RIDICULOUSLY TENDER BEEF TIPS WITH MUSHROOM GRAVY #DINNER #BEEF
Natively constructed meat tips with mushroom sauce — as consistently with NO canned soups! My meat tips are absurdly delicate and simple to make in your moderate cooker or moment pot. Serve hamburger tips over cauliflower crush, pureed potatoes, egg noodles, or rice!
Today I'm expediting another round of natively constructed solace sustenance before it's a thousand degrees in Texas and all I need is cold nourishment for basically the remainder of 2019.
My hand crafted hamburger tips are a family top choice. At the point when things are going a hundred miles for every hour here on weeknights, I have to eat on the table without having to keep an eye on. So I make a series of meat tips with mushroom sauce and serve it over a bed of cushioned, garlicky pureed potatoes and some way or another, with each nibble the inconveniences of the day gradually disperse. Hubby is glad since it's man-nourishment and I'm elated in light of the fact that less dishes! In spite of the fact that to be reasonable, hubby eats dishes, so my joy stems more from the way that this formula requires least prep however creates most extreme flavor?
It generally makes me snicker when I share a moment pot formula on the grounds that quickly I'll get messages requesting that how make that formula in the moderate cooker or on the stove. Also, the turn around demonstrates to be genuine when I make plans in the moderate cooker/stove top. So this one goes out to the majority of my moderate cooker AND moment pot enthusiasts. We should give our kitchen contraptions a chance to make us supper.
INGREDIENTS:
- 3 tablespoons butter
- 2 pounds chuck roast, trimmed+ cubed (or stew meat works too)
- 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 1 onion, diced
- 8 ounces baby Bella mushrooms, cut into thick slices
- 1 ½ teaspoon EACH: garlic powder AND sugar
- 1 teaspoon EACH: onion powder, dried thyme, AND mushroom powder
- 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
- 1 large bay leaf
- ½ cup pepperoncini peppers, thinly sliced
- 1 ½ – 2 cups low sodium beef stock (see directions)
- 2 tablespoons cornstarch (mixed with a few tablespoons of water)
DIRECTIONS:
- SEAR: Season the beef with the flour, a big pinch of salt and pepper; mix well. Heat the butter in the instant pot on the sauté setting or a cast iron skillet over medium-high heat. When it melts sear the beef in batches to form a brown crust, remove to a plate, and continue searing the remaining beef. Add the onions and switch to a wooden spoon. Sauté them for 1 minute, scraping the bottom of the pot to make sure no brown bits are left stuck on.
- SLOW COOKER: Place 2 cups of beef stock along with the remaining ingredients in the slow cooker (except the corn starch) and cook on high for 3-4 hours or low for 5-7 hours. 35 minutes before the cooking time is up, combine ½ cup of the liquid from the slow cooker and the cornstarch in a small bowl, whisk until smooth. Add to the slow cooker and allow for the food to cook for the remaining 30 minutes. If the gravy is too thick, add a few tablespoons of water to thin it to your desired consistency. If you still find your gravy is thin, add more cornstarch mixed with a tablespoon of water. Adjust salt and pepper to preference and serve over rice/mashed potatoes/cauliflower mash, etc.
- OR INSTANT POT: Place 1 ½ cups of beef stock along with the remaining ingredients in the instant pot (except the cornstarch) and select the meat/stew setting. Cook on manual high pressure for 35 minutes. Once the stew is cooked allow natural pressure release for 10-15 minutes. This gives the meat a chance to really soak up all those flavors. Click the ‘sauté’ setting. Dissolve the cornstarch with 2-3 tablespoons of water and add that to the instant pot once the liquid starts bubbling. Allow the sauce to thicken, about 1-2 minutes, stir to combine. If the gravy becomes too thick, you can add a couple more tablespoons of water to thin it to your desired consistency. Adjust salt and pepper to preference and serve over mashed cauliflower, mashed potatoes, rice, or egg noodles.
For more detail : http://bit.ly/2Yq9wTt