Real Irish Stew

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  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2024
  • World wide there are many versions of Irish stew, here is a version true to the origins of this humble dish. Tony cooks up a family recipe with his old school friend, Lorcan O'Toole

КОМЕНТАРІ • 69

  • @nunyabiznez6381
    @nunyabiznez6381 4 роки тому +11

    My great grandmother used to say "meat's not been properly cooked unless you can eat it with a spoon."

  • @winters-ghost89
    @winters-ghost89 17 днів тому

    12 years and I'm still using this video

  • @tziirkq
    @tziirkq 6 років тому +11

    It's nice to see a REAL traditional Irish stew, it's a travesty this has so few views. I've seen so many that put Guinness in it, because sure, isn't Guinness Irish so it goes in the stew, it drives me mental. Good stuff.

  • @OReillysRecipes
    @OReillysRecipes  12 років тому +10

    @Gunnarsguns Hi, that recipe is my interpretation of my old Granny Aggies recipe. She was brought up in the war and has some very unusual tricks to get around the lack of ingredients. My favourite is Saturday night stew, plenty of gravy browning, but no meat. Her thoughts were that my Grandfather would have been so drunk when he got home on a Saturday night that he would not have realised there was no meat in it, not sure if that's true though!! , take care, Tony O

  • @IrishEnoch
    @IrishEnoch 12 років тому +3

    I am what you call a plastic paddy. However, I am proud to be of such a great bloodline. Thank you for what you do and the simplicity of your method. Irish customs won't die.

  • @bernardpearce3478
    @bernardpearce3478 4 роки тому +1

    Yep, same recipe as my Mam's. She hailed from Blackpool, Cork city. Spent 6 years in London. Whenever I was back winter time there was always a stew. It was always neck of lamb pieces, same turnip & white turnip, or as the cockney would say Swede & Turnip. She would often quip, " this is propper Irish stew".

  • @bs-vo1ii
    @bs-vo1ii 3 роки тому +1

    I've cooked this many times now and you don't need stock, just water and maybe some salt :) I can't thank you enough for turning me onto some new root veggies years ago when I found this!! I always cook it on a pot for hours, maybe one day I'll make it in a pressure cooker. Thanks again!!! Cheers- amanda

    • @prager5046
      @prager5046 2 роки тому

      Yeah, stock is too overrated, if you already have meat in it, why to use stock which is often full of sodium and can cover the original taste of the dish. I never use stock in any of my cooking.

  • @angelatwigger9608
    @angelatwigger9608 3 роки тому +2

    Can't wait to cook this 😊

  • @Soundhound101
    @Soundhound101 3 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing good sir. Cheers Tony and Lorcan!

  • @whoopa3724
    @whoopa3724 Рік тому +1

    For the winter my arse anytime of the year pal Yummy

  • @christinegreen9708
    @christinegreen9708 Рік тому

    This looks fabulous, I come from Liverpool but I have to admit I prefer authentic Irish stew to Scouse any day.

  • @khalidalsiyabi6183
    @khalidalsiyabi6183 6 років тому +3

    I love Irish food

  • @whoopa3724
    @whoopa3724 Рік тому

    Ya don't make a stew ya build it and that's how ya make a lovely Irish stew mate tops

  • @OReillysRecipes
    @OReillysRecipes  12 років тому +2

    @LoquaciousByNature Sure, you can use vegetable stock cubes, thank you for your commment and long may you enjoy OReillysRecipes, Tony O

  • @Gunnarsguns
    @Gunnarsguns 12 років тому

    Ive seen a thousand irish stew recipes...everyone different.Mine has beef,carrots,potatoes,beef stock,salt,pepper and flour....thats it. Great vid..i will try it your way

  • @YAHSHAYA777
    @YAHSHAYA777 8 років тому +3

    Cool I'm Dominican and we cook the same. In Spanish is called asopao.

