SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU
This vegetable stew featuring baby squash makes a light and colorful summer meal.
Provided by Martha Stewart
Categories Lunch Recipes
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Heat oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add onions and garlic; cook until golden. Add the white wine; cook until most of it has evaporated, about 3 minutes. Add carrots, bay leaf, thyme, parsley, stock, and 3/4 cup water; simmer 5 minutes. Add potatoes; simmer 7 minutes. Add squash; cook until just tender, about 5 minutes. Add peas and lima beans, and cook 2 minutes.
- Remove the skillet from heat; remove and discard the herb sprigs. Divide the vegetables and broth among four shallow bowls, and serve.
VEGETABLE POT AU FEU
This vegetable dish is good served with cornichons, tiny sour onions, hot mustard, mayonnaise; and French bread. The broth is usually reserved for the next day, when it is cooked with tiny pasta to make a rich soup. This recipe was adapted from "France, The Vegetarian Table".
Provided by lynnski LA
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 1h20m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- In a large soup pot, combine the broth, water, salt, pepper and peppercorns.
- Tie the bay leaves, parsley, and thyme together using kitchen string to make a bouquet garni.
- Add it to the pot, along with the carrots, leeks, onions,turnips, potatoes and parsnips.
- Bring to a boil over medium heat.
- Reduce the heat to low, cover and simmer for 20 minutes.
- Add the celery hearts, re-cover, and simmer for another 20 minutes.
- Then remove the cover and simmer until all the vegetables are tender but still hold their shape, about 20 minutes longer.
- Remove the vegetables and arrange on a platter, (reserve broth for another use).
- Serve veggies with cornichons, tiny onions, mustard or horseradish and mayonnaise in small bowls; and french bread (all optional).
Nutrition Facts : Calories 138.3, Fat 0.5, SaturatedFat 0.1, Sodium 659.4, Carbohydrate 32, Fiber 5, Sugar 7.7, Protein 3.4
POT AU FEU
Provided by Food Network
Time 4h
Yield 8 to 10 servings
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- In a large kettle combine the beef, onions, carrots, celery, garlic, cheesecloth bag, stock, salt and water to cover. Bring to a boil and simmer, partially covered, skimming, for 1 1/2: hours. Add chicken, bring back to boil and simmer, partially covered, skimming, 1 1/2 hours more.
- With tongs or large fork transfer meat and chicken to platter, skim fat from cooking liquid and strain liquid through a sieve into a bowl. Return meat and chicken to kettle and add strained cooking liquid. Bring liquid back to a boil and add bundles of vegetables, carrots, leeks and celery. Simmer, partially covered, 10 minutes. Add turnips and sausage, and simmer, partially covered, for 25 minutes, or until vegetables and meat are tender.
- Arrange meat and vegetables on platter. Serve soup in bowls and allow guests to choose meat and vegetables of their choice. Serve with accompaniments, if desired.
- Recommended Wine: 1994 Cotes du Rhone Domaine Gramenon
CHICKEN, SAUSAGE AND VEGETABLE POT-AU-FEU
This serves as a nice Sunday dinner or for casual entertaining of friends. Relatively simple one pot dish. Pot-au-feu means "pot on the fire" but the name refers to a hearty, family-style French dish of meat. This was originally from Chicago Tribune Tribune's Food & Drink.com
Provided by Iron Mike
Categories European
Time 1h5m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 19
Steps:
- Directions for Horseradish cream. Prep time: 10 minutes.
- Combine cream, mustard, horseradish and sugar in small bowl. Taste; adjust as desired. Can be made 2 days ahead and refrigerated.
- Directions for Chicken, sausage and vegetable pot-au-feu.
- Heat oil in 6-quart pot over medium-high heat. Add sausages stirring frequently until beginning to brown, about 3 minutes.
- Remove from sausages pot and set aside.
- Add chicken, salt and pepper to pot; sear on all sides, about 5 minutes.
- Push chicken to side of pot; add garlic and minced onions to cleared side of pot. Cook, stirring, until softened, about 3 minutes.
- Add 3 1/2 cans broth, turnips, zucchini, cabbage, potatoes, carrots and bay leaf. Heat to boiling over high heat; reduce heat to simmer.
- Cook, covered, until vegetables are tender, about 25 minutes.
