Stew

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Stewing
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Stew
Lamb and lentil stew
TypeStew
Main ingredientsVegetables (carrots, celery, parsnips, potatoes, onions, beans, mushrooms, etc.), meat, (such as beef) and a liquid such as water, wine, beer or stock

A stew is a combination of solid

flavourings may also be added. Stews are typically cooked at a relatively low temperature (simmered, not boiled
), allowing flavours to mingle.

Cocido montañés or Highlander stew, a common Cantabrian dish

Stewing is suitable for the least tender cuts of meat that become tender and juicy with the slow moist heat method. This makes it popular for low-cost cooking. Cuts with a certain amount of marbling and gelatinous connective tissue give moist, juicy stews, while lean meat may easily become dry.

Stews are thickened by reduction or with

cornstarch, potato starch, or arrowroot
may also be used.

History

Ohaw, Ainu fish and vegetables stew from northern Japan

Stews have been made since ancient times. The world's oldest known evidence of stew was found in Japan, dating to the Jōmon period.[1][2]

Amazonian
tribes used the shells of turtles as vessels, boiling the entrails of the turtle and various other ingredients in them.

Irish stew

There are recipes for lamb stews and fish stews in the Roman cookery book

Taillevent, has ragouts or stews of various types in it.[3]

The first written reference to '

Byron's "The Devil's Drive" (1814): "The Devil ... dined on ... a rebel or so in an Irish stew."[4]

Types

Karelian stew

Meat-based white stews also known as blanquettes or fricassées are made with lamb or veal that is

mirepoix
and sometimes browned flour, stock and wine are added.

List of stews

A beef stew
Claypot beef stew with potatoes and mushrooms
Japanese cream stew
A traditional bouillabaisse from Marseille, with the fish served separately from the soup
Brongkos, Javanese stew
Cochinita pibil, cooling in the pan after cooking
Goulash in a traditional "bogrács"
Pichelsteiner
Beef yahni
A pork stew (ragoût de porc)

See also

References

  1. ^ BBC - A History of the World - About: Transcripts - Episode 10 - Jomon pot
  2. ^ World's Oldest Pottery Used to Cook Fish in Japan | JOMON FOOD | Facts and Details
  3. ^ "Taillevent, Viandier (Manuscrit du Vatican)". www.staff.uni-giessen.de. Archived from the original on 2020-08-07. Retrieved 2017-01-27.
  4. ^ Byron, George Gordon Byron Baron (1891-01-01). The Poetical Works of Lord Byron: With Memoir and the Original Explanatory Notes, &c. F. Warne and Company.
  5. ^ Koshi Ishtu – Kerala Chicken Stew Recipe – Food.com – 265726[permanent dead link]
  6. .

External links