Homemade Beef Soup
Submitted by PDB
Old-fashioned homemade beef soup with browned beef shank, crushed marrow bones, carrots, turnips, and onion. Long-simmered heritage soup for cold nights.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
5 hrsREADY
5½ hrsReal homemade beef soup, the slow-simmered, marrow-rich version that takes most of an afternoon and tastes like nothing that comes out of a can. The recipe leans on a single cut of beef shank with the bone, browned hard before any water hits the pot. The Maillard browning is what gives the broth its deep beefy color and savory backbone.
The crushed bone is doing more work than it looks. Cracking the shank bone exposes the marrow, which slowly melts into the simmering broth over four to five hours and adds a silky, gelatinous body that thin canned broths can never match.
The vegetables get browned separately in fat before they go in. Toss them in raw and they’ll cook through, but the soup loses that caramelized vegetable sweetness that makes the whole pot taste fully built rather than just boiled.
Pro Tips
- Brown the meat in batches if needed. A crowded pan steams instead of searing
- Crack the bone with a heavy knife or ask the butcher to saw it. Marrow access is the difference between thin and silky broth
- Skim foam off the surface during the first hour. That foam is what turns clear broth cloudy
- Cool the soup overnight and skim the solidified fat off the top before reheating for cleaner flavor
Variations
- Stir in a half cup of pearl barley during the last hour for a hearty Scotch broth-style soup
- Add a can of crushed tomatoes for a richer vegetable beef soup
- Substitute oxtail for the shank for an even more gelatinous, deeply flavored broth
Ingredients
Directions
Wipe beef shank. Cut meat in small pieces. Crush bone. Brown meat in hot cooking fat.
Combine meat, bone, bay leaf, celery salt, water, salt, and pepper. Cover. Simmer slowly 4 to 5 hours. Skim as necessary.
Brown vegetables in hot cooking fat. Add to meat broth. Simmer until vegetables are tender.
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