- Add reserved sausages and more broth, if needed, during last 10 minutes of cooking.
- Taste and adjust seasoning if required.
- Serve from pot or transfer vegetables to warm platter.
- Skim fat from broth (gravy strainer works well) and moisten meat and vegetables with some broth.
- Pass remaining broth and horseradish cream separately.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 1393.6, Fat 81.9, SaturatedFat 27.9, Cholesterol 318.3, Sodium 2177.7, Carbohydrate 81, Fiber 11.9, Sugar 14.6, Protein 84
POT AU FEU
Provided by Florence Fabricant
Categories dinner, main course
Time 3h30m
Yield 6 to 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 19
Steps:
- Place the beef and veal in a large pot. Add the water and bring to a boil. Allow to cook at a lively simmer about 10 minutes, skimming the surface thoroughly during this time.
- Lower heat and add onions, leeks, celery, carrots, garlic, bay leaves, peppercorns and parsley. Cook at a low simmer for two hours.
- After two hours the meats should be fairly tender. Add the chicken, sausage and turnips. Skim the surface for a few minutes after these ingredients have been added, then cook an hour longer.
- When the ingredients have finished cooking, strain the contents of the pot by ladling them into a colander suspended over a large bowl. Wash the cooking pot, then pour the broth from the bowl through a very fine strainer back into it. Season the broth to taste with salt and pepper.
- Remove the meats from the colander and set aside. Discard the leeks, parsley and bay leaves. Peel and quarter the onions. Cut the carrots and celery pieces into large chunks. Quarter the turnips.
- Arrange the onions, carrots, celery and turnips on a heat-retaining platter and cover with foil. If you are not planning to serve the pot au feu the same day, place all the meats on another platter, cover with foil and refrigerate overnight. Refrigerate the platter of vegetables overnight. Refrigerate the broth overnight. Remove the ingredients from the refrigerator at least two hours before serving.
- To serve, cut chunks of the veal off the bone, remove the skin from the chicken and cut the meat from the bones in large sections. Cut the sausage in chunks. Trim all visible fat from the brisket and slice it thin. Arrange the slices on the platter with the other cut meats. Put the pieces of veal bone on the platter. Cover with foil. Place the meat platter and the vegetable platter in a preheated 200 degree oven to warm for an hour.
- Skim as much fat as possible from broth and reheat gently. Serve broth, with a little chopped flat-leaf parsley on top, in bowls. Pass the platters of meat and vegetables alongside, so guests can help themselves.
- Serve the boiled potatoes and green sauce alongside and have little dishes of mustard, horseradish, cornichons and coarse sea salt on the table as well.
POT AU FEU (POT ON THE FIRE)
This is one of my contributions for the French region in the Zaar World Tour. I haven't tried it yet but I plan to soon and I think it would be a nice dish to serve in the Fall. History: Pot au Feu is French for "pot on the fire". In other words, a stew or stock pot which is left cooking over the fire. In previous times, it may simply have been a cooking pot which was left over the fire, into which was thrown whatever food and scraps happened to be available. Often the meat was either scraps, or relatively poor cuts which needed a long time to cook in order to be tender. In historical terms, it was a dish for relatively poor people. Today in France, one can buy "pot au feu" meat. Expect this to be meat which reflects the historical background of this dish: relatively inexpensive and inferior cuts, which will soften with long slow cooking. While such meat is quite adequate for a Pot au Feu, feel free to use better cuts if you wish. As a Pot au Feu is historically a stew-like dish of whatever meat and vegetables were available, there are no absolute guidelines about what it should contain. However, in general it will contain beef, some bones (such as ox-tail) which have either marrow or cartilage (or both, depending on which bones are used), vegetables (such as carrots, onions, leeks, turnips) and spices. Due to concerns about CJD, this recipe excludes bones.
Provided by Little Bee
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 5h20m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Brown meat in frying pan, adding salt and pepper. Sprinkle a little flour over the meat while turning over. Place meat into oven proofed casserole or even better into a slow cooker.
- Briefly fry bacon, onions, garlic, carrots, than add tomatoes, leek and beef stock. Bring to the boil and add to casserole or slow cooker.
- Cook at low temperature (150 Celsius) for about 5 hours or until the meat falls of the bone.
- Serve with potatoes (boiled or fried).
