Traditional Shepherd's Pie

Once a month at our amazing preschool, which I could rave and rave about, each class "hosts" a luncheon for the teachers as their monthly staff meeting.  What that entails is that all the parents from each class plan a short lunch party (food, dessert, decor, drinks and a little gift) for the entire staff to enjoy at the end of the school day.  Last week, it was the Young Two's turn to host the luncheon and we decided to go with a St. Patrick's Day theme.  It seriously turned out SO cute and the teachers had a ball.  I think the group of moms in this class are some of the most talented women - I got these pictures from one of the moms, Amy, who did the GORGEOUS flowers and adorable balloons.  Another mom brought the theme-perfect cake, another purchased on-point table settings, and class mom, Kyndall, put together the adorable teacher gifts on each plate. 

In any case, I got asked to make the entree and I was more than happy to oblige, but at first we were stumped with what would make a good, Irish-themed entree for 15 people.  Of course, the second I mentioned it to Aaron, he said, make Shepherd's Pie.  I don't know how traditionally Irish it is to be honest, I haven't researched the food-etymology of it, but it worked perfectly!  Since I made it in such a huge quantity - think six pounds beef! - I wasn't initially going to write up the recipe for the blog and make it another time, but I got asked a whole bunch of times how I made it today and so I thought I would go ahead and write it out. 

The photos show a small, square dish of pie, because that day I made two large casseroles and one small one for us, the recipe below will yield enough for one rectangular casserole.

Traditional Shepherd's Pie

Serves 6

For the Filling:

  • 1/2 medium white onion, diced
  • 2 tsp. minced garlic
  • 1-2 cups chopped carrots, to your liking
  • 2 tbs. butter
  • 2 lbs. ground beef (I used a 75% lean for this recipe, it will have more flavor)
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Ground sage
  • Dried Basil
  • Dried Thyme
  • 1-2 cups frozen or fresh peas, to your liking
  • 1 Knorr beef stock base or 2 beef bullion cubes
  • Flour

For the Potato Topping:

  • 4-5 medium russet potatoes (3-4 lbs)
  • 2 tbs. butter
  • Salt, pepper
  • Freeze dried or fresh chives, minced
  • 2 cups shredded cheddar cheese, divided
  • Heavy cream or half-and-half

In a large dutch oven, over medium-high heat, melt the butter.  Add the onion and minced garlic. Saute for a few minutes, until fragrant.  Add the carrots and saute for a few minutes more, until carrots are just tender, but not smushy.

Using a spatula, push your veggies to the side and add the ground beef.  Brown the beef, breaking it up with your spatula.  As you go, season the meat liberally with salt and pepper, and then season with sage, thyme and basil to taste (I just give each a good shake over the mix, probably 1 tsp or so). Then mix the beef into the veggies and continue to cook until all the beef is broken up and cooked through.

Add the beef base to the pot and stir until its dissolved.  Turn the heat down to medium and add the peas. Mix evenly until the peas have heated through.  One spoonful at a time, sprinkle flour over the beef and mix until the flour has absorbed the loose liquid in the pot.  How much flour you use will depend on how much "gravy" you will like in your beef.  I prefer the base to be rather thick so it doesn't bubble through the potatoes on top, so I continue to add flour until the juice has turned to a thin paste or thick gravy and is no longer runny. 

Remove from heat and spoon the beef mixture into a rectangular baking dish.  Set aside to cool while you make the topping.

Peel and quarter the potatoes and boil in a pot of salted water. When the potatoes are tender enough to easily pierce with fork, turn off the heat.  Using a slotted spoon, transfer the potatoes to the bowl of a stand mixer.

Add the butter to the potatoes and mix with a paddle attachment on low.  Season with salt and pepper.  Add 1 tbs. of chives.  Stir in a small handful of cheese, reserving the rest.  Slowly add cream, just a little at a time, beating until smooth.  You want the potatoes to be THICK, not watery, so go slow with the cream, really whipping them up on high between additions. You want them to be the consistency of a thick buttercream icing, but smooth.  Taste and re-season to preference.

