Bob's Easy Beef Stew
Bob’s easy beef stew is the one-pot weeknight classic: browned stewing beef, potatoes, carrots, onions, and bay leaves, thickened with a quick flour slurry. Hearty Sunday-supper comfort, ready in under an hour.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
35 minREADY
50 minBob’s easy beef stew cuts the all-day simmer in half and still delivers the cozy bowl you’re chasing. Stewing beef browns with onions, then water and bay leaves go in while you peel potatoes and carrots. Everything cooks in one pot until fork-tender.
The trick to a glossy, body-thick stew without lumps is the slurry: cold water whisked with flour until smooth, then poured into the simmering pot while stirring. Adding flour directly to hot liquid turns it into pasty pellets you’ll never break up.
Brown the meat properly. Crowd the pan and you get gray, steamed beef instead of the deep brown crust that gives stew its real flavor.
Kitchen Tips
- Pat the beef dry before browning. Wet meat doesn’t brown, it steams.
- Cut potatoes and carrots into similar-sized chunks so they cook evenly.
- Add garlic when browning the meat and a pinch of oregano as the cook suggests. These quietly lift the whole stew.
- The canned peas go in last, only long enough to warm through. They’ll turn to mush if simmered.
Variations
- Swap water for beef broth and a splash of Worcestershire for deeper flavor.
- Toss in a cup of sliced mushrooms with the carrots for an earthier bowl.
- Stir in a tablespoon of tomato paste with the onions for a richer, more rustic stew.
Ingredients
Directions
Brown the beef with the onions in a large pot.
Once the meat is brown add 3 cups of water and bay leaves.
Heat over medium heat while you peel the potatoes and carrrots.
Add potatoes and carrots to the stew pot.
Cover with water.
Bring to a boil.
Cook until potatoes are tender.
Mix up a flour and water mixture to thicken the stew.
Add it right to the pot.
No need to remove the meat/veggies.
Stir well to make sure you don’t get lumps.
Add pepper/salt/whatever you like for spices.
I sometimes add garlic when browning the meat.
Oregano is a nice touch as well.
Once the stew is thickened you can serve it.
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