- Notes:.
- Depending on the meat being used, a Pot au Feu can be very rich. If you would like a leaner version, prepare it the day before and allow to cook overnight. Once cooled the fat will rise to the surface and it can be skimmed off. The dish can then be re-warmed.
- Pot au Feu is often served with mustard and course salt.
- After removing and serving the meat and vegetables, there will be a delicious sauce left over. This can be used for making soup, as a base for a sauce or for cooking vegetables inches.
- For a Pot au Feu with a Mediterranean flavour, modify the recipe by reducing the amount of meat, increasing the amount of vegetables and adding herbs.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 2791.2, Fat 277.2, SaturatedFat 112.1, Cholesterol 390.1, Sodium 802.6, Carbohydrate 32.5, Fiber 6.8, Sugar 14.6, Protein 41.3
WARM WEATHER VEGETABLE POT-AU-FEU
Make and share this Warm Weather Vegetable Pot-Au-Feu recipe from Food.com.
Provided by ratherbeswimmin
Categories European
Time 1h30m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- In a large high-sided skillet or, if you've got one, a woklike stir-fry pan, warm the olive oil over med-low heat.
- Toss in the garlic and cook for 1 minute.
- Add in the onion and leek, turning them in the oil, and season with salt and pepper.
- Cook, stirring gently, just until the onion and leek soften slightly, about 5 minutes.
- Stir in the potatoes and carrots, then pour in the broth.
- Toss in zest and lemongrass.
- Increase heat and bring the broth to a boil, then lower heat and simmer gently, uncovered, until the vegetables are just short of tender, about 10 minutes.
- *You can make the pot-au-feu to this point up to 3 hours in advance; cover and refrigerate; when ready to continue, bring the broth back to a boil, lower the heat so that it simmers, and cook gently until everything is heated through.
- While the vegetables are simmering, bring a skillet of water to a boil--you'll use the pan to reheat the eggs right before serving.
- With the pot-au-feu at a gentle simmer, drop in the asparagus and shiitakes; cook until tender, about 4 minutes.
- Scatter the spinach over the vegetables and cook another 2 minutes, just until slightly wilted.
- Taste for salt and pepper; adjust.
- Slip the eggs into the skillet of simmering water and give them just a couple of minutes to warm while you spoon out the pot-au-feu.
- Ladle the vegetables and broth into shallow soup plates, scatter with chopped fresh herbs, and finish each with a poached or boiled egg; serve immediately.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 406.8, Fat 12.4, SaturatedFat 2.7, Cholesterol 186, Sodium 185.4, Carbohydrate 61.8, Fiber 10.6, Sugar 8.3, Protein 15.6
CLASSIC FRENCH POT AU FEU - CROCK POT OR LE CREUSET
Pot au Feu is French for "pot on the fire". In other words, a stew or stock pot which is left cooking over the fire. In previous times, it may simply have been a cooking pot which was left over the fire, into which was thrown whatever food and scraps happened to be available. Often the meat was either scraps, or relatively poor cuts which needed a long time to cook in order to be tender. In historical terms, it was a dish for relatively poor people. Today in France, you can buy "pot au feu" meat. Expect this to be meat which reflects the historical background of this dish: relatively inexpensive and inferior cuts, which will soften with long slow cooking. While such meat is quite adequate for a Pot au Feu, feel free to use better cuts if you wish. As a Pot au Feu is historically a stew-like dish of whatever meat and vegetables were available, there are no absolute guidelines about what it should contain. However, in general it will contain beef, some bones (such as ox-tail), vegetables (such as potatoes, carrots, onions, leeks, turnips) and herbs.
Provided by French Tart
Categories Stew
Time 10h40m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Crock Pot:.
- Combine all ingredients with the beef stock and cook on low 8 to 10 hours. Taste and adjust seasonings. Put the beef on platter and surround with the vegetables. Keep warm. Strain broth, skimming off fat, and add the flour - mix well and heat up gently until thickened. Serve separately in a gravy boat. Slice meat and serve accompanied with pickles and horseradish, French bread and butter.
- Traditional:.
- Brown meat in frying pan, adding salt and pepper. Sprinkle a little flour over the meat while turning over. Place meat into oven proof casserole dish or le Creuset.
