Yummy easy dinner. Doesn’t take much time to put together but you do have to wait for it. You can use pretty much any cut of roast: chuck, round, rump, sirloin…whatever. The cool thing is that it’s all done in one pan. OK, 2 pans if you count the frying pan you brown it in. You put the meat on, then you add the potatoes and carrots about an hour before it’s done. In the mean time do laundry, mop the floor, weed the garden, practice playing whatever instrument you play, read to the kids…whatever you want while waiting for a fabulous dinner.
1 Roast
1 onion
3 or 4 potatoes
a few carrots
Brown the roast. This one’s a chuck roast, but you can use a rump, round or sirloin.
Put in the roasting pan, add some wine, beer or water and onion.
A little Worcestershire sauce and a bay leaf (optional). Also, if you want to add garlic, pepper or any other seasonings, now would be the time.
Bake, covered for 20 min per pound.
An hour before it’s done peel and cut up some potatoes and carrots, use either a potato peeler
or a paring knife
and scatter them around the roast.
When done, put the vegetables in a bowl (or 2 bowls if you’re picky) and put the roast on a platter to rest for about 10 minutes or so, while you set the table and make the gravy.
Melt about 2 Tablespoons butter, bacon fat or put olive oil or even fat from the roast (if you have enough to spoon off the top of the drippings) in a saucepan or frying pan. Add about 2 Tablespoons of flour.
Stir until toasted or nicely brown. This will both flavour and colour the gravy.
When the desired colour add the drippings from the pan,
simmer until thickened and any water, wine or beer you like to make the appropriate consistency.
Put the gravy in a gravy boat, small pitcher or bowl to serve with the roast and potatoes.
Serve with a salad, biscuits, scones, beer, wine, horseradish or just enjoyed alone for its own flavourful virtues.
We use cast iron pots and pans almost exclusively because they can go from stove top to oven. I love them. Aldi has ceramic lined cast iron pans that are excellent and reasonably priced a few times a year. I don’t mind keeping cast iron cured but some people might.
By: Sherry Oliver on June 29, 2020
at 7:31 am
I love cast iron, too. Grew up with it. Having roommates that aren’t used to it can be a pain when they ruin the seasoning, but my current roommies just ignore those pans & use the others. .
By: briellethefirst on July 17, 2020
at 10:39 am