Scouse
(The best scouse this side of the Mersey)
Serves: 3
(The best scouse this side of the Mersey)
Serves: 3
400g beef (preferably
a tough cut like chuck or even flank)
30ml oil
salt and pepper
1 large onion, diced
1 large onion, diced
1 stock cube
(preferably Knorr®)
500ml hot water
2 bay leaves
a few sprigs thyme
4 large carrots, cut into 15mm chunks
4 large carrots, cut into 15mm chunks
6 medium potatoes, peeled
and chopped into 2 cm chunks
pickled red cabbage,
to serve
Method
Prep: 15 min. Cook: 2 hrs. Ready in 2 hrs 15 min.
Prep: 15 min. Cook: 2 hrs. Ready in 2 hrs 15 min.
Dice the meat if not
already done into whatever size you prefer, remembering the size will shrink
slightly.
Heat the oil in the
pan to a medium temperature and add the meat. Season very well at this early
stage with salt and pepper. Stir and turn until just brown all over. Do not
drain. Add the onions and continue to stir on a medium heat for around 10
minutes; the onions must not brown.
Add the stock with the
water (or 500 ml of good homemade stock) and bring to the boil. Add the bay and
the a few little twigs of thyme, stir, cover and when bubbling, reduce to
medium heat. You want the stock to bubble but not violently for 1 hour.
Uncover and add the
carrots and potatoes, turn up the heat until bubbling throughout and reduce
slightly. Leave for another 45 minutes to 1 hour with the lid off the pan so it
reduces. When the veg has been cooked through but retains some firmness, the
best way to check is to see if it falls easily off the end of a fork without
cracking or breaking, then it is normally done perfectly.
The stew should reduce
once the veg is added and the lid, but you may need to add more water or
perhaps turn the heat up to ensure the liquid is as thick as good gravy.
Taste and season again
if necessary. Serve in a bowl with the red cabbage and plenty of juice on the
top. Really delicious.
Serving suggestion - Yummy
with a nice bottle of real ale!
Tip - Really important
that dish is well seasoned!
A Very Mersey Murder - Review by Martha A. Cheves
A woman is brutally raped and murdered, her body left close to the old disused lighthouse in Hale. Then came a second and finally a third murder. All being committed by who the police feel is the same person. One was a barmaid, one worked with animals and the third was a policewoman. These murders happened thirty-nine years ago with no arrests being made and the case assigned to the cold case files.
This is the information Detective Inspector Andy Ross has just given to his people that make up the Merseyside Police Specialist Murder Investigation Team. His biggest concern regarding this cold case is that there have been two more recent murders that are very similar to those from thirty-nine years ago. The first being a barmaid and the second being a veterinary student. If the person doing the killings now continues to follow the original murders the third will be taking place within just a few days and that person will be one of their own... a police woman.
I've read every book this award-winning author has written. His Jack the Ripper series kept my nerves tied into knots from beginning to end. I've read this series - Mersey Mystery - and I will admit that the 1st book was good, the second was better and as I read the third and forth they got even better but I must say that book five takes me back to the Ripper series!
As I read murder mysteries I judge their ability to fool me by how quickly I can come up with the guilty party. If I have at least the person figured out by around 20% into the book it is a good book. If it takes me 50% to decide who it might be, that is a very good book. And 75% marks the book as an extremely good mystery. But when it takes me all the way to the end and the author has to finally inform me as to who the murderer is I rate that book one of the best. For me this book fits in with the Best.
Now I'm waiting on book 6! But if I were you, start with the full Mersey Mystery Series which can be seen at http://getbook.at/