Thursday, October 9, 2008

Nostalgic for Pot Roast

It was a ritual at our house to have pot roast on Sundays.

My wonderful family was like the many other American families that have always minded its grocery bill, recession or no.

Pot roast is delicious, feeds a whole family, and even leaves leftovers, all costing maybe $30 at the most.

So on Sundays, Mom would throw a mean chuck roast, lots of red potatoes, carrots, celery, any other vegetable that needed to be used, a lot of spices and tons of garlic into the crock pot and turn it on "low."

We'd roll off to Sunday School and church for a couple of hours. The house would smell and feel amazing when we'd get home and change out of our Sunday clothes. Mom and Dad would go about working on the house or in the yard. I'd help them, do homework, whatever - but we'd all busy ourselves until dinnertime - like we had to stay occupied because we couldn't wait to eat. The roast would slow-cook all day, the smell only getting better and richer throughout the house.

We rarely ate dinners together at the table. But on those Pot Roast Sundays, Mom would make garlic toast as the rest of us would fix our plates, and we'd all sit down together at the table to enjoy what we'd been waiting all day to eat.

It was a really simple thing - a pretty simple meal really - but a time we spent together, enjoyed together, and were thankful for. It's a little nostalgic memory that means a lot to me.

I found this recipe for "Slow-Cooker Pot Roast" in Recipes Worth Sharing, a new compilation cookbook that honors community cookbooks and is loaded with simple, delicious recipes that don't cost much to create.

For old-times sake, I enjoyed this recipe last Sunday and have actually been digging on the leftovers all week. It's a fabulously easy, inexpensive recipe that yields tender meat and tons of flavor. Start your own tradition.

Slow-Cooker Pot Roast
Ingredients
- 1 (3-pound) boneless beef chuck roast - 1 tablespoon brown sugar
- 2 large garlic cloves, sliced - 1 teaspoon oregano
- 1/4 cup all-purpose flour - 1 teaspoon prepared horseradish
- 1/2 teaspoon salt - 1 teaspoon prepared mustard
- 1/2 teaspoon pepper - 1 bay leaf
- 1/3 cup olive oil - 8 small read potatoes, peeled (about 1 1/2 pounds)
- 1 1/2 cups red wine - 8 carrots, peeled and quartered
- 1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce - 3 ribs celery, chopped

Directions
- Cut the roast into halves and make small slits in the top of each half. Insert a garlic slice into each slit. Coat the roast with a mixture of the flour, salt and pepper. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet and brown the roast on all sides in the hot oil. Place the roast in a 6-quart slow coooker and add the wine and onion. Mix the tomato sauce, brown sugar, oregano, prepared horseradish, prepared mustard and bay leaf in a bowl and pour over the roast. Add the potatoes, carrots, and celery and cook, covered, on Low for 8 hours. Discard the bay leaf before serving.

Serves 6+++

Leftovers make great sandwiches or are delicious mixed as a sort of goulash with jasmine rice.

2 comments:

Tori said...

Thanks for sharing your story AND recipe. Isn't it funny how the simple meals shared with our families create the deepest memories that we hold so dear?

And only dependable, trusted community cookbooks, will have those special recipes that your mom or grandma cooked to create those memories.
It is my hope that as a Nation we will turn around, realize that our children are not experiencing those family moments in a restaurant (to to mention the cost and health issues eating out all the time has caused.) Let's bring our families back to the table - our children and grandchildren will thank us for it.

Anonymous said...

This sound like a good one. I've been crockpotting like crazy in Alaska, so I'll have to try this one. I made a lasagna in the crockpot last week...seems kinda weird. Let me know if you find any pug "slow cookers". :-) Just kidding :-P