Category:Stewed, braised or pot roasted
This category contains recipes where primary method of cooking is stewing, braising or pot roasting. A stew is a combination of solid food ingredients that have been cooked in water or other water-based liquid, typically by simmering, and that are then served without being drained.
Ingredients in a stew can include any combination of vegetables (potatoes, beans, etc.), fruits (such as peppers and tomatoes), meat, poultry, sausages and seafood. While water can be used as the stew-cooking liquid, wine, stock, and beer are also common. Seasoning and flavourings may also be added. Stews are typically cooked at a relatively low temperature (simmered, not boiled), to allow flavours to marry.
The distinctions between stew, soup, and casserole are fine ones. The ingredients of a stew may be cut into larger pieces than a those of a soup and retain more of their individual flavours; a stew may have thicker liquid than a soup, and more liquid than a casserole; a stew is more likely to be eaten as a main course than as a starter, unlike soup; and a stew can be cooked on either the stove top (or range) or in the oven, while casseroles are almost always cooked in the oven, and soups are almost always cooked on the stove-top. There are exceptions; for example, an oyster stew is thin bodied, more like a soup. The choice of name is largely a matter of custom; it is possible for the same dish to be described as soup, stew, or casserole.
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Osso bucco (veal shank) braised for 2 hours
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Chopped stewing steak
Stewing is suitable for the least tender cuts of meat that become tender and juicy with the slow moist heat method. This makes it popular in low-cost cooking. Cuts having a certain amount of marbling and gelatinous connective tissue give moist, juicy stews, while lean meat may easily become dry.
Stews may be thickened by reduction, but are more often thickened with flour, either by coating pieces of meat with flour before searing, or by using a roux or beurre manié, a dough consisting of equal parts of butter and flour. Other thickeners like cornstarch or arrowroot may also be used.
What is Braising?
Braising (from the French “braiser”) is a combination cooking method using both moist and dry heat; typically the food is first seared at a high temperature and then finished in a covered pot with a variable amount of liquid, resulting in a particular flavour.
Braising relies on heat, time, and moisture to successfully break down tough connective tissue and collagens in meat. It is an ideal way to cook tougher cuts. Many classic braised dishes such as Coq au Vin are highly-evolved methods of cooking tough and unpalatable foods. Swissing, stewing and pot-roasting are all braising types. Braising is a form of pressure cooking.
Most braises follow the same basic steps. The meat or poultry is first seared in order to brown its surface and enhance its flavour. Aromatic vegetables are sometimes then browned as well. A cooking liquid that often includes an acidic element, such as tomatoes, beer, or wine, is added to the pot, often with stock, to not quite cover the meat. The dish is cooked covered at a very low simmer until meat is fork tender. Often the cooking liquid is finished to create a sauce or gravy.
What is Pot roasting?
Pot roasting is a method of slowly cooking meat in a covered pot. It produces moist meat, making it ideal for older and/or less-expensive cuts; because the method does not require an oven, it may prove an economical option for those of limited means. The pot with meat (usually beef) and a little water, and often root vegetables, cooks over a low flame or in a medium oven.
Pot roast may also mean the specific recipe or meal produced by this method.
The meat most closely associated with this style, beef, is prepared by browning a roast-sized piece of beef (taken from the tougher chuck cut), then slow-cooking it in an acidulated liquid in a covered dish.
See also
Pages in category ‘Stewed, braised or pot roasted’
The following 164 pages are in this category, out of 164 total.
