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roast

Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast

October 24, 2016 by rachelle 18 Comments

Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast is an update to a classic dish by beer-braising the roast for several hours and finishing the veggies for an amazing meal!

 

I got a little lost, y’all.

Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast is an update to a classic dish by beer-braising the roast for several hours and finishing the veggies for an amazing meal!

The main reason that I started this ridiculous website was to share my love of home brewing, craft beer, and food.  Not necessarily in that order.  I don’t know where in tarnation my head went, but I got distracted and lost my focus.  I think sometimes we get caught up in what is trendy, or what everyone else is doing, or what we think should be rather than keeping true to who we are.  And, as usual, by we, I mean me.  Well, I’m focused and I’m back to doing what is in my heart. And that, my friends, is all things beer.

Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast is an update to a classic dish by beer-braising the roast for several hours and finishing the veggies for an amazing meal!

I started this website in August of 2014 with my very first post of a Vanilla Bean Bourbon Porter Peach Pie.  I made the beer that went into that pie.  The photos were crap and taken with a point and shoot, but I make no apologies.  Everyone has to start somewhere and I still remember the passion and excitement I felt when I made a pie with my own signature home brew.  And it was delicious.

Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast is an update to a classic dish by beer-braising the roast for several hours and finishing the veggies for an amazing meal!

I’ve also shared some of my home brewing fun over the last couple of years.  There was this competition where I unofficially came in second place with the above mentioned signature beer.  There was an informational post about the basics of home brewing and the annual Women’s Brew at NoDa Brewing Company.  And we can’t forget about the time Lisa ran her truck over my brew pot – presumably so she would beat me in said competition.  She didn’t. 🙂  In fairness, I will disclose that she did buy me a new one!  Some of these old photos didn’t survive the transfer from my original site to this one.  That’s both a blessing and a curse.

Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast is an update to a classic dish by beer-braising the roast for several hours and finishing the veggies for an amazing meal!

The point of all this is to say that I’m back to basics.  The basics of my passion, my fun, my purpose, and enthusiasm.  Home brewing, craft beer, good friends, and good food.  So I leave you with the basic of all basics.  The pot roast.  Braised in a brown ale.

Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast
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Brown Ale Beer-Braised Pot Roast

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 - 3 lb chuck roast
  • 1 - 2 cups of flour
  • salt and pepper
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 2 tablespoons canola oil
  • 1 12 ounce can of brown ale - I used Sweet Josie Brown Ale from Lonerider here in North Carolina
  • 2 onions peeled and quartered
  • 12 carrots peeled, trimmed, and cut into 1 - 1 1/2 inch pieces
  • 5 baking potatoes peeled and cut into 2 inch pieces

Instructions

  1. Heat oven to 275
  2. Combine flour with a generous amount of salt and pepper in a bowl
  3. Dredge roast in flour, salt, and pepper mixture covering both sides and shake off excess
  4. Heat oil and butter in a Dutch oven over medium-high heat
  5. Add roast and sear on all sides - about 4 - 5 minutes each side
  6. Remove roast from pot and set aside on a plate
  7. Remove pot from heat and turn off burner
  8. Carefully add beer to the pot - it will splash and splatter
  9. Add pot back to medium heat and scrape all the bits from the bottom of the pot
  10. Return meat and any juices to the pot, cover with a tight lid, and transfer to the oven for 4 - 4 1/2 hours
  11. Add vegetables to the pot and cook for another hour or until fork-tender

NOTES:

  1. My Dutch oven from Lodge has a very tight fitting lid and I don’t lose much liquid.  If yours isn’t tight, you may want to check it periodically to make sure you still have liquid and add more beer or beef stock as needed.
  2. You don’t want to put your vegetables in too soon or they’ll get weird and mushy
  3. You don’t want your potatoes to be covered in the liquid or they’ll get weird and mealy
  4. I am a complete weenie when it comes to fire, so I always turn it off when I’m adding booze so I don’t blow myself up.
  5. I sometimes like my potatoes with sour cream and/or butter, but sometimes I like gravy.  If you want or need to thicken up the liquid for some beer gravy, just mix together 1/3 cup with 3 tablespoons of corn starch, bring the liquid to a boil and slowly stir in the cornstarch about 1 tablespoon at a time until it’s the thickness desired.

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Filed Under: Entrees Tagged With: beef, beer, beer braised, craft beer, meat, one pot, pot roast, potatoes, roast, roasted, vegetables

Sweet Josie Brown Ale Beer Braised Chuck Short Ribs Pot Roast

January 7, 2016 by rachelle 36 Comments

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How’s the first real week of 2016 going for y’all?  I gotta be honest here.  I have no idea what in tarnation is going on, but mine has been brutal!  I just can’t catch a break.  Do you ever have those days or week where everyone wants a piece of you and there just isn’t any left to go around?

