A Tail of A Beast (of Burden)
Off again to the local meat cutter (Ward’s Meats and it’s just that: you buy an animal from the farmer, the butcher kills it, and off it goes to a local meat cutter for cutting and packing. Our cutter is Ward). This time the goal of the journey is beef bones, both for us (consommé) and the dogs (chewing and burying). Oh, and for sausage casings (I’ve yet to attempt to make these on my own. It’s a project for the future). However, this discussion will focus on neither of these.
In our lives, we try to get closer to the source of our food. Not only is it better for you and you know all about it, but you can get things that normally you would pay for in the store for free (trading homemade preserves for things you want really does work) I like to make beef broth, consommé and stock, but to do this I need a lot of good beef bones. You can’t get these at the local grocery store, and butcher shops are getting to be few and far between. So, since the butcher and the cutter end up with an awful lot of them (and offal) and they just get sent to the rendering plant anyway, I intercept them at the cutter. Normally, we don’t pay anything for them, and they’ll give you more than you can take. We got some bones, and he also gave us a complete ox tail, sectioned, that a customer didn’t take. Ward just wanted it out of his freezer.
Once home, I got to work on Ox tail soup. I thawed them, opened them up and rinsed them off.
That’s them. So, now that we are at the starting point of this recipe, what shall we do? Let’s start, I say!
Ingredients:
21/2 pounds oxtail, cut and trimmed
½ cup unsifted flour plus 2 Tablespoons
2 Tablespoons beef drippings or vegetable oil
2 medium yellow onions, peeled and minced
6 cups of water and 1 pint bouillon
2 Tablespoons tomato paste
2 teaspoons salt1/4 teaspoon pepper
1 bay leaf
½ teaspoon thyme
3 cloves
2 sprigs of parsley
2 medium carrots, peeled and diced
1 stalk celery, diced
1/3 cup sherry or port wine
Dredge the oxtails in ½ cup flour:
Once dredged, brown in drippings. You will need a large, heavy-bottomed stockpot for this:
Drain on paper towels after browning. Add onions to oil, turn up heat to medium and sauté till golden, but not burnt. Sprinkle in remaining flour, mix well and brown lightly.
Slowly add the water and bouillon, stir in tomato paste, salt and pepper;
Place bay leaf, thyme, cloves and parsley in a bouquet garni and add to pot.
Return the oxtail to the pot, cover, and let simmer for 3 hours until the meat is tender.
Remove bouquet garni. Remove meat and separate from the bones, cut to bite size and add back to the pot. Add carrots and celery.
Cover and simmer till carrots are tender, about 15 minutes. Add wine when tender.
I often wondered why this dish exists. There is a high bone to meat ratio, and its the tail. After eating it, I now know why. It has an incredible beefy flavor, and the texture is like tender rib steak. A wonderful soup, it went very well with a cold, rainy winter day in the northwest.









That is bloody fantastic. I’m gonna go see my guy about having an oxtail held back.