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  • 8servings
  • 370minutes

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Nutrition Info . . .

NutrientsProteins, Lipids, Cellulose
VitaminsA, B3, B9, B12, C, D, P
MineralsZinc, Copper, Natrium, Silicon, Sulfur, Phosphorus, Cobalt, Molybdenum

Ingredients Jump to Instructions ↓

  1. 370ml Madeira

  2. 150g tomato puree

  3. 1 sprig of thyme

  4. 3 fresh bay leaves

  5. 1 large/2 small diced

  6. 100g garlic cloves â skin on (around one bulb)

  7. 1 pig trotter - chopped

  8. 1kg beef shinbone - chopped

  9. 3kg veal knucklebone - chopped

  10. 5L water

  11. Rapeseed oil

  12. 1 sprig rosemary

  13. 1 sprig thyme

  14. 3 bay leaf

  15. 1 cinnamon bark

  16. 1 star anise

  17. 180g leek (1 medium sized) - finely diced

  18. 150g celery (roughly 3 sticks) - finely diced

  19. 200g carrot (2 medium) - finely diced

  20. 250g red onion (1 medium) - finely diced

  21. 25g garlic (roughly four cloves) - grated /minced

  22. Baking paper to make a cartouche

  23. 1kg ostrich diced ( diced is the name of the cut! You want this diced too) or venison shoulder

  24. Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

  25. 80g plain flour

  26. 1 flat tsp allspice

  27. 40g butter

  28. 1/2; bottle good Port

  29. 1 1/2L stock

  30. Peel of one orange

  31. 2 plums cut in half and de-stoned

  32. Fresh parsley

Instructions Jump to Ingredients ↑

  1. Sumptuous ostrich stew This is a gutsy yet elegant stew that I would normally use with venison, but on this occasion ostrich works really well too. It screams winter, spice, open fires and a good glass of red wine.

  2. I serve this with new potatoes, greens and glazed heritage carrots.

  3. If I were you, I'd get the stock going in advance and freeze in batches. The recipe makes around 3.5L, 1.5 of which you will use for this stew. Store the 2L left over in 1L containers and this will perk up all manor of dishes or you could reduce it down to make a smashing gravy.

  4. Set the oven to 250 degrees c. Add a little oil to a baking tray along with the chopped bones and using your hands coat the bones with oil, cook for half hour, turn and cook for a remaining half hour - the bones will be lovely and dark and sticky - all important to add flavour to stock.

  5. Whilst the bones are in the oven, put a glug of oil in a heavy based pan on a low heat and add garlic, onion, bay & thyme and cover with a cartouche. Cook for half hour turning occasionally, then add tomato puree and cook for another 15-20mins very slowly with the cartouche on top.

  6. When the bones are done, remove from oven and using tongs add the bones to the tomato puree mix. Drain off the fat from the baking tray, this will reveal all the lovely juices and bits and bobs from the bones. Add the Madeira and put on the stove on a medium heat, using a whisk , stir so that you slowly remove and incorporate the sticky bits from the bottom of the tray.

  7. After 5 mins or so, add this to the bones along with 5L of water. Simmer for 4 hours skimming the surface when necessary.

  8. When it's ready drain off the stock and cool.

  9. To make the stew put a heavy based frying pan on the highest heat. Meanwhile, put the meat in a bowl/baking tray, heavily season and add flour and allspice, mix really well ensuring all the meat is coated. When the pan is smoking add a glug of oil and 20g butter and add a single layer of meat. Once the meat has browned, turn and keep doing so until dark on each side - set aside and get on with the next batch until all gone. Keep aside for later.

  10. Next heat a good glug of oil in a heavy based pan on a very low heat, add aromatics (herbs & spice), and once the aromas are released add the onions, garlic, carrot, celery and leak. Stir and add a cartouche, sweat very slowly until veg are translucent and sweat smelling - about 20-30 mins.

  11. Remove cartouche, turn up the heat to full, add the port and cook for 10 mins or until most of the alcohol has burnt off then turn the heat right down, add meat, plums, orange zest and stock. Add a cartouche and a lid and cook on low for 3 hours or until the meat is supper soft. Stirring occasionally.

  12. When ready, serve up with a little freshly cut parsley.

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