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How and why we brown meat

Different recipes like casseroles and some roasts call for meat to be browned, do it well and your dish will not only have good colour it will have great flavour. Browning either beef or lamb cubes or a whole piece of meat that is to be roasted is a simple step, but a few points need to be kept in mind.

Make sure the meat is dry before you begin


The meat may be a little damp or even wet if it has been frozen, so pat it dry with absorbent paper.
Some recipes call for the meat to be dusted with seasoned flour before browning, this helps create a browned crust on the meat, dust the meat with flour once it is dry.

 

Coat the meat with oil rather than adding it to the pan

 

This reduces the amount of oil you need and helps the meat brown well. Heat the pan before you add the meat.

Note: If the meat has been dusted with flour add the oil to the pan.

 

Don’t overcrowd the pan – brown the meat in small batches


When you’re browning meat cubes for a casserole brown the meat in small batches, about 250g per batch.


Keep the pan at medium-high heat


This helps the meat brown evenly rather than stew or burn in the pan. The pan needs to be hot enough for the meat to sizzle but not so hot that it scorches and burns bits of the meat or results in a blackened pan which will give a burnt taste to the dish.


Enjoy these delicious casseroles


Easy beef casserole





Mild creamy curry





Enjoy these delicious roasts


Roast beef with horseradish Yorkshire puddings





Honey glazed roast beef with corn and potato mash

 

 

 

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