Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (2024)

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (1)

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Okay, I'm a day early but I can't help it. I'm excited. I love St. Paddy's Day!

I'm pretty sure we have some percentage of Irish blood flowing through our veins. Doesn't everyone?

Anyway, I am very happy to do this blog today because of a couple of reasons......

1.) St. Patrick's Day...'nuff said

2.) I got to play with bread

3.) Stew is delicious

4.) my pictures turned out so pretty

Oh, I should mention.... this stew recipe is for a crowd. I wanted to make it big enough to feed

the animals

my coworkers at work. Near as I can tell this make approx 20 servings of about 1 cups each.

The Celtic Trinity Knots (1 can of Pillsbury Pizza Dough and 1 can of Pillsbury Grands Crescent Dough) yielded a total of 48 knots. So, 20 servings of 2 knots with a few left over.

Let's start with the stew recipe :)

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (2)

Irish Stew

Ingredients

8 cups beef broth

2 cans (440 ml each) Guinness draught

1/2 cup barley

3 Tbsp vegetable oil +

2 1/2 lbs stewing beef, cut into chunks

1/4 cup flour

1 Tbsp vegetable oil

2 medium onions, coarsely chopped

1/3 cup red wine

12 large carrots, coarsely chopped

12 medium potatoes, quartered

4 leeks, cut into medium slices

2 medium potatoes, cooked and mashed

1 Tbsp flour

1/2 cup parsley, finely chopped

Directions

Heat broth in a very large sauce pan (at least a 10 liter/10 quart pan). Add in the Guinness.

Keep simmering and add in the barley.

In a large frying pan over medium-high heat, heat the 3 Tbsp of oil. Place the chunks of beef in a large plastic bag and add in the flour. Shake to coat. (You may need another Tbsp or two to coat all the pieces.)

Cook the meat, about 1/3 of it at a time, in the frying pan. You want to brown the meat and seal in the flavors.

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (3)

When the meat is browned, remove from the pan and add to the simmering broth. Repeat until all meat is cooked.

Add the 1 Tbsp of vegetable oil to the hot pan.

Add in the chopped onions. Cook and stir for about 2 minutes then add them to the broth as well.

Take the 1/3 cup of red wine and pour it in the hot pan. Deglaze the pan with the wine and then add this to the broth. (You want to make sure you scrape up all the tasty bits stuck to the pan!)

Cover the saucepan and let simmer, very gently, for 2 hours. Stir every 20 minutes or so to make sure nothing is sticking to the bottom of the pan. (If it seems to be sticking then turn the heat down even more.)

After 2 hours - add in the carrots, potatoes, and leeks. Cover and continue to simmer for an additional 40 minutes. Again, stir occasionally to make sure nothing is sticking to the bottom.

After 40 minutes - in a small bowl mix the 2 mashed potatoes with the 1 Tbsp of flour. Add this to the stew and stir well. (This acts as a thickener and makes it more "stew like").

Cook and stir for another 5 - 10 minutes until thickened.

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (4)

You can serve like this....

Or garnish with the chopped parsley....

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (5)

Mmmmmm.... tasty with baking powder biscuits or a hunk of our Irish Potato Breador with our pretty Celtic Trinity Knots (instructions follow below!).

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (6)

Celtic Trinity Knots

Ingredients

1/4 cup melted butter (we used our Guinness Butter)

1/3 to 1/2 cup Parmesan cheese, powdered

1 can Pillsbury Pizza Dough

1 can Pillsbury Grands Crescent Dough

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (7)Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (8)

Directions

Preheat oven to 375. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper, set side.

Open the can of Pillsbury Pizza Dough (or Crescent Dough) and unroll on counter. Pinch seams together, flip dough over, and pinch seams together again.

Cut the dough into 24 equal strips. (12 strips each from the crescent dough as it is in 2 pieces)

In the photos below the crescent dough is on the right and pizza dough is on the left.

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (9)Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (10)

To make each knot:

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (11)

Starting at step #3 in the photo above - Place 1 strip in a "rainbow" shape. (Helpful hint - roll the strip in your palms so it is rounded and not flat. I found this made shaping the knot easier.)

Step #4 - take one side and fold it up over the middle of the "rainbow" to form a loop.

Step #5 - take the other side and fold it up and over the first loop, leaving a small hole in the center where they cross over.

Step #6 - Pinch together the ends of the strip into a point. Pinch the 2 loops into points as well. Do your best to shape the knot so all loops are even.

Step #7 - Place the knots onto the prepared cookie sheet. Using a pastry or basting brush, lightly brush each knot with the melted butter. Sprinkle with the Parmesan cheese.

Step #8 - Bake at 375 until tops are browned, about 15 minutes or so - keep checking.

Step #9 - Remove from cookie sheet and serve warm or let cool completely and serve at room temp.

(Crescent dough is on the right and pizza dough is on the left in the photos below).

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (12)Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (13)

I found the crescent dough was softer than the pizza dough. The pizza dough went quite crispy. Not that that is a bad thing! The crispy, cheesy knots were delicious with the stew.

Okay, the crescent dough knots were equally as delicious. Personal preference which one you prefer. I think I liked the crescent ones a bit more. Need a hint as to which ones Sue liked? (Yeah, it was the pizza ones - big surprise!)

You can, of course, just use either/or. I used both because I wanted to see how each would turn out. When I make them again I will most likely just use the Pillsbury Grands Crescent Dough as I preferred the softer texture.

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (14)Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (15)

You should totally make this for your St. Patrick's Day dinner.

The Celtic Trinity Knots take about an hour to make - depending on how fast you are at shaping them - and the stew takes about 30 minutes of prep work (ie: cutting veggies, cooking the meat) otherwise it just bubbles away on the stove for the afternoon making your house smell AMAZING.

You can very easily half the stew recipe and make 10-ish servings. Or, make the whole batch as it freezes very well!

Irish Stew and Celtic Trinity Knots (2024)

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