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A Stew of Oxtail and Onions for a Cold Night

The animal’s tail has a gentle life, the occasional swish in a buttercup-strewn meadow, and I like to think that is reflected in how we choose to cook it. Oxtail is a meal of almost soporific qualities. It will not be hurried toward tenderness any more than the animal will be hurried along a country lane. After a long, slow baking with a lot of finely sliced onions and a little aromatic liquid, the velvety fibers will fall away from the bone in brown and pink flakes. Some spinach, very lightly cooked and served without butter, will flatter the meat and melt into the creamy sauce.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    enough for 4

Ingredients

olive oil
oxtail – 4 pounds (1.75kg)
large onions – 2
3 bay leaves
a glass of white wine
heavy cream – 1 1/4 cups (300ml)
smooth Dijon mustard – a tablespoon
whole-grain mustard – a tablespoon

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Warm a little olive oil in a Dutch oven or other heavy pot. Season the oxtail all over with salt and black pepper. Lower into the oil and let color on all sides. Meanwhile halve, peel, and thinly slice the onions, while occasionally turning the meat so that it browns lightly and evenly. Remove the oxtail from the pot and add the onions, letting them soften a little but not color.

    Step 2

    Preheat the oven to 325°F (160°C). Hide the meat among the onions, tuck in the bay leaves, and pour over the white wine. Lay a piece of buttered or oiled wax paper over the top, then cover with a lid. Bake for two and a half hours, checking now and again that it is not dry. If it is, add a little more liquid. Remove from the oven.

    Step 3

    Lift the lid and remove the meat to a warm dish. Pour off any obvious fat from the pan, then stir in the cream and the mustards, and check the seasoning. Bring to a boil on the stove and bubble hard for five to ten minutes to reduce the quantity, stirring in any pan stickings as you go.

    Step 4

    Spoon the mustard sauce over the oxtail and eat immediately.

Tender
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