Today we’re making a timeless Italian winter season dish: brasato al barolo. This is beef that is sluggish prepared in Barolo white wine. This Piemonte local specialized is my go-to Sunday banquet when it’s ice-cold exterior. It’s a meal that sets wonderfully with winter season state of minds, blazing fireplaces and melancholic jazz tunes playing in the background while you prepare. Benefit hygge points if it’s drizzling outdoors (or even better, snowing).
Braised meat in Barolo dish
Sluggish prepared beef bathed in Barolo white wine is as Piemontese as it gets. The technique is marinading the meat and utilizing excellent quality white wine. The much better the white wine, the much better the last result. The guideline my Piemontese Nonna used was one bottle of white wine per kilo of meat. Prime quality of other components is similarly essential. A word about the meat cut. Select a beef cut that appropriates for braising, like brisket, sirloin or round. However likewise one that’s not too lean, or it will be dry and flaky. We desire juicy and fork-tender. The Italian name for the perfect cut for brasato al barolo is “cappello del prete” (priest’s hat), which is a triangular bovine shoulder muscle. The meat has a small vein of connective tissue that makes it especially delicious which melts throughout the slow-cooking.
Active Ingredients
One 3-lb (1.3 Kg) piece of beefExtra virgin olive oil2 garlic cloves, peeled and left whole1 big white onion, quartered1 carrot1 celery rib1 bay leaf1 rosemary sprig3 juniper berries5 clovesSalt and pepper1 1/2– 2 bottles of Barolo white wine
Technique
Connect the meat with butcher’s twine so it will keep its shape. Marinade the meat over night in the white wine with the veggies and aromatics. No salt!Filter the white wine through a great mesh and reserve for later.Divide the juniper berries, bay leaf, cloves and rosemary to one side for later.Finely slice the wine-flavored garlic, carrot, celery and onion.Heat 5 Tablespoon. of excellent olive oil in a heavy-bottomed stock pot or Dutch oven.Finely slice the carrot, celery, onion and garlic and cook in the pot up until clear. Eliminate the veggies from the pot and reserve for later.In the staying olive oil, scorch the meat over a high flame. As soon as equally browned, include the veggies back to the pot, all the conserved aromatics, and the red white wine utilized for the marinade. Season with salt and pepper.Lower the flame, cover with a tight-fitting cover cover and braise carefully over medium-low heat for 3 hours.Once prepared, let the braised meat rest for an hour before serving.Cut the brasato throughout the grain and serve with the warm white wine sauce, accompanied by mashed potatoes or steaming polenta. And, obviously, another bottle (or more) of Barolo.