A stew is a combination of solid food ingredients that have been cooked in liquid and served in the resultant gravy. A stew needs to have raw ingredients added to the gravy. Ingredients in a stew can include any combination of vegetables and may include meat, especially tougher meats suitable for slow-cooking, such as beef, pork, lamb, poultry, sausages, and seafood. While water can be used as the stew-cooking liquid, stock is also common. A small amount of red wine is sometimes added for flavour. Seasoning and flavourings may also be added. Stews are typically cooked at a relatively low temperature (simmered, not boiled), allowing flavours to mingle.
Stewing is suitable for the least tender cuts of meat that become tender and juicy with the slow moist heat method. This makes it popular in low-cost cooking. Cuts having a certain amount of marbling and gelatinous connective tissue give moist, juicy stews, while lean meat may easily become dry.
Stews are thickened by reduction or with flour, either by coating pieces of meat with flour before searing, or by using a roux or beurre manié, a dough consisting of equal parts of fat and flour. Thickeners like cornstarch, potato starch, or arrowroot may also be used.
Stews are similar to soups, and in some cases there may not be a clear distinction between the two. Generally, stews have less liquid than soups, are much thicker and require longer cooking over low heat. While soups are almost always served in a bowl, stews may be thick enough to be served on a plate with the gravy as a sauce over the solid ingredients.[1]
History
Ohaw, Ainu fish and vegetables stew from northern Japan
Stews have been made since ancient times. The world's oldest known evidence of stew was found in Japan, dating to the Jōmon period.[2][3] Additionally, Herodotus says that the Scythians (8th to 4th centuries BC) "put the flesh into an animal's paunch, mix water with it, and boil it like that over the bone fire. The bones burn very well, and the paunch easily contains all the meat once it has been stripped off. In this way an ox, or any other sacrificial beast, is ingeniously made to boil itself."[citation needed]
Amazonian tribes used the shells of turtles as vessels, boiling the entrails of the turtle and various other ingredients in them. Other cultures[who?] used the shells of large mollusks (clams etc.) to boil foods in.[citation needed] There is archaeological evidence[where?] of these practices going back 8,000 years or more. [citation needed]
There are recipes for lamb stews and fish stews in the Roman cookery book Apicius, believed to date from the 4th century AD. Le Viandier, one of the oldest cookbooks in French, written in the early 14th century by the French chef known as Taillevent, has ragouts or stews of various types in it.[4]
The first written reference to 'Irish stew' is in Byron's "The Devil's Drive" (1814): "The Devil... dined on... a rebel or so in an Irish stew."[5]
As part of the Eintopfsonntag campaign, from 1933 the Nazi party made a midday Sunday eintopf (stew) obligatory on some days:[6] in particular as part of the Winterhilfe,
the first Sunday of the month from October until March was declared Eintopfsonntag.
Types
Karelian stew
Meat-based white stews also known as blanquettes or fricassées are made with lamb or veal that is blanched or lightly seared without browning, and cooked in stock. Brown stews are made with pieces of red meat that are first seared or browned, before a browned mirepoix and sometimes browned flour, stock and wine are added.
List of stews
Main article: List of stews
A beef stewClaypot beef stew with potatoes and mushroomsA traditional bouillabaisse from Marseille, with the fish served separately from the soupBrongkos, Javanese stewCochinita pibil, cooling in the pan after cookingGoulash in a traditional "bogrács"Dubu jjigae (Korean tofu stew)PichelsteinerBeef yahniA pork stew (ragoût de porc)
Eintopf, (one pot) the German word for a stew: many different regional specialty recipes for Eintopf are known in Germany; for example, the Kassel area has a type called Lumben un Fleeh in the local dialect (Standard German: Lumpen und Flöhe - rags and fleas), which is quite similar to Irish stew. There are thicker German stews such as Hasenpfeffer or Labskaus; these would not usually be considered an Eintopf, though the technical difference is minor (longer cooking times and fewer vegetables)
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