I finally took a whack at my Nana's beef soup recipe. I really wish we had it written down before she passed, but I'm in the ballpark for a first attempt going from memory/scratch. It would good enough for me to overeat, anyways.
-Big package of soup bones from BJ's. Roasted in the oven at 450 until browned on both sides over a bed of carrots, onions, garlic, and celery.
-Took roasted items, tossed into instant pot, filled with water, pressure cook high for 2 hours.
-Drain pressure cooker contents through cheese cloth, making sure to really squeeze the bag.
-Brown some bone-in chuck on the stove.
-Into a giant pot goes the beef chuck, large can of diced tomatoes, half a big can of crushed tomatoes, small can of tomato paste, salt, pepper, seasoned salt, bay leaves, and Hungarian paprika. Simmer contents on medium-low for what seems like an eternity.
-Add carrots, onion, and celery late in the game. Cook until the carrots are tender. I made a mistake and thought there were green beans in her recipe so I added them too. I was wrong, will omit the green beans next time.
-Pull the beef chuck remove the bones. Coarse chop the fall-apart beef, return the beef and the bone marrow to the pot.
-Serve over egg noodles with an extra dash of seasoned salt.
One thing is that this recipe HAS to be better the next day. In fact, I'm not even sure my Nana ever served it the day it was cooked. First reason is that a lot of grease/fat floats to the top of the pot on this one, from both the bone broth and subsequent cooking of the meat. She always let this solidify and then scraped it off to make the soup a little less oily. The other reason is that some magic happens with the melding of the flavors when it sits. When I started with just the bone broth, which smells kind of funky, I thought it was going to be a disaster and that I was all wrong. Once the tomatoes and everything started going in, I still thought it was going to be a disaster, as all the constituents sort of float around on their own. It's not until much later in the cooking does everything start to really break down, and you get this intensely red broth. I ate a bowl hot, it was good, not great. It sat on the stove for a while mostly cooled down at that point, when I snuck another taste (or 12). THERE it was, that "this tastes like Nana's soup" moment.
I do need to experiment a little more with the tomato aspect. Something seemed just a bit off, and I'm wondering if she may have used an actual can of plain tomato sauce in lieu of crushed tomatoes, purely from a textural perspective. I may try that next time instead.