Beef Curry
Submitted by jhlanes
British-Indian style beef curry with cubed beef, apples, raisins, and chutney in a curry-spiced gravy, then oven-braised two hours until fork-tender. Classic colonial-era comfort food.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
2 hrsThis is old-school British Raj curry, the kind served in officers’ clubs and Sunday roast dinners from London to Bombay, not a modern Indian curry. It’s a distinct tradition with its own rules, apples and raisins included.
The method is pure French technique applied to Indian flavor. Beef cubes get browned in butter and oil, then onions and apples cook down in the same fat to build sweetness. Curry powder toasts briefly to bloom the spices, then a flour-thickened beef stock slurry goes in for the gravy base.
Tomato paste and chutney round out the final layer of sweet-sour complexity that defines this style. Raisins plump during the two-hour oven braise, adding pops of concentrated sweetness throughout.
Serve over plain boiled rice with traditional sides like mango chutney, chopped peanuts, and diced banana. That’s the genuine “Anglo-Indian curry” experience your grandfather may have eaten in the 1960s.
Chef Tips
- Pat the beef cubes bone-dry before browning. Wet meat steams and turns gray instead of developing that deep crust the sauce is built on.
- Brown the meat in batches. Crowding the pan drops the temperature and your beef won’t sear properly.
- Use a chuck roast cut into cubes, not stew meat. Stew meat is usually a mystery blend and cooks unevenly.
- Bloom the curry powder in the hot fat for at least a minute before adding liquid. Raw curry powder leaves a dusty, chalky aftertaste.
Variations
- Swap beef for lamb cubes for a richer, more traditional Anglo-Indian version.
- Add a tablespoon of desiccated coconut during the braise for a more southern Indian character.
- Stir in a tablespoon of mango chutney at the end for extra sweetness and acid balance.
Ingredients
Directions
In a large skillet or dutch oven heat the butter and oil over moderately high heat.
When the foam subsides, thoroughly brown the meat a few pieces at a time and remove to a side dish.
Cook onions and apples in the same fat until lightly browned, and add to the meat.
Add the curry powder and cook slowly for a few minutes.
Whisk the flour into the beef stock, pour over the curry mixture, whisking to prevent lumps.
Heat to simmer, stirring constantly. You want a smooth, thickened sauce.
Add remaining ingredients, simmer a few minutes more and return the meat, onions and apples to the pan.
Cover and set in the middle of a preheated 350℉ (180℃) oven for 2 hours.
Serve with plain boiled rice.
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