
Recipe by
Chef Gordonbot
Classic Chamin-Asado (One‑Pan Overnight Beef Stew for a 400W Hotplate)
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Backstory: Old-school Jewish comfort with a Hungarian twist — asado (short ribs/plate) slowly braised with roasted bones and whipped marrow for silkiness, eggs cooked right in the pot, and warm notes of smoked paprika, cumin and cinnamon. Robust, set-and-forget, and bloody delicious.
Ingredients
- 2.5–3 kg asado cut (short ribs/plate), trimmed into large chunks
- Salt and plenty of freshly ground black pepper
- 3 tbsp neutral oil (or beef tallow if available)
- 2 large onions, quartered
- 4–5 large carrots, peeled and cut into 2–3 cm pieces
- 4 medium potatoes, peeled and cut into large chunks
- Optional: 1 medium yam, peeled and cut like potatoes
- 6–8 whole eggs, room temperature, unpeeled
- 2 whole roasted marrow bones (kept in)
- 3 tbsp whipped roasted marrow (from your prepared marrow)
- 1½ cups good beef stock (or 1½ cups water + 1–2 beef bouillon cubes)
- 1 cup dry red wine
- 2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce or soy sauce (umami)
- 2 tsp smoked paprika (or 1 tbsp for stronger paprika note)
- 1½ tsp ground cumin
- 1 cinnamon stick (or ¼ tsp ground cinnamon)
- 2 bay leaves
- 4 cloves garlic, smashed
- 1 tbsp brown sugar or honey (optional — balances acidity)
- 2 tbsp chopped fresh parsley (for finishing, optional)
Prep and Assembly (total active time ~40–60 minutes)
- Season the beef generously with salt and lots of black pepper.
- Heat a heavy, ovenproof Dutch oven or heavy pot over medium-high heat. Add oil. Working in batches, sear beef pieces until a deep brown develops (2–3 minutes per side). Don’t overcrowd. Transfer seared meat to a plate.
- Lower heat to medium; add onions and a pinch of salt. Brown until edges color (5–7 minutes). Add garlic and cook 30 seconds.
- Return beef to the pot. Nestle in the roasted marrow bones.
- Pour in wine to deglaze, scraping up browned bits. Let wine reduce 1–2 minutes.
- Add beef stock, Worcestershire/soy, smoked paprika, cumin, cinnamon stick, bay leaves, and brown sugar if using. Bring briefly to a simmer.
- Add carrots, potatoes (and yam if using), arranging them around the meat. Tuck the whole eggs among veg so they sit submerged or at least half-submerged in liquid.
- Dollop the whipped marrow into the pot in three or four blobs around the meat (it will melt into the braise).
- Taste the liquid and adjust seasoning — remember you’ll season more after cooking if needed, but be generous now.
Hotplate Instructions (400W, overnight ~12–14 hours) 10. Cover the pot with a tight-fitting lid. Place on your 400W hotplate set to low/steady — the goal is a very gentle steady simmer or strong steep; you should see the surface occasionally tremble but no aggressive bubbling. If your hotplate has numbers, use the low setting that keeps a slow movement. 11. Leave undisturbed for 12–14 hours. Check once briefly after the first 1–2 hours to confirm liquid is not boiling off excessively; add a splash of water/stock if needed. After that, minimal interference. 12. In the morning (or when serving), remove eggs and set aside to cool slightly before peeling (they’ll be mahogany from the braise). Remove marrow bones (if you like, scrape any remaining marrow into the sauce). 13. Skim any excess fat if desired. If sauce is thin, reduce on stovetop for 5–10 minutes until glossy and slightly thickened. Reheat gently if needed. 14. Adjust salt and pepper to taste. Stir in chopped parsley for brightness.
