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For the Ultimate Stew

  • 1 Kg Brisket (cut into 3cm x 3cm chuncks)
  • 300ml red wine (Merlot is great, but anything robust)
  • 500ml water
  • 2 stock cubes
  • 4 carrots (chopped)
  • 2 onions (chopped)
  • Sunflower Oil
  • 2 tbs tyme
  • Salt & pepper
  • 25g Flour
  • 2 tbs tomato puree
  • 250g Closed Cup mushrooms (whole)
  • 3 cloves garlic (chopped)
  • Worcestershire Sauce

For the Ultimate Dumplings

  • 100g Bread
  • 140g butter (cubed)
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt

3 tbs freshly dried (good bunch fresh) parsely + extra for serving

  • 1 tsp dried tyme
  • 2 eggs (beaten)
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    Method

    • step 1

      Add oil to an oven proof casserole or metal stewing pot and heat until it is smoking. If you want to use a slow cooker then just do all the steps in a large pan and transfer to the slow cooker when the strew is simmering. It is good economy to buy a whole role of brisket from your butcher. When you are about to start cooking, rince it under the tap to remove that 'sweat' that it generates in the fridge.
    • step 2

      Preheat the oven to 160C. Sear the beef in batches on all sides to get brown caramalisation of the meet. Remove from the pan and set to one side. Add the onions to the pan and cook down, stirring all the time. When done stir in the flour and mix. Add the water, stock cubes, red wine and tomato purée. Mix and make sure everything is dissolved. Return the beef to the mix and throw in the carrots and mushrooms. To give it some extra flavour richness, add 2 tbs Worcestershire Sauce.
    • step 3

      Transfer the cooking pot with the lid on to the oven for 1 hour 40 minutes with the lid on, or in the slow cooker on high for 1 hour then 5-6 hours on low (or just 6-7 hours on auto).
    • step 4

      crank the oven up to 200C. Throw the bread into a food processor and blitz! Throw in the baking powder, salt and herbs. Throw in the butter and blitz again until the butter disappears. Add the eggs and blitz again until a wet sticky dough is formed. You can of course do this by hand using a grater for the bread and mixing with a spoon. Open the stew pot and take small pieces of dough and form into dumplings (around the size of a small orange). Add to the stew and close the lid. Put the stew in the pre-heated oven for 20 minutes. If using a slow cooker, add when the cooker goes down to the 'low' setting.
    • step 5

      Serve ladled into a bowl with some fresh chopped parselly spinkled on top. Goes great with a glass of robust red wine or English Pale Ale.
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    Comments, questions and tips (15)

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    Overall rating

    A star rating of 4.5 out of 5.7 ratings

    mattmcconnell

    Not a very well-written recipe. Forgetting the typos, what does "cook down" onions mean? When does the garlic go in? The thyme?

    Pamela Cramer

    Thanks Chris. This was delicious. I made the stew with Guinness instead of wine, and marmite instead of Worcester sauce, and the dumplings with crumbed waffle and scone as I had no bread. It came out a treat. I will definitely save this recipe and make it again.

    jbeard34

    Have you not got a spell checker or a proof reader?! So many typos on this!

    davewattsuk

    A touch pedantic, isn't it?

    Veronique Murray

    Stew lovely but dumpling recipe can't be right surely 140g butter and 2 eggs to only 100g dry consistency like thick paint.. Just added a load of flour to see if they can be saved ?

    AzJsy

    Veronique, did you use bread or bread crumbs? I am making this now and thought (dried) bread crumbs for some reason, glad I double checked and will use fresh bread.

    aainsley

    Made this twice now and had fantastic results both times! Absolutely delicious, beef cooked to perfection! I cooked on the stove as my oven isn't great, worked just as well on a low heat for the same time.

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