Top the cooled beef mixture with the remaining shredded cheese.  Then top with the potatoes, spreading evenly.  I like to add texture to the potatoes, swirling them up with a fork, so they brown attractively in the oven.  You can get really fancy, and apply the potatoes with a pastry bag and a large cupcake tip - extra points for presentation on that one!

If making ahead, you can cover the casserole and refrigerate until you want to use it, up two two days or freeze it even!  If doing either of those, when you are ready to bake it, set the casserole out on the counter while the oven pre-heats so its not super cold going into the oven.

You can kick it up one more notch and brush the top of the potatoes with just a tiny bit of melted butter before it goes in the oven.  It will brown and form almost a butter crust on top and is kind of amazing.

If making right away, bake in the top third of your oven at 400° for 15 minutes, then turn the casserole and cook for 10-15 minutes more until bubbly and browned on top.  Serve immediately.


Comforting Chili-Mac

So right now finding things to eat in our house can be a bit of a challenge; everyone has an opinion and so I feel like often whatever I make, at least one person is unhappy that night at dinner.  Townes is in a phase where all meat is "sausage" and he only wants "sausage" - Hondo is all carbs all the time, if there isn't pasta, life's not worth living - and Aaron is fine as long as the vegetables aren't big enough to be obvious.  Easy to make everyone happy, right?

Not surprisingly I was exasperated figuring out what to make for dinner, so I asked Chanel (who I have finally realized is like a dinner Magic 8 Ball - I don't know how she does it - I say what should I make for dinner and she just says "x" and its perfect).  Well, she said chili, because it would make T happy, but then macaroni because of Hondo.  I couldn't choose between my children, so I made both.

This chili-mac is full of veggies (and you can even add more, I think sweet potatoes diced up add a great layer of flavor in chili and are chock full of nutrients; a spicy pepper like a jalapeno would kick it up a notch; use your imagination!), has pasta for Hondo, meat for Townes (we can just call it sausage), and is wrapped in a silky cheese sauce no one can resist.  Serve it Texas-style with some Fritos for a second-level frito pie, or top it fully-loaded with sour cream, bacon, green onions and shredded cheese, or just eat it as it is.  You can't go wrong.

Cozy Chili-Mac

Serves 8

ingredients for chili:

  • 3 tbs butter
  • 2 tbs minced garlic
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced small
  • 1 green bell pepper, diced small
  • 1 medium to large white onion, diced small
  • 2 lbs ground beef
  • 3 tbs chili powder
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 2 tsp chipotle powder
  • 1 tsp oregano
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1 can of red kidney beans (15 oz)
  • 1 can of black beans (15 oz)
  • 1 small can of crushed or petit diced tomatoes
  • 1 lb tube pasta, uncooked (I used elbows but cavatappi would be fun, or anything you like to hold sauce well)
  • 1 box (32 oz) beef broth

ingredients for cheese sauce:

  • 2 tbs butter
  • 2 tbs flour
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1/2 cup chicken broth (optional)
  • 2 cups shredded Mexican blend cheese
  • Salt and pepper

In a large Dutch oven or pot, melt the 3 tbs of butter and sauté the garlic for just a minute or two until fragrant. Add the peppers and onion and sauté until onions are translucent.

Push the vegetables to the on half of the pot, add half of the ground beef and brown. Once browned well, and broken up, stir into the vegetables and push the mixture back to half the pot. Repeat with second half of the meat.

Add the seasonings (chili powder, chipotle, cumin, oregano and salt and pepper) and stir to combine well. Add the beans and tomatoes. Combine evenly and bring to a simmer.

Pour in the beef broth, bring to a boil and add the uncooked pasta. Boil until the pasta is cooked: it will probably take 50% longer than the time on the box (i.e. If it says 8 minutes, expect about 12). Stir frequently to prevent the chili from cooking into the bottom of the pot.