    • @hyunjinki1995
      @hyunjinki1995 7 років тому

      in philippines Shopao (but that's Chinese bun stuffed) not stew

  • @nixon092010
    @nixon092010 10 років тому +1

    Just found your channel, am sorry i watched it at this hour of the morning because it left me so hungry, cool vidio though am deffintly going to try this tomorrow

  • @kragger1985
    @kragger1985 3 роки тому

    Thats the best one I've seen

  • @leandragilmour2806
    @leandragilmour2806 4 роки тому

    Will be trying this for sure!

  • @tunifang
    @tunifang 12 років тому

    i posted this in celtic mythology on face book and they loved it! stay with the erie foods. thanks for doing that!

  • @jessiejames7492
    @jessiejames7492 5 років тому

    many years ago in my country we couldI buy TOM PIPER'S irish beef stew in tins. IT WAS DELICIOUS. i still think about it.....

  • @nonrevnosnibormetalbeerrev6251
    @nonrevnosnibormetalbeerrev6251 3 роки тому

    Everybody makes it different, but as long as it is Irish folk making it north or south then its done right. 👌

  • @truthpreppin7630
    @truthpreppin7630 3 роки тому

    The way it should be done!

  • @Patricia-ic4ee
    @Patricia-ic4ee 5 років тому

    God that looks good .feeling hungry now.x

  • @LoquaciousByNature
    @LoquaciousByNature 12 років тому +1

    We don't have the lamb stock or cubes in US. Can I use chicken or beef? I love turnips and rutabagas:) This is a beautiful stew for fall and winter.

  • @MelissaJMJ
    @MelissaJMJ 5 років тому

    Thank you 🙏

  • @dryflyman7121
    @dryflyman7121 3 роки тому

    Great recipe, but as my wife is from Wexford we don’t add leeks or thyme! I’d guess if you went to every county in Eire, you’d get a different recipe or variation. For those persons in England making this you don’t need to use stock cubes, as you can buy good liquid lamb stock from Waitrose. The cubes are too synthetic and some chefs only use because they get paid to!! Lovely winter dish 😋

  • @OReillysRecipes
    @OReillysRecipes  12 років тому +1

    Jasus, your nan was posh! I laughed when you said mutton, do you know I never knew mutton till I went to England to live and would buy a whole mutton for £15, those were the days, I am showing my age now, but when I was a 'boy' butcher we never classified sheep as either mutton or lamb, it was all the same, just bigger, now with EU regulations we are more specific.I came across7yr Falklands mutton and you know it was the best 'lamb' I ever tasted, not the 'smelly old man' mutton meat, thanks T

  • @moinakbhattacharya878
    @moinakbhattacharya878 4 роки тому

    Oh yea, this one and Hungarian Goulash, are the two things I cook quite often in winter days

  • @user-gh8sl7iu3y
    @user-gh8sl7iu3y 4 роки тому

    Amen!

  • @whoopa3724
    @whoopa3724 Рік тому

    Ya can put Guinness in if ya like which is lovely if ya do it nice n slow but this way he done it without Guinness it's Still Irish stew

  • @TheScouseassassin
    @TheScouseassassin 8 років тому +7

    Proper Irish stew, just like my mother used to make, just add a crusty loaf and lashings of butter.

  • @nunyabiznez6381
    @nunyabiznez6381 4 роки тому

    Well so much for this idea. I live in the U.S. and wanted to recreate the Irish stew my great grandmother made. She came here from Ireland in 1901. I remember as a little boy near Boston eating her Irish stew. Only problem is most grocery stores here don't sell any lamb at all and the few that do sell almost nothing but lamb chops. Sometimes around Christmas you can get a roast lamb. Absolutely no one sells lamb stock or even lamb cubes (by cubes I assume you mean bullion cubes). It just isn't a thing in the U.S. So now to make this I have to figure out a way to make lamb stock from scratch using lamb chops. I wonder if the bones from the chops would be useful.