 

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Yeah, me too.  So, we’re on the homestretch into the weekend and I’m not messing around.  There are no salads here today – although I will include some vegetables – just because…

 

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We’re only one week into the new year, but I’m busting out the beer.  Sometimes ya just have to do what blows your dress up.  And to borrow a phrase from the Beach Boys and my friend Chey – Help Me Rhonda!  These Sweet Josie Brown Ale Braised Chuck Short Ribs are just what the doctor ordered.  They are cooked forever low and slow and just fall off the bone and melt in your mouth.

 

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If you aren’t familiar with Sweet Josie Brown, it’s a brown ale made here in North Carolina at Lonerider Brewery.  It’s totally my jam and I highly recommend it.  If you can’t find it in your area, just use your favorite brown ale and I’m sure it will be fantastic!

 

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Have a great weekend, friends!

 

P.S.  We totally piled this on top of some roasted garlic and goat cheese mashed potatoes.

 

Print

Sweet Josie Brown Beer Braised Chuck Short Ribs Pot Roast

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 1 3/4 pounds of chuck short ribs
  • salt and pepper
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 1/4 cup flour
  • 1 can Loanrider Sweet Josie Brown Ale or other brown ale of choice
  • Few sprigs of fresh thyme
  • 4 carrots
  • 2 onions

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 225
  2. Heat skillet over medium to medium-high heat and melt butter and olive oil together
  3. Liberally salt and pepper short ribs
  4. Sear each side of each rib (I had 4 and did 2 at a time) on all sides - do this in batches so they sear and caramelize rather than steam
  5. Set each batch aside - I did it in two batches
  6. When all meat is removed, add the tomato paste and whisk for a minute or so until melted
  7. Add flour and whisk for another minute
  8. Return meat to pan and add beer and thyme
  9. Cover and transfer to oven for 3 and a half hours
  10. Add carrots and onions and return to oven for another 1 1/2 to 2 hours

Filed Under: Entrees Tagged With: beer, beer braised, beer braised short ribs, post roast, ribs, roast, short ribs, vegetables

Stuffed Leg of Lamb – Pinot Noir Soaked Fig and Dates with Gorgonzola and Pistachios

March 26, 2015 by rachelle 4 Comments

I highly recommend that you ask the butcher to butterfly your lamb for you.  I speak from experience here.

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I tried to figure it out, consulted Google, and watched a video.  No luck.  Chris had to do it.

 

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He doesn’t mind though.  It makes him feel all cave-manly to cut meat and wield a knife.

Speaking of meat – it never looks as good in pictures as it does in real life.  At least not in my pictures.  I’m not going to burden you with ugly meat pictures with unappetizing juices leaking out. I’m just going to tell you to make this dang roast.  It’s totally awesome.

You don’t care for lamb, you say?  Well, big whoop?  It’s all about this booze-soaked fig and date stuffing with Gorgonzola and Pistachios anyway.  Don’t get me wrong – it’s fantastic with the lamb, but it would be good in just about any other kind of meat you like.  I think it would be awesome in pork chops or a pork loin too.

If I were going to stuff this into a pork chop, I would probably just cut a pocket and jam it in there. For a pork loin, I’m thinking maybe the way to go would be to butterfly it have Chris butterfly it, pound it out flat, stuff it and roll it. No matter what kind of meat blows your dress up, this stuffing is totally awesome.  You need to do this!

 

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And that’s all I’ve got to say about that.

 

Print

Stuffed Leg of Lamb – Pinot Noir Soaked Fig and Dates with Gorgonzola and Pistachios

Ingredients

  • 4.5 pound leg of lamb butterflied (do yourself a favor and have the butcher do it)
  • 1/2 cup bread crumbs
  • 5 garlic cloves
  • 1/2 cup salted pistachios
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil plus more to rub on lamb
  • 3-4 ounces Gorgonzola crumbled
  • 6-8 dried figs soaked in Pinot Noir for at least 4 hours, chopped
  • 6-8 dried dates soaked in Pinot Noir for at least 4 hourschopped
  • 4-5 sprigs fresh rosemary
  • 2-3 sprigs fresh thyme
  • salt and pepper

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350
  2. In the bowl of a food processor combine dates, figs, Gorgonzola, pistachios, garlic and bread crumbs. Pulse until combined and nuts and garlic are roughly chopped.
  3. Drizzle in olive oil and pulse until combined and the mixture is sort of damp and pasty
  4. Spread stuffing mixture on inside of lamb fold top of lamb over, tie with kitchen twine to keep together, rub outside of lamb with olive oil, salt, and pepper.
  5. Roast at 350 15-20 minutes per pound, until rare or preferred temperature

Filed Under: Archives Tagged With: cheese, date, fiig, garlic, gorgonzola, lamb, pistachio, roast

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About Beer Girl Cooks


I’m Rachelle, an attorney by day with a passion for home brewing and cooking with craft beer.

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