Creole Daube
- Ready In:
- 4hrs 50mins
- Ingredients:
- 15
- Serves:
-
6-8
ingredients
- 3 lbs rump roast
- 5 garlic cloves, 2 slivered and 3 minced
- salt, pepper, Creole seasoning
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 large onion, chopped
- 1 bell pepper, chopped
- 2 celery ribs, chopped
- 1 (6 ounce) can tomato paste
- 1 (8 ounce) can tomato sauce
- 1 cup red wine
- 1 (14 ounce) can beef broth
- 1 tablespoon italian seasoning
- 1⁄4 teaspoon cayenne
- 1 pinch sugar
- 2 tablespoons fresh flat-leaf parsley, finely chopped
directions
- With sharp knife or ice pick, punch holes in the roast, about 2 inches apart, and stuff with slivers of garlic.
- Rub roast generously with salt, pepper, and Creole seasoning.
- Heat oil in a heavy pot or Dutch oven, and brown roast well on all sides over medium-high heat.
- When browned, take roast out of pot and set aside.
- In the same oil, saute onion, bell pepper, and celery over medium heat until soft, about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Add minced garlic and cook 5 more minutes.
- Add tomato paste and cook, stirring frequently, almost until it begins to brown, about 10 minutes.
- Add tomato sauce and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, for about 5 minutes.
- Add wine, beef broth, Italian seasoning, cayenne, salt if needed, and sugar, and stir well.
- Return roast to pot, fat side up, turn fire to low, cover and simmer for 4 hours until roast is very tender.
- Stir well every hour and turn roast over half way through cooking.
- Slice roast thickly and return to sauce.
- Sprinkle with parsley and serve with spaghetti (or pasta of your choice).
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
LaLa Lola
New Orleans
I live in New Orleans where we are completely spoiled by the fabulous food and restaurants and are hard to please when we venture far away from home. We were struck a hard blow by Katrina, but we're coming back slowly but surely. I work fulltime but love to spend weekends cooking for friends and family, especially during the holidays. Favorite cookbooks: anything from Southern Living and Bon Appetit magazines (the recipes don't intimidate me!).
I have 3 sons (2 of them steps) and 6 precious step-grandchildren. I say "steps" but I love them like my own. Both DH and I are in education (me clerical, him administration).
Before Katrina, we shared our love of food and cooking with 3 other couples in a dinner group called "Whine & Dine." Our quarterly dinner parties all had themes that were reflected in the menu, centerpieces, what we wore, etc. Tremendous fun as we celebrated the cuisines of Canada, Italy, seafood, fine restaurants, Martha Stewart. At a breakfast dinner party, we all wore pj's and slippers! The storm disrupted all of our families and homes and social lives for quite awhile, but I'm hoping we'll re-start our group again soon (now that everyone involved has finished repairing their kitchens!)
Update Oct 2009: Whine & Dine reunited after 4 years. The theme was Whine & Dine Goes to Hollywood. Menu: The Magnificant Seven-Layer Dip, Ratatouille, Veal Oscar, When Harry Met Salad, Ol' Yeller Squash, Okrahoma, and Napoleon Dynamite. All of us dressed as movie stars and "Oscars" were awarded. For a night, it was as if Katrina had never happened! Great, great, happy fun!
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