Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Father knows be(ef)st

A few years ago my dad served me a pot roast which I was more than a little reluctant to try. Now, before I write anything more you should first know this: my dad is fucking awesome. He is an amazingly resilient person full of the kind of wisdom and old-country surlyness which one cannot acquire without having lived through multiple immigrations and life-endangering shenanigans. That having been said, he is a godawful cook. His past offerings have included red cabbage juice and maple-beansprouts, so you can understand my surprise when I was faced with something which was both delicious AND cooked by my pops. Unheard of! His original was done with lamb and without the rub, but the simplicity and "death by onion" technique remains in my recipe.

Armanowski pot roast

- 3-4 lbs beef chuck roast
-6 large vidalia onions, diced
(or whatever it takes to cover the roast given your meat and your cooking vessel)
-3 large cloves of garlic
-2 tbsp fresh rosemary
-12 pitted prunes
-2 tbsp olive oil
-1/2 tsp whole peppercorns
-Salt + pepper

Pre-heat your oven to 325 degrees and toss the diced onion with a 1/2 tsp of salt (you can always add more later if that isn't quite enough). Season your beef with salt and pepper, and don't bother remove the strings tied around the meat. Puree the garlic, 1/4 tsp salt, olive oil, rosemary, and prunes together with your weapon of choice. Ever seen a pile of bear droppings? That's pretty much the look you're going for. Put a little bit of oil on your fingers and proceed to smear the paste onto all sides of the beef, whence it should resemble a larger pile of bear droppings. Arrange a handful of onion for your roast to sit on at the bottom of a dutch oven or other heavy lidded cooking vessel and cover the meat with the remaining heap of onions and peppercorns. Place the lid onto the pot and leave it in the oven for 3 hours, or until good and tender. Don't worry about massive pungency from the onions, they lose their bite as they cook down and get surprisingly sweet.




No broth, water, or wine needed - that bit of salt you added to the onions will help bring out their own moisture and when you eventually uncover this awesomeness you will find it swimming in its own de-licious juices. Once cooked, Sweep any remaining onion from the top of the meat and brown it uncovered underneath a broiler for a little extra colour. Slice up the beef and serve it swimming in au jus. Props, dad. Serious props.

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