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Laura Brady
By Laura Brady

Cuban-inspired Beef, Red & Black Bean Stew (Jack Monroe)

9 steps
Prep:10minCook:20min
Updated at: Thu, 17 Aug 2023 07:03:34 GMT

Nutrition balance score

Great
Glycemic Index
36
Low
Glycemic Load
22
High

Nutrition per serving

Calories504.8 kcal (25%)
Total Fat13.6 g (19%)
Carbs60 g (23%)
Sugars7.6 g (8%)
Protein39.2 g (78%)
Sodium2857.3 mg (143%)
Fiber14.8 g (53%)
% Daily Values based on a 2,000 calorie diet

Instructions

Step 1
First peel your onion, and very very finely slice it. Very finely slice your celery, and mince or coarsely grate your carrot. You want the veg to be as small as possible, because it won’t be cooking for very long, so you want to maximise the opportunity to get as much flavour from it as possible and get it as tender as you can in the time you have. If you have a small bullet blender or food processor, now would be an excellent time too give it a whirl, but if you don’t, don’t worry, a sharp knife and/or grater and some patience will still get the job done.
Step 2
Pop the veg in a large nonstick pan, preferably one with a lid, but if you don’t have one we can improvise – I’ll get to that! Don’t put it on the heat just yet, you’re just prepping at the moment and conserving that precious energy.
Step 3
Grate the garlic over the top, or chop it very finely. Add the oil and salt, and stir well to coat the veg. (Still no heat yet, step away from the ignition! Think of this like a flash-marinade if the thought of cooking from cold makes you feel a little weird, trust me any reservations you have about not doing things like the posh telly chefs do should be alleviated by the reminder that their energy bills for those recipes are paid for by television companies. Yours – and mine – aren’t!)
Step 4
Open your can of kidney beans and give them a thorough rinse. Open your can of black beans and don’t – you want the ‘juice’ from this can to deepen the flavour of the stew and thicken it slightly. Kidney beans contain toxins that an cause a dodgy belly, so these should always be rinsed well, but other beans are fine. So get these the right way round please, I’ve been there and it’s a thoroughly unpleasant mistake to make…) Pop the kettle on to boil for the stock.
Step 5
Open your can of stewed steak – if you’re using it – and pop that next to the black beans. Do the same with the tomatoes. If you’ve opted for plum tomatoes, the connoisseur choice in my opinion as they tend to have more tomato-to-juice ratio than the pre chopped kind and be a richer, deeper colour and flavour – stick a small sharp knife in the tin and jiggle it about to chop them up, or use a pair of kitchen or other large sturdy scissors. While you’re being organised, grab your stock cube, herbs, cumin, chilli, vinegar and pepper too so you have them to hand. It seems fastidious, but you want the 15 minutes that your pan is bubbling to be time well spent, not time spent emptying cupboards rootling around for a dusty old spice jar.
Step 6
Now all your – what is called in the restaurant industry – ‘mise en place’ is in place, it’s time for the hot stuff. Place the pan on the largest hob ring on the highest heat, and cook the veg for 2 minutes, giving it a stir to disturb it so it doesn’t catch and burn, and cooks evenly.
Step 7
Add both cans of beans, the tomatoes, the stewed steak, and crumble in the stock cube. Give it all a good stir, then add the dried herbs, cumin, chilli and plenty of black pepper. Pour over the boiling water. Stir it all again, then cover the pan to trap as much of that precious heat in as possible. If you don’t have a lid, you can use a large sturdy dinner plate, a larger pan balances on top or upturned like a dutch oven, or kitchen foil, or a baking tray or baking sheet balanced on top of the pan as a substitute . Cook on the high heat for 12 minutes, giving it a very quick but vigorous stir every now and then, being sure to scrape up the bottom of the pan as it will get super hot, and replacing the lid fast.
Step 8
After the 12 minutes, give it another good stir, then pop the lid back on. Turn the heat off completely, but leave the pan on the hob ring (the space it has just been cooking in will be warm, so it makes sense to leave it in situ.) Leaving the pan covered, leave it to stand for 20ish miniues to continue to cook in the residual heat. This develops the flavours further, and also thickens the stew, and its basically free extra cooking time with no effort on your part.
Step 9
After the 20 no-cook minutes, either remove a quarter of it and blend it to smooth if you have a blender, and return it to the pan, or leave it as is if you’d prefer. Give it your last one-minute blast of heat to get it hot hot again, and serve.
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