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Maloney
Irish Beef Stew
My friend's name is Duane. By day, most days, he's an insurance
executive with about 90 employees reporting to him. On March 17th each
year, he's a completely different guy. Lucky him. On St. Patrick's
Day, Duane is a leprechaun. You see, Duane is 2'7" tall. For the
"season," as they call it (St. Patrick's DAY has been
stretched to about a week), Duane dresses at night in a perfectly
tailored leprechaun suit and goes "on tour." His larger
friends carefully carry him on their shoulder from bar to bar. They
put him on the bar where, amongst the glassware, he deftly dances a
jig or two and gets his picture taken with everyone who wants one. And
who wouldn't, because no one would believe you've seen an honest to
goodness REAL leprechaun back home! Duane (I mean, the leprechaun),
also gets to kiss just about a zillion pretty girls --cheeks only--and
then off he goes on a protective shoulder to the next bar. Each visit
takes about an hour to complete.
Some would think this is taking advantage of little people. I haven't
discussed this with Duane. I don't need to. You can just look at the
smile on his face. He's in heaven in his green top hat, white tights,
little green pants and his little green vest. He's the center of
attention and a mighty good dancer. He's a mini-version of John
Travolta on that bar. He's paid handsomely and he just plain
has a great time.
I asked Duane why I don't see him during the summer. I only run into
him around St. Patrick's Day. "I'm a family man," he
answered. "When I'm finished with work, most days I go home to
play with my kids." He's got a 5-year-old daughter and an
18-month-old. His 5-year-old is little like him. I hear she's not yet
two feet tall and scrambles on the bus each day to go to kindergarten.
Visualize that one--and smile.
I hope you had a fun St. Patrick's Day. This year I was on a cooking
mission for St. Patrick's Day. I had a hankering for my mother's Irish
stew. It's another one of those recipes I forgot to ask for before she
died. In my mind, I could sort of see her make it but I didn't know
exactly what to do. I sent an email to all of my family members
thinking maybe one of them had been smarter than me. Maybe one of them
had coerced my mother or Aunt into giving them the recipe, and maybe
they would share it with me. It's a simple recipe. It had to be
because my mother didn't like complications in her food.
No luck. One, wrote back, "I don't even remember how Mom boiled
water," and then went on to tell me the foods she made that he
missed. Another wrote to say she watched Mom make it once, but
that Mom told her it was never the same twice. She wasn't quite
sure of all of the details, so I told her if what I came up with
tasted even close, I'd pass it along. One other, just wished me luck.
The others (I think) are still digging in their recipe drawers.
I was on my own.
When we ate the results, I was transported back to Washinton, D.C.,
circa the '60s and, boy, it tasted good. I hope you like it too. By
the way, I found out in an article that the corned beef and cabbage
combo is not indigenous to Ireland.
They don't serve it there. I HATE corned beef and cabbage. Now it
makes sense. I'd rather have my Irish beef stew.
Special notes: When my mom made beef stew, she made it for a
"crowd"--our family--in a large electric fry pan. She'd
throw all ingredients in and let it cook on low for hours, sometimes
all afternoon on a Sunday. This was before slow cookers or "Crock
Pots." You can do yours in the slow cooker. I've done mine on the
stove so you can see how to do it the old-fashioned way--the way they
would have done it in Ireland
years ago.
Irish Beef Stew
Serves 6
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 pounds beef stewing meat cut into 1-inch cubes
4 cups beef broth
4 Tbl Worcestershire sauce
12 oz gravy (from a jar or you can make it yourself)
1 tsp sugar
6 oz tomato paste
1/2 tsp salt
1-1/2 Tbl dried thyme
4 or 5 large baking potatoes (about 3 lbs), peeled and cut into large
cubes
3 cups baby carrots or regular carrots peeled and cut into 1-inch
slices
1 large onion cut into chunks
Water, if necessary
Parsley
Get out your large soup pot. Seven- or eight-quart size will do it.
Pour in your vegetable oil and put in your meat. Brown the meat on all
sides quickly over medium high heat. Stir often to toss the meat
around. You're not cooking it all the way through, just lightly
browning the outside. (Five to six minutes.)
Pour in the broth, Worcestershire, gravy, sugar, tomato paste, salt
and thyme. Stir this all up and bring to a boil. Then turn down to
medium low. Let simmer covered for 45 minutes. Stir once in awhile to
make sure nothing sticks to the bottom. You'll open the pot and be
amazed at how much gravy you have!
Now it's time to peel your potatoes. (If you peel them ahead, they
will turn brown.) Add the potatoes, onion and carrots to your pot.
Bring to a boil again. You're going to simmer 15 to 30 minutes more
until the potatoes are soft but not mushy and the carrots are cooked.
If the liquid is not covering everything, you can add up to 2 cups
more water and stir it into the gravy. Don't worry. The sauce will
thicken up again.
Chopped parsley just adds a little color at the end as a garnish.
Serve in soup bowls or other big bowls with some nice bread to soak up
the sauce. This is a simple, Irish meal. Don't try to make it fancy.
You'll spoil the intention. Comfort food. Enjoy!

Saint Patrick's Day
Links
St.
Patrick's Day Around the World
Irish Toasts
Marjorie
Louise St. Patrick's Day Treats
Eight
Irish Blessings
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Prayer
Irish Cheer
Irish Wisdom
St.
Patrick's Day Traditions and Fun Facts
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Quiz
Irish
Quiz 2
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