The Feast of Leftovers continues for me – and probably for many of my readers. I mentioned yesterday I had a lovely Prime Rib dinner for Christmas Eve. (Prime Rib cooking instructions are here). Yesterday the nicer cuts of leftover prime rib were consumed as part of the Feast of Stephen (December 26)
Now I have 4 nice large bones from the Prime Rib – and the less choice scraps of meat (too much fat, gristle, overcooked – my aren’t we fussy North Americans!). So the solution is soup! (I have a Sour Cream Biscuit recipe here if you want something to go with the soup. Easy to make while the stock is simmering!)
PREP WORK
To create a Prime Rib soup you make things up! Soup from leftovers is improvisational cooking and experimentation. For Prime Rib soup trim off the excess fat – but still leave some fat on the bones and other scraps. Remember fat is flavour! You can always skim off the floating fat at the end of the cooking.
Some recipes for Prime Rib just have you dump all the ingredients into a big enough pot and let it simmer away until done while adding pre-made beef stock or bouillon cubes for flavour.
We will make our own stock base from the Prime Rib bones. Part of the reason I do this is to control the salt content. Because we are using leftovers that are seasoned it is a good strategy to wait before adding more seasoning. You can always add more of what is missing – but you can never take it back once it is in the pot!
Step One: Prime Rib Stock
Place the bones (ribs) in a pot large enough to hold the bones and just cover with water. You do not want too much water at this point as it will dilute your flavour. Also add in the less choice cuts of prime rib meat you have in the left-overs. If you have some better slices of leftover prime rib save that meat for adding at the end.
Next add to the pot 1 medium onion (whole), 1 or 2 cloves garlic, and the root vegetables of your choice. I like adding 1 parsnip root and 2-3 carrots. Make sure you have enough water to cover the contents of the pot. Set on stove-top and bring to boil. Then let simmer for at least 90 minutes. Longer is better. Remember you don’t want a full boil – only a slow simmer!
Go find a good book and a glass of wine and do some reading! Remember the bones and meat are already cooked so what we are doing is extracting flavour. The longer you allow this to simmer the richer the broth! This is soup foreplay – so a long slow simmer helps to intensify the end result.
While the stock is simmering you can prepare any additional vegetables you may want to add to the final soup. I like adding chopped celery, potatoes, peas, and mushrooms. You can also add a chopped carrot or two. Set them aside for later. Keep the potatoes in cold water so they do not turn black!
When you think the stock is done (the meat will be falling off the bone)- take it off the heat and let it sit 15 minutes. Once the stock has settled you can skim off the excess fat at this point. Remove the larger items (bones, meat chunks, root vegetables, onion) from the stock and set aside for use later – or if you don’t like super-cooked veggies just toss them in the green-bin!
Step 2: Season the Stock
Take a fresh pot and place a fine sieve over the fresh pot. Now gently pour your stock into the new pot. Time for the taste test! Get a small spoon and sample the stock. What does it need? Salt? Spices? More beefy flavour? Does it need a little more water? Or maybe some pre-made beef stock to add both volume and flavour. This is the part where you use the magic of your senses to make the soup your own!
If I have leftover Prime Rib gravy I will add it to the stock. The gravy will thicken the stock so go easy! As well in go any leftover sauteed mushrooms I might have. Since these are already seasoned – make sure you add these before adding more salt! If I need more salt I will sometimes add 1/2 teaspoon of Marmite for flavouring, or a few squirts of Worcestershire sauce.
You can now freeze your stock, or use some for the next step in soup making!
Step 3: Add vegetables (and other ingredients that need to cook)
Once you have adjusted the seasoning (and the volume of liquid) – add the uncooked vegetables to the prepared stock. Some people like adding barley – remember barley will absorb quite a bit of liquid. I would add no more than 1/2 cup of soup or pearl barley. (Myself I like adding Japanese Udon noodles at the end to my soup so I don’t add barley – this is your soup so make it the way you like!)
Place the soup on the stove and bring to boil. Turn down to a simmer and let cook for 20-30 minutes or so (until vegetables are cooked to your liking. Barley also usually cooks in 30 minutes).
Step 4: Finish the soup and eat!
IF you had leftover meat from the Prime Rib that you did not use in making the stock then you can add these choice bits of meat to the soup so the meat will be heated, and soften. Make sure it is cut into bite sized pieces. It is up to you when you add this meat – I add right away so it cooks for 30 minutes and falls apart.
If you kept the bones and meat from making the stock, you can strip any better bits of meat to add back to your soup. The longer the bones and meat have cooked the easier it will fall off the bone and gristle. Add this meat back when the soup has finished cooking.
If you are using Udon noodles you can add these at the end. Let your soup come back to a boil and the turn it off. Add black pepper to taste.
Enjoy!
Remember this is not an exact recipe so you can experiment and find what works best for you.
Related articles
- How to Roast Prime Rib for Christmas Dinner (victrocious.wordpress.com)
- Family Christmas Recipes (ruralhousewives.com)
- 8 Stocks and Recipes to Make With Your Holiday Leftovers (artofmanliness.com)
- Making bone broth or stock from leftovers (modernhomesteaders.net)
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Wow! Apparently many people had Prime Rib for Christmas! December 26, 2015 and at 1000 views already for this…
At least one thing I wrote has an audience!
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Tried it out today and it went over big in the house. Thanks!
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Reblogged this on Servus Humillimus.
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I don’t want soup but now you have me completely obsessed with having meat. I eat meat once in a while. But, when I get the craving, I HAVE TO HAVE IT. My husband, when I mentioned it was not a fan since he is cooking a pork roast. (I don’t care.) We can have that tomorrow. I need steak. Tonight. Gee, Thanks for the craving. I’m going to ask my son….
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🙂
There is nothing like a lovely properly cooked steak,
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Now you’ve made me hungry. Delicious
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It is delicious
it was my lunch for today and i froze some for another day! got to get my money’s worth out of the prime rib 🙂
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I have some leftover prime rib and you have now solved my problem
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Soup is always the answer! I find after the heavy and rich meals of the past few days soup is just what I am craving!
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me too
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