It's pot-au-feu time again - when the village comes together for a feast of all things beef and veg. The whole lot is cooked up in an enormous cauldron- and yes, at the end of it you really do have something magic.
M-C adds her magic ingredients to the potion |
This year the village Getafix (or Panoramix if you're French) was the marvellous Marie-Claude:
First, here is her recipe for the best pot-au-feu in the world- (and then I will give you some new ideas for what to do with the leftovers.)
For 8 people:
3 kg of beef ( chuck, shin, cheek and a marrow bone if you can get it or 500g oxtail)
2 onions and 4 cloves of garlic
6 carrots
3 turnips
3 small or 1 large swede
2 sticks of celery
1 bouquet garni of parsley and thyme
3 beef stock cubes
4 bay leaves
6 potatoes
3 leeks
salt and pepper
1. Bring a large pan of cold water ( 3-4 litres) to the boil and add the beef in large pieces, along with the onions, garlic, herbs and stock cubes
Bring your pot to the boil and add your beef, then the veg progressively |
3. Leave to simmer for an hour then add the vegetables progressively in the order above at intervals of 10 minutes. Cut them into large pieces or leave whole, depending on the size of the veg.
4. Add the potatoes and leeks last.
5. Simmer for at least another hour (It should cook at least 3 hours)
Pot-au-Feu |
Now what about those leftovers?
:Les 'restes' |
Pot-au-feu Pies |
Fill a circle of pastry with leftovers |
Fold over and crimp then glaze |
Bake at 190 degrees for Pot-au-Feu Pasties |
But this year I have gone for something a bit fusion. I was struck how similar the Pot-au-Feu recipe is to making a Vietnamese Beef Phô- the main difference being the aromats.
I took a bottle of the wonderful magic potion ( the Pot-au-Feu bouillon)
Beef bouillon |
I stir-fried the beef and veg (except the beansprouts) along with the spices:
Stir-fry the beef and veg |
Add the noodles and beansprouts |
Pot -au-Phô |
Romans, anyone? |
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