- only about two people will read this (one of them probably my Mother);
- I often tamper with perfection and change a recipie; and
- I will aknowledge where they came from.
Beef with Olives and 100 cloves of Garlic
Skordostoumbi
Skordostoumbi
The instructions are a little kurz but I don't want to type forever. Do put in all that garlic it's fantastic! This is one of the tastiest beef stews I have ever eaten. The book is "The Olive and the Caper" by Susanna Hoffman.
1/4 cup olive oil
1.5 kilos beef in 2 inch chunks
100 cloves of garlic
48 Kalamata olives
4 cups dry red wine
1 tbsp tomatoe paste
2 bay leaves
1/2 tsp freshly ground black peper
1/2 cup shredded basil leaves
1/4 cup olive oil
1.5 kilos beef in 2 inch chunks
100 cloves of garlic
48 Kalamata olives
4 cups dry red wine
1 tbsp tomatoe paste
2 bay leaves
1/2 tsp freshly ground black peper
1/2 cup shredded basil leaves
- Preheat oven to 220 celsius
- Heat oil and brown meat batch by batch. Place in a clay pot (or casserole dish).
- add garlic, olives wine, tomatoe paste, bay leaves and pepper to the juices left in the pan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Add this to the clay pot (or casserole dish).
- cook stirring once or twice until tender for about 1 3/4 - 2 hours until beef is tender and sauce thickens.
- take out of oven and let rest for 20 minutes. remove bay leaves and sprinkle basil.
Hi- I tried adding you to my blogroll. HAve you got the RSS feed for this blog?
ReplyDeleteIgnore that- it just appeared in my Blogroll. Oh well...Recipe looks great :0)
ReplyDeleteHi Jodie love the pics and the recipes you can add me to your reader list. I am going to send your sausage recipe to out fiend Kevin, looking forward to trying them, Sue
ReplyDeleteThanks Sue, the hot spicy Italian suasages are really best, and it makes great meatballs as well. Beef would be good, but that is much harder to find (at a reasonable price) in Zürich.
ReplyDeleteHi Jodie,
ReplyDeleteWell done on setting up the blog, I look forward to further culinary adventures! Sorry for the delay in commenting – I’ve been a bit lzy about setting up a Google account, with yet another password for me to forget…
This looks yummy! We’re heading into winter now here in Canberra – good stew weather! I’ve made a Greek stew in the past which I think was vaguely similar to this, but with much less garlic, only 2-3 cloves from memory. It was rather underwhelming, so I agree that the garlic must be crucial! Sharon