    • @prager5046
      @prager5046 2 роки тому

      You simply don't need lamb stock, if you already cook a lamb in your dish.

    • @nunyabiznez6381
      @nunyabiznez6381 Рік тому

      @@prager5046 Yes well that never happened since no grocery store or butcher in my county sells lamb at all now. I had seen lamb chops three years ago for sale but about 18 months ago I learned I can't even buy that any more. When I asked the grocer about this he said that they no longer have a supplier that sells lamb in any form mostly due to lack of popularity. He suggested I search the internet for canned lamb which I never heard of. My brother tells me he can get it in one grocer in his state but only chops. There is now almost no lamb farming in the U.S. Pretty much it's all cattle, swine, poultry and fish.

    • @HFTLH
      @HFTLH Рік тому

      @@nunyabiznez6381 Hi, not sure what part of the U.S. you hail from...my family is from Virginia, and I know there are sheep being raised in the state. However like you said, when you go to the grocery store you don't see lamb for sale very much. For anyone in a state that has sheep farming like Virginia, try finding a butcher who deals directly with the farmer, or go to a farmers market, or search online for farms who sell their meat direct to the customer. There are some websites that can help you source locally grown meat and produce in your area.

    • @nunyabiznez6381
      @nunyabiznez6381 Рік тому

      @@HFTLH I was born and raised in Massachusetts and lived for about 25 years in Rhode Island and currently live in Florida. I have lived in Florida for about 8 years now. When I grew up we had lamb but that disappeared in the grocery stores, except for lamb chops, around 20 years ago in New England. Here in Florida I was told by a Publix Manager that lamb meat isn't a thing and never heard of it being sold in a grocery store. I got a similar story at the Winn Dixie and the grocery manager at the Walmart Super Center just gave me a blank stare when I mentioned lamb as though he was trying to figure out if it was a vegetable or something in the hardware aisle. I called around and even spoke to someone in a Middle Eastern grocery that specialized in Mediterranean foods and he told me that he regrets that he could not find a supplier that sells lamb in our county. I know it is popular in the Levant as I had a friend who spent time there which is why I thought of a Middle Eastern grocer. We do have one butcher in my county (population 1 million +) who sells nothing but meats (Independent butchers are almost unheard of in Florida) and he sells meat from only three animals, bovine, swine and chickens. I asked about lamb and his reply was "nobody sells lamb anymore good luck." As far as I know, no grocer deals directly with farmers. All the ones in my county get their meats from distributors. I know that in the northern part of the state there was a large meat producing industry years ago. The cowboy was invented in Florida by one of my ancestors almost 400 years ago. But I think little remains of it today as the land is about gone to development. There are no farms in my county any more. The last orange grove was sold to make condos 10 years ago. There is an orange grove in the county north of me but other than that nothing is rural for about a 75+ mile radius from my county unless you count public parks and some amusement parks as rural. As for produce, I grow my own in my back yard which is in the downtown of a major city. I also illegally keep some chickens because I like fresh eggs but I just don't have the space for sheep. I have no doubt that somewhere in Florida someone is selling lamb but I just am not going to drive for hours to get some for one recipe I'd eat maybe twice a year. But I do thank you for your suggestions.

  • @sean.furlong1989
    @sean.furlong1989 5 років тому

    I have seen recipes where you fry the lamb to brown it before cooking, is that traditional too?

  • @liwiathan
    @liwiathan 6 років тому +1

    All the Irish Stews I have seen have celery, and most have garlic and onions. I can't have garlic and I'm not supposed to have onions, and I don't like celery, so whatever, but I'm confused.

    • @zimzimma5688
      @zimzimma5688 6 років тому +1

      Some people put celery in, most put onions, but never garlic. Up until about the 1980's a lot of Irish people thought garlic was poisonous as bizarre as that sounds!

  • @kourtneic8242
    @kourtneic8242 9 років тому

    Thanks for showing me.. I hope she love it.... #... Yum...

