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I don't think I've posted a thread since like GBS circa 2004 (we won't talk about that username anymore) and tbh I completely forgot about GWS. That said, I tried to find this recipe, was directed to some bad reddit thread, and it turns out nobody has posted a good Instant Pot Genovese recipe anywhere that I could find in my extensive 90 second search. Fantastic, cool story. Genovese is a southern Italian meat sauce. It would be more accurate to say, "Genovese is Napolitano pot roast dumped onto pasta." It's a "Sunday meal," which means it takes 8-10 hours for grandma to cook properly. That said, it's mostly down time and you should definitely take the time to cook it properly at least once. But with my new "we-got-married-before-this-could-be-put-on-our-registry" Instant Pot, I figured I could compress that time. Also, there are two schools of thought about what you do with the finished sauce: Serve it up as a delicious meat goop, or put the less thick parts on the pasta and serve the meat as a secondi or main course. Option 1 makes for better leftovers and option 2 is basically serving the same dish twice. There are few things I enjoy more in life than committing Italian sacrilege, so we're going with option 1 here. To be clear Genovese, which means "of Genoa" or "Genoan" depending on your personal belief system, is a Neapolitan dish. It's "peasant food," basically slow-cooked beef and onions from the south of Italy. I did a semester of college in Tuscany, where I learned to cook, and would visit a friend every other weekend in Naples because the food is just so much better down there. This recipe is adapted from a Neapolitan cookbook a local woman would give to my buddy, one of the NATO people who were stationed there. I asked him if putting Worcester in the sauce would kill an Italian somewhere and he said that it would, but that it would probably also resurrect an English person so I decided it wasn't worth it. I'll do my best to detail the process of reducing a 10 hour sauce into a 3 hour sauce. The thing with Genovese is, you can try to speed up the process but it just doesn't come out as delicious. Enter the Instant Pot. First, we meet our cast of characters (minus a few because I was a little high when I took this picture): 3 Yellow onions 2 Celery ribs 1 Handfull of Ranch Sticks (grate these if you want mushier sauce, but I chopped mine) 2 lbs Chuck roast 1 pack of salt pork (or pancetta you bougie gently caress) 1/2 can of diced tomatoes 1 cup Italian parsely Rye whiskey (to taste) Hash oil (to taste) [not pictured] salt olive oil dry white wine Step 1: Start heating the Instant Pot with ~1/4 cup of olive oil in it on low saute mode while, and chop some veggies. Do the celery, carrots and parsley first and put them in a bowl: Step 2: Then do the onions. First, chop them in half. Then cut them into thirds vertically: Then slice them horizontally. Don't worry about being exact with this part as this is all going to be a glorious paste in your near future. I wore contacts until I got LASIK last year and I always thought people were just being sissies about cutting onions. It changes when you don't have leave-in eye shields. This is my cooking friend Frankenstaples. That's not his real name, but he just had a tumor removed from his head and is generally scared of anything that makes noise, so cooking sends him into hiding. Also, he wears a bowtie that my wife changes with the season. I apologize. Step 3: Now that you've chopped the veggies, it's time to chop the meat. You want ~2" cubes for the chuck roast and narrow strips for Officer Salty: Again, don't take too much time on this because it's all gonna be mush in a little bit. Step 4: Pour the olive oil in your instant pot and put it on Saute, heat setting medium or high depending on your level of impatience. The goal here is to render the fat out of the salt pork (or pancetta, you bougie gently caress), scoop it out with a slotted spoon, and set it aside when it gets golden-y brown-y looking. Yes I know the lighting is terrible. Step 5: Now throw the beef chunks in. Salt the poo poo out of them and cook them until they're brown on all sides. This should leave you a good bit of cow juice in the bottom of the instant pot. to: Step 6: Now turn the pot off, turn it back on to medium saute, and dump the carrots, celery, and parsley mix in there. Throw Deputy Delicious in there as well and make sure to stir it all together to deglaze the pot: Cook that down in the beef for 5-10 minutes, and pour yourself another whiskey because you're not even halfway there yet. I also recommend the hash pen. gently caress, you're out of rye. Go ahead and throw a housewife pour of white wine in