Pages

Monday, January 23, 2012

Oxtail & Rice Soup

After making the oxtail consomme I ended up with about 1kg of oxtail meat. I made a few tortellini with the meat but it's just way too much. I would be making tortellini until the second coming! Well here is a soup I made to use up half of the meat. I also had some great turkey stock made from the second turkey I bought at Christmas. (I took off all the meat and roasted the bones with carrot, celery, onion and garlic)

As well I had some vegetable mix from a lamb stock a made a last year. I reserved the vegetables, ground them up and put in the freezer. They also had a great meaty taste.

1 cup brown rice
2 cups brown chicken stock
1 Leek, cut in half and sliced
2 large carrots, diced
2 celery stalks, diced
1 bulb garlic
2 tbsp oil
500g beef oxtail meat
500g leftover veggies from lamb stock
8 cups brown chicken stock
4 dried Arbol chile peppers
50g fresh parsley
Salt & pepper

Cook the rice with the 2 cups stock

Feed the meat and veggie stuff through a food grinder
Heat the oil in the soup pot and add the garlic. When the garlic is fragrant add the leeks, carrot and celery. Season with salt and pepper.  Cook the veggies until they start to stick to the bottom of the pot. Add the meat and ground vegetable matter. and 8 cups stock and cooked rice and arbol chiles. Bring to a boil and simmer for about half an hour.

Remove the chiles and finely chop the chiles and add back to the pot. Add the parsley and serve.

As I said above. A great beefy taste to the soup with a little heat from the chile.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Oxtail Consomme

Here is my first post of 2012. I am following the Oxtail Consomme recipe from Jennifer McLagan in her book Bones. I see the recipe has been reproduced on the web word for word. Just search for "Oxtail Consomme with Sherry".

Here is my interpretation of the recipe. I did try to follow it quite closely. However, I did make a few alterations due to the ingredients I had on hand. In particular, I didn't have any sherry.

The original recipe is supposed to yield six cups. I got 8 cups out of it. I should have reduced it to concentrate the flavours as I found it a bit thin on flavour. The leek flavour was a little strong so I would try to reduce the amount used in the raft a little bit next time.

For Oxtail Stock
Ingredients
2 Carrots
2 celery
2 onion
1 bulb garlic
granulated garlic
2.1kg Oxtail
1/4cup Port
2 cups water
2 tbsp dried thyme
4 or 5 bay leaves
1 tbsp peppercorns
10 cup water

Preheat the oven to 400F

Slice the carrots, celery and onion and add to the roasting pan. Slice the garlic bulb in half and add to the pan. Season the oxtail with salt, pepper and granulated garlic and add to the pan on top of the vegetables.

Oxtails Ready to Roast


Roast for 1 hour, turning the oxtail pieces half way through.

Roasted Oxtails


When done move all the oxtail and vegetables to a stock pot. De-glaze the roasting pan with the port and 2 cups water. Add to the stock pot with thyme, bay leaves, peppercorns and water. Bring to a boil and simmer for 5 hours.

Strain the stock through a sieve. Reserve the oxtails and discard the rest of the debris. Cool the stock and refrigerate over night so the fat turns solid. The remove the oxtail meat from the bones and use in soups, pasta sauces or any application where you want a nice beefy taste.

For the Raft
1 carrot
1 celery stalk
1/2 large leek
175g medium ground beef
2 egg whites
2 tbsp water

Dice the carrot, celery and slice leeks and add to a food processor. Process until smooth. Add the ground beef, egg white and water. Process until well combined.

Remove the stock from the fridge. Skim the solid fat off the top. Move the gelled stock to a pot. There will be some debris at the bottom, try to leave that out. Warm the stock in the pot to liquify it again. Add the raft and bring to a boil stirring frequently to keep the raft from sticking. When it starts to boil create a hole in the raft to allow the steam to escape and simmer for 45 minutes.

Jelled Stock


Move the raft to a bowl and strain the consomme through cheese cloth.

Consommé


Done!