Food & Drink Magazine

Beer Drenched Cowhand Beef

By Ally @allykitchen
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If you’re a cowhand on a roundup I’m sure by the end of the day you could eat one of those heifers in one sitting! You’re flat out starvin’~~I’ve watched enough of Ree Drummond’s shows to know that~~cowboys are hard workin’ and deserve stick to the ribs grub! And, who doesn’t like a good cold frothy beer after sweatin’ to the mooing?

Well, that’s what you’re gonna get in this beef and more~~it’s beer drenched as it slow cooks for several hours (yes, it’s adaptable to your slow cooker), the spices put some heat on the back of your throat, and if you want to throw in veggies and make it a full blown meal you can! Or, just do the beef, have some really nice crusty big cowhand rolls ready and pile on the fork-tender beef and dig in~~be sure to have big ice buckets of long necks! ~peace & beer~ xoxo ~ally

beer drenched cowhand beef

Serves: 4
Preheat Oven to 325

What you need:
3 Tbl. olive oil
2 lb beef, chuck roast cut into 4 pieces
2 tsp. garlic, granulated
2 tsp. onion powder
1 ½ tsp Jamaican Jerk seasoing mixture
1 tsp. sea salt
½ tsp. red pepper flakes
1 (12 oz.) lager beer
2 cups dole Roasted Garlic Tomato Garden Soup
Optional:
Fresh veggies (I did whole carrots and small whole potatoes.)

beer drenched cowhand beef

What you do:
Put the oil in a heavy stew/Dutch pot (with a lid). Add the beef. In a bowl, combine the garlic, onion powder, Jamaican Jerk seasoning, salt and pepper flakes. Mix together. Pour in half the beer and blend then pour over the meat.

Add the remaining beer and the Dole soup. Cover with a double folded piece of foil and then put the lid on. Put in a preheated 325 oven for about 2 ½ to 3 hours. Check every 30-45 minutes to see if you need to add some water. If you’re adding fresh veggies, put in at about the 2 hour marker and cook another 45-60 minutes or until tender.

Note: This recipe can be done in a slow cooker. Cook on high for about 4 hours adding veggies after about 3 hours. Continue cooking until meat and veggies are fork tender. Add water as needed.

beer drenched cowhand beef

beer drenched cowhand beef

©alice d’antoni phillips www.allyskitchen.com

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