What I Done:
I grabbed a couple pot roast recipes online to get an idea of the cook time and ingredients, and what I came up with was something like:
- 2.5 lb. chuck, salted for 45 mins, tied
- 6 yukon gold potatoes, peeled but whole
- 2 yellow onions, in thin rings
- 2 garlic cloves, peeled and chopped fine, crushed with salt
- 1 carrot, peeled and medium chopped
- 1 celery rib, medium chopped
- 1 bay leaf
- 1 sprig fresh thyme
- 2T butter
- 2T oil
- 3C beef stock
- 1T tomato paste
- 1T balsamic vinegar
- Salt + pepper
Once the veggies were done (after the garlic), I took the beef out and put it aside, put the veggies into the pressure cooker pot, added the stock and tomato paste, and brought everything to a simmer. I put the peeled potatoes into the veggie/stock mixture, then put the beef back on top of all that so its bottom was just under the surface of the liquid (because it was sitting on the potatoes).
I sealed the pressure cooker up and watched it to see if the lock indicator would pop up. I'd never used a pressure cooker before, so I was alternately reading the directions and adjusting the heat. Eventually the little yellow tab thing popped up--very clear change in the sound from hissing steam to *shoop* and then nothing.
It cooked for 40 minutes, then I moved it off the heat to let it keep cooking while it released pressure. That took another 15-20 minutes, during which time I steamed some green beans. When the pot released, I took the beef out and tented it with foil while I ran the potatoes through a food mill.
Again on the advice of the CI article I'd read, I sieved the liquid and veggie mix to get the solids out, ditched the bay leaf and thyme stems, and let the liquid sit so the fat could settle out a bit. I had to use a turkey baster to get the liquid from under the fat layer, but eventually got about a quart of it which I heated in a sauce pan with the veggie remnants. I ran an immersion blender through it to make a sauce, and added balsamic vinegar to that to give it a little bite.
How was it?
Well, it was kind of ok. It was nice to have a meal, but I think the beef upset my stomach a bit--possibly it was just a bit too fatty still. I also wish that I'd had some time to reduce the sauce a bit--it came out thinner than I would have liked.
Probably the biggest issue with the meal was that I didn't have milk for the mashed potatoes, so they came out sort of cakey and dry.
Do it again?
I'm thinking not--turns out I was sort of thinking of roast beef when I decided to make pot roast. Once I started eating it, it quickly became apparent that I'd forgotten what pot roast tasted like. It wasn't bad, it's just not one of my favorite foods--in all honesty, I'd much more happily have a vegetable soup with beef chunks, if I'm going to be doing the whole softening-via-melting-collagen thing.