New England Yankee Pot Roast

Yankee Cooking At Its Best

This New England Classic is easy to make, but does require a long braise. The active cooking time is probably an hour or less. It is even better the second day.

The first time I made this, the aroma filled my SoCal home and brought me straight back to my Massachusetts roots. This can be made in a dutch oven or a slow cooker; the method is the same.

Ingredients

  1. A two-to-three pound chuck roast
  2. Kosher Salt and Freshly Ground Black Pepper
  3. 3 tablespoons high smoke-point fat. Any of the following will suffice: Ghee, clarified butter, vegetable oil, avocado oil, grapeseed oil
  4. Rough Mirepoix: 1 onion, sliced; 3 carrots, peeled and sliced into 2-3 inch pieces; 3 celery stalks, sliced into 1 inch pieces
  5. 8 oz cremini mushrooms, halved or quartered depending on size
  6. 3-4 garlic cloves, finely minced
  7. Zest of half an orange
  8. OPTIONAL: 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper, for a little zing
  9. Umami Bomb: 1 tablespoon each of 3 or 4 of the following: tamari or soy sauce, roasted garlic paste, anchovy paste, tomato paste, miso paste, marmite
  10. 3 tablespoons all purpose flour
  11. 1 bottle (750ml) of reasonably crappy but still drinkable red wine – Reserve 1/4 cup separately
  12. 2 cups chicken stock
  13. 2 packets unflavored gelatin
  14. Sachet d’Épices: 2 bay leaves, several sprigs of thyme, a few parsley stems, a few strips of orange peel (white stuff – called pith – scraped off with a sharp knife): All wrapped up in a piece of cheesecloth and secured with twine.
  15. 1-2 lbs of baby yellow potatoes, whole with skins on
  16. Parsley, for garnish, if desired.
  17. 4 tablespoons cornstarch

Mise En Place

  1. Trim chuck roast of any excess gristle or silver skin; split into two or three pieces if need be. Season aggressively on all sides with kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper.
  2. Prepare Mirepoix: Slice onion, carrots and celery; combine and reserve in a medium bowl
  3. Prepare mushrooms and reserve in a medium bowl (or the box the came in!)
  4. Mince garlic and zest orange (and cayenne, if using); combine and reserve in a small bowl
  5. Make Umami Bomb: Select at least three of the ingredients and smush together in a small bowl until a smooth, homogeneous paste is formed.
  6. Measure out flour and reserve in a small bowl
  7. Open bottle of wine and remove cork (You don’t want to be doing this while everything is burning in the pan!). Reserve 1/4 cup separately and set aside.
  8. Measure out chicken stock and sprinkle gelatin packets on top
  9. Prepare Sachet d’Épices
  10. Locate potatoes
  11. Measure out cornstarch and reserve in a small bowl. Place with reserved 1/4 cup red wine.

Method

  1. If using oven, preheat oven to 325°F
  2. In a large sauté pan over medium high heat, add 3 tablespoons high smoke point fat and swirl to coat the bottom of the pan. When oil is shimmering, add beef, working in batches if necessary, and brown on all sides, 5-7 minutes per side (Remember: Brown means brown).
  3. Remove beef and place in a dutch oven or slow cooker. Do not clean out the sauté pan – you should have a lovely fond built up on the bottom of your pan.
  4. Add mirepoix (celery, onion, carrots) to the pan and sauté over medium heat. As the vegetables release their moisture, scrape up the fond (browned bits) from the bottom of the pan. If the fond threatens to burn, add a splash of water or wine to aid in deglazing the pan. Continue to cook mirepoix until lightly caramelized, 10 or so minutes.
  5. Add mushrooms to the pan, and sauté with mirepoix until lightly darkened, 3 – 5 minutes
  6. Add minced garlic and orange zest (and cayenne, if using). Sauté until very fragrant, 1 minute.
  7. Add Umami Bomb and stir well to fully incorporate
  8. Add flour and stir well to incorporate. Cook off raw flour taste – it will brown slightly and may give off a nutty aroma
  9. While stirring, slowly add bottle of red wine (Leave reserved 1/4 cup aside). Return heat to high and bring to a boil, then reduce heat to medium. Allow wine to reduce by 2/3 – it should take on a syrupy consistency. If you run a wooden spoon along the bottom of the pan, you should catch a glimpse of the bottom of the pan before the liquid covers it over.
  10. Once the wine is reduced, dump the contents of the sauté pan over the beef in the dutch oven or slow cooker.
  11. Pour the stock/gelatin mixture over everything
  12. Add Sachet d’Épices and submerge under liquid
  13. Add the potatoes and stir well to combine (if a few potatoes are peaking out above the liquid, that’s okay)
  14. Oven: Cook in oven for 4 hours, mostly covered but with lid slightly askew to allow steam to escape. Slow Cooker: Cook on HIGH for 6 hours or LOW for 8-10 hours.
  15. To Finish: Use a slotted spoon to remove large chunks from stew (beef, carrots, onions, celery, potatoes, etc). Locate Sachet d’Épices and discard. Arrange beef, carrots, onions, celery and potatoes in separate piles on a platter if desired.
  16. Strain remaining liquid into a fat separator (no fat separator? Use this nifty trick!) into a saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce for 5 minutes.
  17. Mix reserved 1/4 cup red wine with 4 tablespoons cornstarch and whisk into a slurry. (You were wondering where I was going with that, huh?)
  18. Slowly add slurry to boiling braising liquid, 1 tablespoon at a time, until sauce is nice and rich and easily coats the back of a spoon. Taste and adjust for seasoning.
  19. Pour reduced liquid from saucepan back over beef and vegetables. Garnish with parsley if desired. Serve.

8 thoughts on “New England Yankee Pot Roast

  1. I am not certain the place you’re getting your info, but good topic. I needs to spend a while learning much more or figuring out more. Thanks for magnificent information I was on the lookout for this info for my mission.

    Like

    1. Thanks so much! Lol yes, mostly I got my information from trial and error and burning a lot of food. Practice makes perfect. Glad you found it helpful. Keep me up to date on your future culinary adventures!

      Like

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