While the pasta in cooking, prepare your cheese sauce. In a saucepan, melt the butter over medium-low heat and then whisk in the flour. Whisking constantly, let the floor and butter cook for just a minute or two, but do not burn.

Slowly, adding it just a little at a time, whisk in the half cup of chicken broth, whisking until smooth. Repeat with the milk and then cream. Once combined, mix in the cheese and stir until melted. Season with salt and pepper. Remove from heat.

Once the pasta is cooked into the chili, remove from heat and pour the cheese sauce into the chili. Stir well to combine together. Serve immediately. Garnish with sour cream, bacon bits, shredded cheese, sliced green onions, chives or Fritos.


Beef and Broccoli: NY Chinese Take-Out

There are a lot of things I love about living in Texas, and lots of foods I love eating in Texas, but there is one (of a couple things) that I can not get here that just kills me: Chinese Take-Out. 

When I lived in New York growing up, we could get it anywhere really.  Every town had at least two different places, and truthfully, they tasted the same, the menus were the same, and they were perfect.

My asian-take-out game stepped up a few notches when I moved to San Francisco in college - suddenly, there wasn't just chinese.  There was Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Vietnamese, Pan-Asian, Asian-Indian, the list goes on.  SO. MUCH. GOOD. FOOD.  And, it was all take-out. 

Such simple beauty in just calling it in, picking it up, boarding a cold, wet, smelly, MUNI bus, sitting in a cold, hard seat smelling it's delicious aroma through its Styrofoam encasement, and finally walking up three flights of stairs to your apartment, flopping down on your bed and devouring take-out perfection with a plastic fork and trashy TV.

Beauty like this does not exist in Austin, Texas.  Sorry, Austin, but take-out is not your forte.  The only thing I could order for delivery to my house when I first moved here was Pizza.  That was it. And even if I wanted to venture out and drive to get it myself, there was ONE decent Chinese place and it was so far away, it wasn't worth the effort.

Four years of missing Chinese later and I stumble upon this recipe from Table for Two and everything changed. A little tinkering on getting it right, and before I knew it, I could close my eyes and pretend I was eating it out of a cardboard contained with plastic fork, and I wouldn't be the wiser.

I am still missing my Chicken Lo Mein, but man, this hits the spot for beef and broccoli any day.

New York Style Beef and Broccoli

Serves 4-6

Ingredients:

  • 2 lbs. boneless beef roast, sliced into thin strips
  • 2-3 cups beef broth
  • 1 cup soy sauce
  • 1/2 cup light brown sugar
  • 2 tbs. sesame oil
  • 2 tbs. garlic powder
  • 1 tbs. corn starch
  • 3 tbs. flour
  • Broccoli florets, large bag, frozen
  • Cooked white rice, for serving

Cut the strips of beef in to 1-inch pieces.  Set aside.

In the bowl of a crockpot, whisk together 2 cups of beef broth, the soy sauce, brown sugar, sesame oil, and garlic powder.  Add the meat to the bowl and toss to coat.

If there is not enough liquid to cover the meat, add just enough broth to ensure the meat is all covered.  Sometimes the roast I am able to buy is heavier than 2 lbs, but not to waste I just use it all - in this case I adjust my liquid appropriately.

Cook on high for 5 hours (or until meat is cooked to your preference, I like it very tender to a fork).  Keep in mind with crock pot cooking times, that all crock pots vary greatly depending on how large the capacity is and your cooking temp options.  Check your your meat as it cooks and when it is done, its done, don't fret over what the recipe says.

In a small bowl, whisk together the cornstarch and flour.  Whisk in 4 tbs. of the broth from the crock pot to form a paste.  Stir this paste back into the crock pot and allow the sauce to thicken for 20 minutes.

After the sauce has thickened a bit, add in the desired amount of frozen broccoli florets.  I happen to love broccoli so I put in an entire bag, but its entirely up to you.  Stir, re-cover the crock pot and let the broccoli heat through (about five minutes). 

Serve over rice immediately.