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Signing UpStep 1: First ingredients
- 2 pounds of stew meat (beef) cut into small cubes
- 1/2 pound of beef stick summer sausage sliced and quartered
- 2 medium onions cut into eighths
- 4 medium carrots in thick slices
- 2 stalks of celery sliced diagonally
- 1 can of kernel corn (10 to 12 ounces)
- 1/3 cup of quick-cooking tapioca
- 3 or 4 medium potatoes quartered and sliced
I added part of each of these in a continuous rotation so they are already mixed as I place them into the crock pot. Press these down into the crock pot to make room for the lid, if necessary. Normally I peel the potatoes, but decided to leave the skin on this time. The skins are supposed to contain good nutrients.
Remember that this is stew, and you can use whatever you have. Add something extra that is not in the recipe, if you like. If you do not have some ingredient or find it difficult to get, do not worry. Stew ingredients can be flexible.










































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I would assume you use less if you had powder to achieve the same mouth-feel. Some experimentation is in order, I think.
I made the recipe with some substitutions for what I had on hand:
Meatballs instead of beef
omit potatoes (unfortunately this is the wrong type of carb for me)
Add more celery and carrots
use1/2 cup of frozen succotash instead of the canned corn (quite a bit less corn in the mix)
No summer sausage (next time for sure)
4oz of sherry instead of the bourbon
I had both the tapioca pearls and powder on hand and tried the pearls. They had dissolved within two hours. The stew turned out really well. Google says that tapioca is a better thicker to use when freezing, and since I'm all about "plan-overs" (deliberately planning on making extra, and freezing the leftovers) this should work out well.
So under that rule, I could:
Swap the stew beef for ground rabbit meatballs (rabbit, the other other white meat!)
Add a totally new vegetable, like rutabaga.
And then change the whiskey to sherry and call it a totally new recipe.
Also, I have a recipe for beef satays that uses whiskey to tenderize. I would suggest if the beef you use isn't totally tender after all of that slow cooking, then you could marinate the beef overnight in the whiskey first, and then add everything to the crockpot when you start to cook.
The first batch never made it to the freezer, because I ate it all for lunch and dinner (doing roofing work makes you pretty hungry), so I'm trying again. The only appropriate spirit in the house is my favorite rye, and I'm not willing to try that so today I used a bottle of stout. I also switched up to hamburger patties (easier to pre-brown) and threw in a small handful of frozen shoestring french-fries.
Burger and Fries Stew anyone?
Anyway, being yours, maybe I must try it.
Anyway, my cooking skills go a bit over fried eggs...
Summer sausage is probably more similar to salami than to chorizo. You could use any sausage you like to add a little flavor. The summer sausage is pre-cooked and ready to eat cold. But, the crock pot I used for cooking cooked the raw stew meat. It would also cook raw sausage so that it is safe to eat. If you can fry an egg, you can make this stew.
My secret ingredient is to use condensed tomato soup. I don't know what it is, but it makes a very tasty stew.
The original recipe was from a book called "Beat This!". There is an adaptation of the recipe here at this URL by another author. She uses red wine, but I usually add 12 oz of dark beer (original recipe called for "beer", wine or water, and I just have to assume that the original author used something awful like Bud lite).
I usually cook it in my cast iron dutch oven, but I take the lid off and add in one or two of those "biscuits in a tube" during the last 12 minutes or so, leaving the top off so they can cook and brown in the oven.
The bourbon is one of the "secrets." I believe the summer sausage is another, as well as the garlic powder.
We frequently go to a Mongolian BBQ. I like to be sure to add the red cooking wine sauce.
Thank you for looking and for commenting.