Texas Style Carne Guisada
My youngest daughter and her husband are currently in Bali,
Indonesia and were homesick for some good Texas style Mexican food. I am posting this blog so they can fix some
Carne Guisada for their new friends in Bali.
Growing up in West Texas, Mexican food was a staple in our
diets. Most of us had Mexican food almost as much as we did American cuisine
and sometimes a blend of both. As I grew older I spent the summers working as a
cowboy on ranches from the Red River to the Hill Country and all the way out to
the Trans Pecos. Each area served a little bit different kind of Tex-mex food
and all tasted a little different. Each dish was influenced by the people that
lived there. One of my favorites was Carne Guisada. It was eaten with rice,
peppers and tortillas on the side. Other places it was wrapped in tortillas and
eaten as tacos or burritos. Many times I had it as the main ingredient in
breakfast tacos. I like to serve homemade Carne Guisada with Spanish style
rice, refried beans, flour tortillas and lots of peppers. I have even been
known to stop at one of the Mexican fast food chains to get my fix of Carne
Guisada.
This wonderful Mexican stew is made in many variations and
one can use most any meat or peppers in its creation. I have eaten it made from
beef, pork, venison and other game meats. No one way is right and I enjoy
trying it all over this great State. Some versions have potatoes and other
vegetables. One of my favorites is a New Mexico version full of green chilies
and sweet onion. My most memorable meal of Carne Guisada took place on a
horseback sheep hunt on the Big Bend Ranch State Park. My brother-by-choice and
I had hired a couple of vaqueros as guides and they had taken us up in the
rough high desert country in search of Aoudad sheep. At lunch we let the horses and
our backsides take a rest while we sat and ate Carne Guisada tacos that had
been packed in our saddle bags. We sat on a high mesa where there had once been an Apache village, the circles where the wikiups were placed still visible all these many years later. As we ate we were looking across the Rio
Grande into the majestic mountains of Mexico. That day I ate an authentic meal with
people from a different world thinking of Apaches while taking in a view I will never forget.
CARNE GUISADA
Ingredients:
1 pound stew beef
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
2 tablespoons tomato paste
10 1/2 ounces condensed beef broth, undiluted
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1 teaspoon chili powder
1/2 teaspoon cumin
1 or 2 small jalapeno or Serrano Chile peppers, chopped
1/2 cup water
2 teaspoons cornstarch, dissolved in a small amount of cold
water
Directions: Brown meat in oil on all sides. Pour off excess
grease. Add tomato paste [optional], beef broth, salt and pepper, garlic, chili
powder, cumin, Chile peppers, and water. Cover and cook on low for 8 to 12
hours, or until meat is very tender. Turn to high and dissolve about 2
teaspoons of cornstarch in small amount of cold water and slowly pour into
stew, which is simmering, until proper thickness of gravy is obtained. Serve
with rice and warm tortillas, if desired. The longer you let it simmer the
better it gets. Good Eating, Wild Ed
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