Victoria Crispo

Oct 10, 20141 min

Moroccan Beef Stew

After becoming acquainted with ras el hanout a couple of years ago, I’m always excited about finding a recipe that makes use of it. And we indeed found one while flipping through the BF’s latest copy of DRAFT Magazine- Moroccan Beef Stew.

My hankering for not following a recipe to the letter was in check on the day I made this delight, particularly because of the lack of vegetables in the original recipe. So I included some baby carrots and celery to the mix (and served with a side of broccoli and cauliflower braised in a bit of beer). I also doctored up the recipe with some dried apricots (in respect for Armenian-American family friends, I sought out a variety that did not come from Turkey) and dried cherries- just a few for taste. I did not want to veer too far off from the intended flavors of the meal.

Golden raisins and dried apricots

In place of the black lager, I used peanut-buttery Sweet Baby Jesus by DuClaw. Whoa. That was some seriously peanut-buttery smelling brew! The entire house smelled of it as I simmered my sauteed onions, celery, and garlic in it.

Simmering Sweet Baby Jesus porter with onion, celery, and garlic

I coated the stew meat with the ras al hanout (and freshly-ground pepper) before browning…and after browning:

Browned stew meat with ras al hanout

And added the other ingredients (olives, tomatoes, and the like):

to the crockpot, letting all those flavors go to town and meld together to create something delicious! We served the first batch with couscous, which was a perfect compliment to a Moroccan-inspired dish.

#cook #5senses #porter #slowcookerrecipes #rasalhanout #DRAFTmagazine #aroma #spices #beer #cooking #SweetBabyJesusbeer

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