My parents were born in raised in Kentucky, my husband’s in Texas. Here lies the base to an eighteen-year long debate over is it stew or soup.
Growing up when mom made stew it was a thick gravy sauce, with beef, potatoes, peas and a single bay leaf that always managed to end up in some ones bowl. Mom served it with bread and butter.
My husband grew up with stew that was broth based, beef, potatoes, carrots, tomatoes and one onion. He eats it with crackers.
Can you see where the debate comes from?
My loving husband states it is because he is from the south and they put tomatoes in everything. I have been deemed a Yankee. Well I hate to break this to my husband, but his father's side of the family was not even American's during the Civil War! When the namesake did immigrate to America, he went to Kentucky. Therefore, if I am a Yankee, he is too!
I will leave each of you to decide which label you would like to classify this recipe, in our house it is called "Oh, that’s good!"
If you have a picky eater like mine. Try a ladle full with only a small bit of broth and top with shredded cheddar jack cheese.Growing up when mom made stew it was a thick gravy sauce, with beef, potatoes, peas and a single bay leaf that always managed to end up in some ones bowl. Mom served it with bread and butter.
My husband grew up with stew that was broth based, beef, potatoes, carrots, tomatoes and one onion. He eats it with crackers.
Can you see where the debate comes from?
My loving husband states it is because he is from the south and they put tomatoes in everything. I have been deemed a Yankee. Well I hate to break this to my husband, but his father's side of the family was not even American's during the Civil War! When the namesake did immigrate to America, he went to Kentucky. Therefore, if I am a Yankee, he is too!
I will leave each of you to decide which label you would like to classify this recipe, in our house it is called "Oh, that’s good!"
Paddy's Beef Stew (Soup)
1 ½ to 2 lbs of beef stew meat or roast cut into 2 inch pieces
1 yellow onion, coarsely chopped
3 carrots sliced
4 large potatoes, chopped to bite size pieces
2 large (28-30 oz) cans of whole tomatoes
Ground pepper
1 Tablespoon of vegetable oil
In soup pot, add oil and brown stew meat (personally, I add crushed garlic or garlic powder to the meat at this point.) Add enough water to cover meat, cover pot and let simmer until meat is tender. (If you have meat tenderizer go ahead and sprinkle some in) Simmer until almost all of the water has evaporated from pot, usually takes 1 ½ hours.
Add potatoes, onion and carrots. Crush tomatoes while adding to pot along with the juice.
Cover pot and simmer until vegetables are done, season with pepper to taste.
Crock-pot version – Yes, you can make stew in a crock-pot!
Place meat tenderizer, stew meat, pepper, (garlic,) onion and enough water to reach almost halfway of crock-pot. Set to highest setting, replace lid and let simmer for 6 hours.
After six hours, water should be mostly gone. Place carrots and potatoes in a microwavable dish (I prefer an 8-cup Pyrex measuring cup) cover with water and microwave on high for ten minutes. The vegetables should fork tender but not completely cooked. Add tomatoes, potatoes and carrots to crock-pot and let cook for an hour on high temperature.
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