i'll definitely give chuck a try then!
Quote (hofx2 @ Nov 30 2013 12:34am)
Beef cheecks, shoulder, chuck roast, to name a few... you can always go to your butcher and ask him for a good meat for braising...
Stock and broth is pretty much the same thing... (some will say broth is made with meat and stock with bones, but in the end they are both water infused with vegetable/meat or fish...)
For slow cooking beef i recommend using red wine + veal stock, if u cant get hold of veal stock u can use chicken stock or water... now for thickening the sauce theyre is 2 schools (not counting powdered sauce, cause its garbage).. first one (which i recommand) will give you less sauce, and will give u better result if u started off with veal stock... just reduce down ur broth until it becomes thick enough to glace a spoon, then put a dash of lemon juice then whisk in fresh butter, about 25% volume of butter for volume of broth... the other school is reducing it down a little then you use roux (butter and flour) to thicken it up.
Or if you do a pot-au-feu, you dont thicken it, just reduce it down and use the broth as a jus to drop on top of all ur meat and vegetable (google pot-au-feu)
i dont remember seeing veal stock at the store, but i'll look for it. i definitely want something with low sodium though, and idk if veal stock comes in that variety. i'm typically not interested in soup. i was hoping to have the meat/veggies with a sauce that i can put over rice/noodles.
does corn starch not work to thicken it? i've used it in baking to thicken, but i'm not experienced at all when it comes to cooking meat.