauce.
- It will, however, make an acceptable brown stew, using the following beef bourguignon system.
brown beef stock, scraps, herb bouquet, vegetables, stewing beef, vegetable garnish suggestions
Taken from www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/pot-au-feu-boiled-dinner-391554 (may not work)