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1 recipe
suggest servings
| 1 | medium | onion | cut up |
| 1 | each | black pepper | cut up |
| 1 | each | green bell pepper | diced |
| 2 | ears | corn | |
| 2 | tablespoons | vegetable oil | |
| 12 | ounces | beef | |
| 1 | tablespoon | garlic | chopped |
| 2 1/2 | tablespoons | hot chili peppers | powder |
| 1 | pinch | black pepper | |
| 1/2 | cup | vermouth | |
| 4 | cups | stock | |
| 3 | cups | cream |
Coarsely chop the reserved trimmings from your onions and peppers; set aside.
Cut the whole onion and peppers into a neat fine dice; set aside.
With a small paring knife remove the corn kernels from the cob, reserving the cobs, and combine kernels with the diced vegetable mixture.
In a large heave saucepan heat 2 tablespoons of oil until very hot but not smoking.
Add the meat cubes and stir over high heat, shaking the pan, until the meat is nicely browned .Add the chopped vegetable trimmings to the meat and toss 4 to 5 minutes.
Add the garlic to the mixture and toss 2 minutes.
Add the chili powder, ground red pepper and black pepper to the mixture and stir for 2 minutes.
Add the vermouth and reduce the mixture for 2 minutes.
Add the Veal Stock and reserved corncobs and bring the mixture to a boil, stirring.
Boil mixture gently, skimming any fat from the surface frequently, until the stock has reduced to a light syrupy consistency. Add the cream and continue to boil gently, skimming, until liquid is reduced and coats the back of a spoon .
Remove and discard corncobs.
Strain half of the mixture into a clean saucepan, add corn and vegetable mixture to strained liquid, boil for 2 minutes, and set aside.
| % Daily Value* | |
| Total Fat 60.0g | 92% |
| Saturated Fat 29.0g | 147% |
| Trans Fat 0.0g | |
| Cholesterol 198mg | 66% |
| Sodium 471mg | 20% |
| Total Carbohydrate 20.0g | 7% |
| Dietary Fiber 1.0g | 4% |
| Sugars 6.0g | |
| Protein 34.0g | 68% |
| Vitamin A | 27% | Vitamin C | 54% | |
| Calcium | 20% | Iron | 17% |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
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Growing up, rhubarb to me was a special treat that my friends and I got from our parents once a year. We didn’t know where it came from, how it was grown and what it even looked like as a plant. ...
This recipe is also good with sweet pickles and honey ham (Buddy brand sliced meats) This is a great recipe!
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