Monday, July 28, 2014

Food - Beef Barley Soup

Beef Barley Soup with Kale Ribbons
This is a satisfying, super-hearty, meaty stew.  Full of vegetables, beans, and ribbons of kale, and tender chunks of beef.  Pearl barley adds to the heartiness instead of rice, while miso paste adds saltiness and a nice hit of umami that only makes the meaty taste more savory.  Make a big pot, and freeze it in individual servings for a nice treat on rainy day or when you’re feeling under the weather.
You can stick to the same amounts of vegetables, but you can alter the amount of beans, carrot, celery, and diced tomato to your own preference.  The kale will thicken up the broth at the end, and lend a lovely pop of green color to the soup.
Ingredients
Six to eight short ribs with bones (you can use boneless, but the stew will not be as flavorful, and the meat will not be nearly as tender!)
15 cups of beef stock
4 + 4 cups water
1 ½ cup mixed dry beans (I like using a 15-bean soup medley, you can find these in most grocery stores in bags)
1lb pearl barley
10 cups chiffonade-sliced kale
Two tomatoes diced
1 large onion chopped (1lb)
3 cloves chopped garlic
As many chopped carrots as you want
3-4 ribs chopped celery
1 tbl Salt
1 tsp black Pepper
Healthy shake of white pepper
4 tbl Miso Paste
2 tbl tomato paste

  1. The night before, soak beans in water.
  2. Chop veg, onion, tomatos, etc.
  3. Get a really, really big soup pot.  The largest pot you have.
  4. Drain the beans, put them, the carrots, onion, barley, tomato, celery and garlic in the pot.
  5. Pat salt and pepper onto the dry short ribs, then place them in the pot.
  6. Add the salt and pepper in.
  7. Pour in 15 cups of beef broth/stock.  Add the tomato and miso paste.  Stir.  Add 4 cups of water, stir.  Turn the stove on to high, and then turn down when the pot begins to boil.
  8. Let simmer for three hours, stirring every half hour or so.  Adjust seasoning as you go.  Top off with water if it gets too chunky.
  9. Fifteen minutes before serving, fish out the short ribs and cut the meat off the bone into chunks (if it hasn’t fallen off the bone already).  Add the meat back into the pot.  Stir in kale and boil for three to six minutes.  The liquid will thicken and go creamy right away.
  10. Take off heat and serve.  Soup is best when served with cornbread and parmesan cheese sprinkled on top, but toasted slices of a hearty bread will be good too.  Yum!

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