B
- Bacon, chorizo and vegetable stew
- Beef bourguignon (slow cooker recipe)
- Beef bourguignon recipe
- Beef pastitsada
- Belazu Chicken Couscous
- Bigos (Cabbage and meat stew)
- Birkapörkölt (Mutton stew) (HC)
- Boeuf bourguignon
- Bográcsgulyás (Goulash)
- Boulangère potatoes
- Braised aubergines
- Braised bamboo shoots
- Braised Lamb Shanks with cherries
- Braised red cabbage with ginger and cranberries
- Braised star anise beef
C
- Rødkål (Danish red cabbage)
- Cazuela de cordero al ajo con judías verdes
- Chicken and Dumplings
- Chicken and Sausage Gumbo
- Chicken and mushroom stroganoff
- Chicken casserole
- Chicken ghiveci
- Chicken hot-pot
- Chicken kadra with Chickpeas, peppers and onions (slow cooker recipe)
- Chicken kadra with Chickpeas, red peppers and raisins
- Chicken La Daube
- Chicken Provençal
- Chicken tagine
- Chicken tagine with chermoula
- Chicken with Preserved Lemon and Olives
- Chicken, pancetta and mushroom stew
- Chilli chicken with chickpea couscous
- Chinese braised beef
- Choto ajillo (Kid and garlic casserole)
- Coda alla vaccinara
- Coq au vin
- Creamy chicken casserole with potato dumplings
- Creamy cider pork casserole
- Cuban carne con papas
- Cuban Pescado Estofado (Stewed Fish)
- Cuban-inspired Brunswick stew
- Curry goat
- Curry sauce
- Curry Sauce 6 litres
E
F
G
- Gedünstetes Schöps (Stewed mutton)
- Gentse hutspot (Gent stew)
- Ghiveci calugaresti (Monastic vegetables)
- Ginette Mathiot's Coq au vin
- Givech
- Gluten free sausage cassoulet
- Greek beef stew with noodles (slow cooker recipe)
- Green bean casserole
- Guinness lamb shanks with dark sticky gravy
- Guinness stew
- Guiso de faisán (Pheasant stew)
K
L
- Lahmeh, batata bi khal ahmar (Meat, potatoes and red wine vinegar)
- Lamb hot pot
- Fårikål (Lamb or mutton stew with cabbage)
- Lamb shanks in porter with dark sticky gravy
- Lamb tagine
- Lancashire Hot-Pot
- Leek and mince casserole
- Lemon and bay leaf chicken with new potatoes
- Lepure cu masline (Rabbit with olives)
- Loin of pork in sherry vinegar
O
P
- Paprikás csirke (Paprika chicken)
- Pisto manchego
- Pisto Toledano
- Porco com vinho e alhos
- Pork and Bean Cassoulet
- Pork curry, slow cooked with fruit, nuts and coconut
- Porotos granados (Bean and vegetable stew)
- Pot roasted chicken with bay studded rooster potatoes
- Pot Roasted Mediterranean Chicken
- Pot-roast Guinea fowl
- Potato, savoy cabbage and mushroom casserole
- Potted hough
- Poule au pot (for 2)
- Poule au pot (for 4)
- Puerco en naranja
- Pumpkin and green bean tagine
- Purple Majesty chicken hotpot
R
S
- Salmi of game
- Sausage and bean casserole
- Sausage Boulangere (GF)
- Sausage, bacon, red cabbage and apple bake (GF)
- Sausage, Kale and Bean Stew
- Sausage, mushroom, lemon and thyme pot roast (GF)
- Scottish sausage stovies (GF)
- Serpenyős rostélyos (Braised sirloin) (HC)
- Sicilian sausage soup
- Slow cooked beef stew with a cheese rösti crust
- Slow cooked leg-of-lamb with harissa
- Slow roast beef brisket with Guinness
- Slow-cooked shin of beef
- Slow-cooked shin of beef (slow cooker recipe)
- Smoked haddock and potato hotpot
- Spatchcocked chicken with fennel and onions
- Spicy lamb meatball potato and onion hotpot
- Spicy sorrel flavoured chicken
- Steven's beef stew with suet dumplings
- Stewed oxtail with butter beans
- Stewed quails
- Summer beef tagine
- Szeged gulyás of fowl (HC)
T
- Tajine bil hoot (Fish Tagine)
- Tajine karnoune bil limoun (Artichoke and lemon tagine)
- Tex-Mex pulled chicken
- Texas Chili
- The New official recipe for Spaghetti Bolognaise
- The renowned Mr Brown Pulled Pork - Oriental
- The renowned Mr Brown's Pulled Pork (Slow cooker recipe)
- The renowned Mr Brown's Pulled Pork (Sous-Vide recipe)
- Thit bo kho (Vietnamese beef stew with basil and star-anise)
- Tokana (Shepherd's stew)
- Tomaticán
- Tomaticán (Beef and tomato stew)
- Tomato casserole
- Traditional Irish Stew