  • @rayssa6410
    @rayssa6410 Рік тому

    🍛🍞☕🌿

  • @treasurehunteruk9718
    @treasurehunteruk9718 7 років тому

    Do you serve it with the bones on the plate. I would rather remove them during cooking.

  • @brynmiller7547
    @brynmiller7547 7 років тому +2

    Surely the meat should have been seared?

    • @jackoshea7668
      @jackoshea7668 6 років тому +1

      Bryn Miller it should be ...but traditionally it wasn’t

  • @hyunjinki1995
    @hyunjinki1995 7 років тому

    can I use pork or beef ?
    Lamb in the Philippines is somewhat hard to find

    • @JPB2255
      @JPB2255 6 років тому

      hyunjin lee beef

  • @tjoshaugh
    @tjoshaugh 4 роки тому

    Why doesn't he say how much of the ingredients to put in????

  • @MrTonyheaney
    @MrTonyheaney 7 років тому

    My wife and kids are coming back home after 3 months away and I want to cook them this as a treat, can I use stewing stake? and as I don't have a pressure pot just a normal one how long should I cook for? Also, hope you don't mind I share this on my Limerick City Citizens facebook group facebook.com/groups/LimerickCityCitizens/

  • @americasfuniestvids
    @americasfuniestvids 8 років тому

    Wut it lamb stock I'm still learn to cook abit more is it the grease or fat?

    • @xionmemoria5939
      @xionmemoria5939 8 років тому +1

      +Drew Miller No shame in asking about cooking, but my gosh what language are you asking in?
      After an animal is cut of its meat, the bones and remaining meat are boiled in water slowly over a few hours. It imparts the flavor of the meat to the water, and usually adds some color. The water is strained and set aside so there aren't any pieces of meat or bone in it, then it's called "stock". Easy to make, easier to buy.

  • @missmaryhdream6560
    @missmaryhdream6560 4 роки тому

    Dumplings please to add to that delicious 😋 stew

  • @zhinka1
    @zhinka1 4 роки тому

    that is a white turnip and a rutabaga !

  • @georgehare2915
    @georgehare2915 7 років тому

    If your into lamb canada is last place for you . its costly as folks prefer beef and pork. lamb is 5 times the price of beef steaks. $29 per kg last time i checked ? wee shoulder was $28 and up. PRIME RIB i got for $7.95kg

  • @duibhiruimaolmmhauid9039
    @duibhiruimaolmmhauid9039 4 роки тому

    A Wexford Irish stew does not have leeks or turnip

  • @Werewindle
    @Werewindle 4 роки тому

    Irish Stew is fine if you leave out the thyme.

  • @nikopotts1399
    @nikopotts1399 Рік тому

    Didn't make bread , takes 45 minutes that soda breD

  • @0u8derp8
    @0u8derp8 8 років тому

    fry the onions.

    • @TheMoodyGuru
      @TheMoodyGuru 6 років тому +2

      0u8derp8 Nope, that's not the traditional way.

  • @DominicMagliocco
    @DominicMagliocco 12 років тому +3

    Not than traditional as mutton is the meat you should use and not lamb. Poor people could not afford lamb... Jeez, I'm half italian and I have to put you right oln an Irish recipe... Thank god for my aul Belfast granny

  • @bonzodog67lizardking15
    @bonzodog67lizardking15 6 років тому

    What? No Irish whiskey?? No Guinness?? What kind of an Irish meal is that??! :)

    • @snoopjog5060
      @snoopjog5060 4 роки тому

      That’s...that’s just not a good joke.

  • @franciscozahradnik8040
    @franciscozahradnik8040 7 років тому +1

    I came out of nostalgia.
    My mother made us Irish stew when were kids. We hated it. Of course we where living in India, where everything is more tasty.
    Sorry but boiled lamb and vegetables is not my preference. And the thyme does not add a spite to improve it´s flavour.