- Briefly fry bacon, onions & garlic. Add the carrots and then the leeks and beef stock. Bring to the boil. Put everything into a large le Creuset or casserole dish, adding the turnips and potatoes last.
- Cook at low temperature (150C/300F) for about 5 hours or until the meat falls of the bone.
- Slice meat and serve accompanied with pickles and horseradish, French bread and butter. Serve the thickened jus in a gravy boat.
- Notes:.
- Depending on the meat being used, a Pot au Feu can be very rich. If you would like a leaner version, prepare it the day before and allow to cook overnight. Once cooled the fat will rise to the surface and it can be skimmed off. The dish can then be re-warmed.
- For a Pot au Feu with a Mediterranean flavour, modify the recipe by reducing the amount of meat, increasing the amount of vegetables and adding more herbs.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 2960.2, Fat 266.9, SaturatedFat 110.7, Cholesterol 371.2, Sodium 453.4, Carbohydrate 98.1, Fiber 14.9, Sugar 16.9, Protein 42.8
MIRAVAL'S VEGETABLE POT-AU-FEU
Provided by Molly O'Neill
Categories dinner, main course
Time 1h
Yield Four servings
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. Cut the base of the pumpkin so that it will sit steadily. Cut off the top to create a lid and set aside. Scrape out the pulp and seeds. Spray the cavity with olive oil and rub it with the garlic. Place the lid back on the pumpkin, wrap in aluminum foil and bake on a sheet for 20 minutes.
- Meanwhile, season the vegetable or chicken broth with salt and pepper and warm. Remove the pumpkin from the oven and when cool enough to handle, gently peel back the foil on top and remove the lid. Place a layer of chicken in the bottom of the pumpkin. Top with the steamed couscous.
- Combine all the vegetables, stir in the oregano and basil and divide the mixture evenly over the chicken. Ladle the broth into the pumpkin, replace the lid, rewrap with the foil and bake for 20 more minutes. Serve immediately.
FISH POT-AU-FEU
Make and share this Fish Pot-Au-Feu recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Julie Bs Hive
Categories Vegetable
Time 45m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Bring broth, wine, and tarragon to a boil over high heat in a large 5-6 quart saucepan. To this pot add the potatoes and carrots and return to a boil. Reduce heat and cover. Boil gently for 10 minutes.
- Trim the root end and all but 3 inches of green tops from the leeks and remove the outer leaves. Split lengthwise and rinse well. Add to pan, cover, and boil for about ten minutes, until vegetables are tender. Remove leeks from pan and keep warm.
- Rinse then pat dry the fish. Cut into 4 equal portions. Add to pan, cover, simmer until carrots are tender and fish is opaque but still moist. This should take 7-10 minutes.
- With a slotted spatula, lift fish from pan and arrange in 4 wide, shallow bowls, arrange vegetables alongside and ladle broth over all.
- Enjoy!
More about "summer vegetable pot au feu food"
VEGETABLE POT-AU-FEU RECIPE | BON APPéTIT
From bonappetit.com
SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU - MEALPLANNERPRO.COM
From mealplannerpro.com
POT-AU-FEU RECIPE | JAMES BEARD FOUNDATION
From jamesbeard.org
SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU RECIPE | EPICURIOUS
From epicurious.com
Servings 4Author Condé Nast
SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU FROM MARTHA STEWART (PIC ONLY)
From pinterest.com
POT AU FEU - FRENCH BRAISED BEEF AND VEGETABLES
From slofoodgroup.com
SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU RECIPE | RECIPE | SUMMER …
From pinterest.com
TRADITIONAL POT-AU-FEU RECIPE (BEEF & VEGETABLE STEW)
From urbainecity.com
SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU RECIPE | EAT YOUR BOOKS
From eatyourbooks.com
VEGAN POT AU FEU — PRODUCE ON PARADE
From produceonparade.com
BEST SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU 1372145 RECIPES
From recipert.com
ASPEN SUMMER POT AU FEU - GOODTASTE WITH TANJI
From goodtaste.tv
SUMMER VEGETABLE POT AU FEU RECIPES
From tfrecipes.com
VEGETABLE POT AU FEU RECIPES
From tfrecipes.com
CLASSIC FRENCH POT AU FEU RECIPE - THE SPRUCE EATS
From thespruceeats.com
Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »
You'll also love