Minesta (Manestra): Difference between revisions

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== Background ==
== Background ==
My heritage on my mother's side has some Greek. I don't recall the details now, but I think 2 generations back. One of the "family" recipes is a casserole they call minesta. Basically a baked lamb shoulder with orzo pasta in a tomato sauce.
This recipe is really an evolution of an old family recipe. I am including each step along the way, so bonus to you dear reader is you get several versions to try out and decide what you like best.


I have no idea how close my version is to what my grandmother made. My mother made a couple of changes, as have I. AFAIK, we don't have a written version. In any case, this is one of my comfort foods, something my mother made for me for special occasions.  
Part of my heritage on my mother's side is Greek. My maternal grandparents both passed when I was young, so there isn't a lot of "dinner at grandma's" in my memories. So, I don't really know what they ate. The one exception is this dish. My mother got this recipe from her mother and prepared it on special occasions. I loved it and it was something she prepared when I was going to visit if it wasn't Thanksgiving or some other holiday with a proscribed menu. So it's become one of my comfort foods.


The biggest change was in the meat, my mother (and maybe others) weren't big fans of meat. It's also an uncommon thing in supermarkets around here. So instead she used chuck roast. Similar flavor and texture, though larger.
It's called minesta and is basically a roast lamb shoulder with orzo pasta in a tomato sauce.
 
I have no idea how close this is to what my grandmother actually made. I remember seeing the original 3x5 card my mother made of the recipe, but it's lost to the mists of time. My mother made a couple of changes, as have I.
 
The biggest change was in the meat, my mother (and maybe others) weren't big fans of lamb. It's an uncommon thing to find in supermarkets in Greater Suburbia. It's also rather expensive. Instead, she used beef chuck roast. Similar flavor and texture, though larger and boneless.
 
The other major change is in preparation. Originally, you'd cook a roast in a roasting pan in the oven. You know, that place you store pans and stuff. It would take 2-3 hours depending on the size of the roast. That limits the meal to something for a weekend dinner. Working full time as she did and with 2 kids, the weekends weren't exactly conducive to lengthy operations in the kitchen.
 
Sometime in the 1980s crockpots/slow cookers became a thing. A roast like this would take 6-8 hours to cook. This may sound counter-intuitive but making it take longer made it easier to make. Because now you could put it together in the morning and let it go until you got home from work. This had 2 additional benefits: 1) the lower cooking temperature meant cleaning the pan was a lot easier and 2) the window where it's "done" but not "overdone" is really quite wide. A much more forgiving situation if you were nervous about ruining a meal. So once she had one of these wondrous devices, she used it instead of roasting in a pan in the oven.


== Ingredients ==
== Ingredients ==


* 2-3 lbs Chuck Roast
* 2-3 lbs Lamb Roast or Beef Chuck Roast
* 1 29 oz. crushed or pureed tomatoes
* (1) 29 oz. crushed or pureed tomatoes (not sauce)
* 1 lb. Orzo pasta
* (1) lb. Orzo pasta
* Random Italian/Greek spices (parsley, oregano, rosemary, and thyme)
* 2 cups broth (usually Beef)


== Directions ==
== Directions ==
# Put the roast in the pan (or slow cooker) and cover it with the tomatoes and sprinkle on the spices
# Cook it until it's done (but leave the oven/cooker on)
# Remove the roast, cut it up into small pieces and put it somewhere it will stay warm but not eaten by the dogs
# Stir the orzo into the juices/tomatoes, cover and let it heat
# How long? Well...that depends. I like my pasta ''done'', so that's about 30 minutes in a slow cooker on high.
If you like yours chewy, I'm sorry, ''al dente'', then stop it whenever it's where you like it. However, orzo soaks up a ''lot'' of liquid. Perhaps more than you actually have. This is where the broth comes in, add it as needed while the pasta is cooking. You are aiming for something that's basically a thick stew. It's OK to err on the more fluid side, the orzo will win eventually no matter what you do.
# Return the meat to the pan and get it back up to temperature and then serve.
The leftovers are really good as well, though they will be drier as noted.

Revision as of 11:17, 7 July 2020

Background

This recipe is really an evolution of an old family recipe. I am including each step along the way, so bonus to you dear reader is you get several versions to try out and decide what you like best.

Part of my heritage on my mother's side is Greek. My maternal grandparents both passed when I was young, so there isn't a lot of "dinner at grandma's" in my memories. So, I don't really know what they ate. The one exception is this dish. My mother got this recipe from her mother and prepared it on special occasions. I loved it and it was something she prepared when I was going to visit if it wasn't Thanksgiving or some other holiday with a proscribed menu. So it's become one of my comfort foods.

It's called minesta and is basically a roast lamb shoulder with orzo pasta in a tomato sauce.

I have no idea how close this is to what my grandmother actually made. I remember seeing the original 3x5 card my mother made of the recipe, but it's lost to the mists of time. My mother made a couple of changes, as have I.

The biggest change was in the meat, my mother (and maybe others) weren't big fans of lamb. It's an uncommon thing to find in supermarkets in Greater Suburbia. It's also rather expensive. Instead, she used beef chuck roast. Similar flavor and texture, though larger and boneless.

The other major change is in preparation. Originally, you'd cook a roast in a roasting pan in the oven. You know, that place you store pans and stuff. It would take 2-3 hours depending on the size of the roast. That limits the meal to something for a weekend dinner. Working full time as she did and with 2 kids, the weekends weren't exactly conducive to lengthy operations in the kitchen.

Sometime in the 1980s crockpots/slow cookers became a thing. A roast like this would take 6-8 hours to cook. This may sound counter-intuitive but making it take longer made it easier to make. Because now you could put it together in the morning and let it go until you got home from work. This had 2 additional benefits: 1) the lower cooking temperature meant cleaning the pan was a lot easier and 2) the window where it's "done" but not "overdone" is really quite wide. A much more forgiving situation if you were nervous about ruining a meal. So once she had one of these wondrous devices, she used it instead of roasting in a pan in the oven.

Ingredients

  • 2-3 lbs Lamb Roast or Beef Chuck Roast
  • (1) 29 oz. crushed or pureed tomatoes (not sauce)
  • (1) lb. Orzo pasta
  • Random Italian/Greek spices (parsley, oregano, rosemary, and thyme)
  • 2 cups broth (usually Beef)

Directions

  1. Put the roast in the pan (or slow cooker) and cover it with the tomatoes and sprinkle on the spices
  2. Cook it until it's done (but leave the oven/cooker on)
  3. Remove the roast, cut it up into small pieces and put it somewhere it will stay warm but not eaten by the dogs
  4. Stir the orzo into the juices/tomatoes, cover and let it heat
  5. How long? Well...that depends. I like my pasta done, so that's about 30 minutes in a slow cooker on high.

If you like yours chewy, I'm sorry, al dente, then stop it whenever it's where you like it. However, orzo soaks up a lot of liquid. Perhaps more than you actually have. This is where the broth comes in, add it as needed while the pasta is cooking. You are aiming for something that's basically a thick stew. It's OK to err on the more fluid side, the orzo will win eventually no matter what you do.

  1. Return the meat to the pan and get it back up to temperature and then serve.

The leftovers are really good as well, though they will be drier as noted.