there. Dump a half a small can of diced tomatoes in there along with a bay leaf: Yes I know my phone photography is garbage. Well aware. Now mix that poo poo up until it looks like good Mexican food: Turn your Instant Pot off again, seal it up, and hit the Meat/Stew button, and then Adjust until you're on 20 minutes: Let it do its thing. It snowed 2" since I started this process. Probably like 5" by the time it was all said and done. Pow day tomorrow yusssssss. After 20 minutes, it should look like even more delicious Mexican food, and your house should be aromatic to say the least: Now get your potato masher out and start loving poo poo up It's a twist and grind motion, much like a dry handjob. At this point, Frankenstaples came out of hiding because the house smelled so good: Set your Instant Pot for another 20 minute Meat/Stew session after you've satisfied yourself with the potato masher Too close for missiles, switching to guns. Also pictured: chili con queso because gently caress you After the second 20 minutes, remove the lid and put it on saute again, low heat this time. Get nasty with the potato masher again. It should look like this when you start out: Again, I know my photography is poo poo. At this point, you want to keep it on low saute until there's not much liquid left on the surface. Maybe 10 more minutes, maybe more. At some point, start boiling your pasta to just barely sub-al dente. Drain it, ladle some of that meat love in there, and continue to cook it. While that's happening, grate some parmigiano reggiano. Don't ever use anything spelled "Parmesan." My hypocrisy goes only so far. Okay, so now should have a mush of beef and onions. You should've been tasting it this whole time and adding salt as needed, Chop a little more parsley. Finish your beer, you're now switching to red wine. Garnish with the parsley, parm, and serve with two or three bottles of wine. I started this at about 4:15 and ended it at about 7:15. You can definitely do it in less time (the NYT recipe is only like an hour or so) but just don't. Seriously, if you're gonna put any effort into this just do it, you're already taking a shortcut via the pressure cooker. Moot .1415926535 fucked around with this message at 06:18 on Mar 3, 2019 |
# ¿ Mar 3, 2019 06:06 |
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# ¿ Apr 17, 2024 21:22 |
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My wife and I just both got gassed by him in our bed. Dude didn’t even wake up. Not so adorable.
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# ¿ Mar 4, 2019 07:59 |
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I’ve done the 9 hour version and this was every bit as good. If you do it right, the onions dissolve into a delicious goop which complements the falling apart roast beautifully. It’s absolutely comfort food, especially lovely when you’re in the middle of a hellacious snow year like we’re having in Colorado. If I were to make it again I wouldn’t change a thing.
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# ¿ Mar 11, 2019 19:12 |
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The basic rules of Italian cooking are as follows: 1. Good ingredients 2. Don’t ruin them I tend to gravitate to slow-cooked sauces as there’s more time to taste, adjust, repeat, but if you can make good arancini as a party trick you’ll blow some minds.
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# ¿ Mar 12, 2019 06:21 |
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That Works posted:Might need a pinch of sugar to offset the acidity if you find it potent. Slab of butter at the very end never hurts. I used to know the Italian verb for adding butter to your sauce at the end. It was something like acrematizzare or generally meaning “bring it to creaminess.” Now I can’t find it. I’m also told that doesn’t pass the Italian purity test in some parts.
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# ¿ Mar 12, 2019 06:33 |
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Just FYI this guy died for your San Marzano tomatoes
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# ¿ Mar 15, 2019 08:25 |
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As long as the weight is about the same I don’t see why you’d need to adjust it.
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# ¿ Sep 6, 2019 06:56 |
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Do it. Pressure cooker onion mush is still onion mush.
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# ¿ Sep 10, 2019 22:52 |
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# ¿ Apr 17, 2024 21:22 |
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👍 🙏
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# ¿ Oct 23, 2019 07:19 |