Pressure cooker beef cheeks and soup

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Pressure cooker beef cheeks and vegetable soup

Hello Reader,

I hope you’ve had a good week. For me, two loved ones experienced serious health problems. I expect one will make a full recovery and the other will hopefully see this experience as an opportunity for change.

I’m reminded of my own mortality when people I love are suddenly and unexpectedly affected by a serious health problem.

I was going to call this rubbish bin soup because the vegetables were all old and were about ready to throw away. They were limp and I had to look hard for mould. Given I was using a pressure cooker, I had no fears for the safety of the food. A pressure cooker is an autoclave by another name. So, I saved these vegetables from the rubbish bin and made soup! 😊

Recipe

Equipment

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Ingredients

  • Beef cheeks
  • Barbecue sauce
  • Worcestershire sauce
  • Brown onions
  • Potato
  • Celery
  • Carrot
  • Shallots
  • Daikon
  • Rice bran oil
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Sugar
  • Garlic
  • Bay leaves

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Instructions

  1. Buy a pair of beef cheeks from the supermarket or butcher. [I bought these beef cheeks from the supermarket.]
  2. Remove the meat from the plastic wrap and put the cheeks into a vacuum bag along with some barbecue sauce and Worcestershire sauce. Vacuum seal the bag and put the marinading meat into the refrigerator for about a day. The meat should absorb the spicy vinegary flavours of the sauces and get a hit of umami from the anchovies in the English version of fish sauce.
  3. Dice the vegetables into cubes about 1 cm3.
  4. Put the vegetables into a large bowl and pour in a little rice bran oil plus some salt. Massage the oil and salt onto the vegetables.
  5. Put the vegetables onto a baking sheet and put into a hot oven until they start to caramelise on the cut edges.
  6. When the vegetables were ready from the oven, put the beef cheeks and vegetables into the pressure cooker and put on the lid. For at pressure for one hour. This should ensure the meat would be tender and easy to tease apart.
  7. Once the hour has passed, wait for the pressure in the vessel to equal the pressure outside the vessel and remove the lid.
  8. Lift the meat from the vessel. Be careful, the meat will fall apart under the force of its own weight. Scoop a flat sieve under the meat and lift it so the cooking liquor drains off back into the cooking vessel and transfer the meat to a large bowl.
  9. Pour the contents of the pressure cooker vessel into a large stainless-steel saucepan.
  10. Tease apart the beef muscle and connective tissue fibres and lay them out on a baking sheet. Smear some barbecue sauce over the meat and put it into a gentle oven to partially dehydrate. The excess liquid will evaporate leaving sticky meat.
  11. Turn on the hob for the saucepan and bring the broth to a gentle simmer so it can reduce a little.
  12. Once you achieve a consistency you think is right, use a stick blender to process the broth into a soup.
  13. Divide the soup into aliquots for freezing and keep one portion in the saucepan.
  14. Add a dollop of sour cream to thicken the soup and pour it into a bowl.
  15. Add some of the sticky pulled beef.
  16. Give thanks to the Lord.
  17. Eat with a spoon.

Thoughts of the meal

Not a bad meal. A bit of an odd concept I think others may say. Not to worry, I’m the one eating it.

I’ll have plenty of meat for this week and a few bowls of soup to keep for the freezer.

Final thoughts

  • How do you feel when loved ones take ill?
  • Have you ever made a rubbish bin meal?
  • Do you like meaty soups?

References

Cook, R. K., et al. (2021). “Use of a Pressure Cooker to Achieve Sterilization for an Expeditionary Environment.” J Spec Oper Med 21(1): 37-39.

BACKGROUND: Sterilization of healthcare instruments in an expeditionary environment presents a myriad of challenges including portability, cost, and sufficient electrical power. Using pressure cookers to sterilize instruments presents a low-cost option for sterilization in prehospital settings. This project’s objective was to determine if sterility can be achieved using a commercially available pressure cooker. METHODS: Presto(R) 4-quart stainless steel pressure cookers were heated using Cuisinart(R) CB-30 cast-iron single burners. One 3M Attest 1292 Rapid Readout Biological Indicator and one 3M Comply SteriGage integrator strip were sealed in a Henry Schein(R) Sterilization Pouch and placed in a pressure cooker and brought to a pressure of 103.4kPa. Sterility was verified after 20 minutes at pressure. The Attest vials were incubated in a 3M Attest 290 Auto-Reader for 3 hours with a control vial. RESULTS: Sterility using the pressure cooker was achieved in all tested bags, integrator strips, and Attest vials (n = 128). The mean time to achieve the necessary 103.4kPa was 379 seconds (standard deviation (SD) = 77). Neither the ambient temperature nor humidity were found to affect the pressure cooker’s time to achieve adequate pressure, nor the achieved depth on the integrator strip (all p > .05). CONCLUSION: This study provides evidence that sterilization is possible with offthe- shelf pressure cookers. Though lacking US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval, the use of this commercially available pressure cooker may provide a method of sterilization requiring minimal resources from providers working in expeditionary environments.

Pore, B. B., et al. (2021). “Pressure Cooker Nozzle Penetrated the Orbit – Globe Saved.” Asia Pac J Ophthalmol (Phila) 10(4): 418-419.

Photographs

Here is a gallery of photos of the meal. The pork loin was an extra piece that I needed to cook for later in the week.

           

15 Responses

    1. I’ve never thought of it before. I suppose I tend to think of it as meat with a sauce 😊

  1. This doesn’t look like a bad meal at all. Good use of vegetables lying around, and so long as no mould and they look alright, they can be made into a meal. I get concerned when a loved one gets ill and really do wish they get well. Been there over the last year and it really made me appreciate the times when we are all well. Hope your two loved ones make a full recovery very soon.

    I like meaty soups and like you, will pair them with the vegetables that are left in the fridge. Sometimes it really is because I want convenience so will make the most of what’s in the fridge.

    1. Thanks, Mabel. I hope they will be okay.
      I’m looking forward to leftover soup this week. 😊

  2. Gary- Above all I trust that both of those you love will fully get over their problems soon. All the rest can wait or does not matter in the long run. As far as your Saturday night soup is concerned – my apologies – it is a very commonly prepared one and bears the name of ‘fridge-cleaning delight’ cheap, fun and cheerful, and does not deserve to be remotely related to garbage bins !!!! Delightful, hot and filling, kind Sir ! I make mine with somewhat greater ease on the stovetop and I can assure you any ‘bugs’ present hate the boil and bubble there . . . actually, beef cheeks having become so fashionably pricey, I usually buy a cheaper cut of meat . . . that’s me 😉 !

    1. Thanks Eha
      Boiling is at best disinfection which is usually sufficient for food. Sterilisation however is best with steam under pressure.

    2. If you are as careful as that – how do you enjoy the most delightful street food in the world in Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam and all points India . . . . in over half a century I have never ever had one case of gyppy tummy and all I avoid are raw salad vegetables 🙂 !!!

      1. I have been unwell in Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam, and India. All but Vietnam were for work and associated with WHO activity.

    3. I guess we are all different – what joy then in being able to travel the world . . . . perchance you were meant to work from home . . . ? Way back my husbands and I made many annual ‘long weekenders’ to Asia to eat non-stop what the ‘natives’ did . . . that was the fun and the joy . . . . am saddened for you . . .

    4. I meant absolutely nought about your life in general . . . but most medicos surely know how to avoid ill-health they should be having a huge ball overseas . . . there being so many steps one can takr ahead of time . . . what use being away if one wastes one’s opportunities eating from miserable faux-food producing hotel ‘kitchens’ . . . : 🙂 ?

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