Monday, February 05, 2007

As requested, Chef Tony's 15-B Pot Roast recipe.


For those in attendance at the Stratto’s beer dinner last week who asked for Chef Tony’s delicious pot roast recipe, here it is. Note that although the recipe was originally prepared with NABC’s brew, you could easily substitute many microbrewed Porters and achieve comparable results. If you choose to come and buy Bob's Old 15-B for cooking, remember to buy two growlers – one for cooking, and one for the prep time. You may need another for dinner.

Stratto’s/15-B Pot Roast Recipe

10 lbs shoulder of beef
¾ cup olive oil
4 tbsp kosher salt
1 & ½ tbsp ground black pepper
3 tbsp granulated garlic
4 bay leaves
2 medium yellow onions
3 large carrots
4 stalks celery
½ cups peeled garlic cloves
72 ounces Bob’s Old 15-B Porter
2 quarts beef stock
6 cups water

Pat the roast dry using paper towels to remove any excess moisture.

Place the roast onto a large plate or tray and rub the entire roast with the salt, pepper and garlic.

Chop the onions, celery and carrots into 1” pieces.

Heat oil in a large pot with deep sides, medium to high heat.

Add the seasoned roast to the pot and sear on all sides until a golden brown crust forms.

Remove roast from pot and set aside.

Discard any excess fat left in the pot.

Place pot back on stove and heat on high.

Add all the vegetables to pot and cook for five minutes.

Add the Porter to the pot and scrape the bottom with a spoon to loosen any leftover remnants.

Place the roast back into the pot and add remaining ingredients, making sure the roast is almost completely submerged by the liquid.

Cover the pot tightly with foil and place into a 350-degree oven for 3.5 hours.

Remove the pot from the oven and let rest for 30 minutes.

To remove the roast, be sure to use utensils large enough to support the weight so the roast won’t fall apart.

Strain the remaining broth and vegetable mixture into a large sauce pot.

Bring the strained stock to a boil, then reduce heat to a simmer and reduce by a third.

Serve … and eat, drink, and be merry.

6 comments:

  1. For an alternative to the heavily biased NAHealtblog, try: www.diogenestrainee.blogspot.com

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  2. Good thing Chef Tony didn't give the big recipe. I assume this can be downsized?

    Chef Debbie (Silo Brewpub) and I did a couple cooking with beer/beer tastings at the old Cookbook Cottage. She always prepared a similar pot roast and it was wonderful.

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  3. I was wondering where to buy 10 pounds of meat, what cauldron I had to prepare it in, where would I get 20 people to help me eat the dish.

    Aside from the huge portion, that recipe looks great.

    I made a pot of chile yesterday with a bottle of Dark Star Porter... it blended in nicely and gave an excellent boost to the chili's flavor

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  4. Cool, chili and beer. I use Altbier in my stock chili recipe, tried Bourbon Barrel Stout one time, wasn't great. Nut Brown Ale is also good, a little maltiness to kick start the chili's.

    The winning chili last Thursday was made with Alt.

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  5. I was inspired by the beer and chile bonanza in Jeff last week. Upland made theirs with their Bad Elmer's Porter, and was really good. Of course they didn't win, so I should have asked Joel what you all made yours with. Then I could have made an award winning recipe.

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  6. I made the following for Fossils pitch in once only used Rogue Mocha Porter, will try this 15b/Chef T recipe:
    http://www.alaskanbeer.com/cgi-bin/recipes/search.pl

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