Oxtail-Stuffed Peppers

Oxtail-Stuffed Peppers
Phil Kline for The New York Times
Total Time
4½ hours
Rating
4(8)
Comments
Read comments

Timing is everything. I was at Casa Mono, in Manhattan, lapping up every drop of the sauce from a little cazuela of piquillo peppers stuffed with oxtails. The next day I was tasting Ribera del Duero wines (with the restaurant’s wine director, as it happened) and could think of no better dish for them than those meaty, slightly fruity peppers with their alluring hint of bitterness.Andy Nusser, the chef at Casa Mono, provided the recipe, enough to feed the entire town of Peñafiel. I made drastic cuts (four quarts of stock down to two cups, for example) but still had enough for a party. My freezer holds the bonus. Though the oxtails are time consuming, they cook mostly unattended. —Florence Fabricant

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Ingredients

Yield:8 to 12 appetizer or tapa servings

    For the Oxtail-stuffed Peppers

    • 2oxtails, about 3 pounds each, cut in 4- to 5-inch sections
    • Salt
    • black pepper
    • 3medium onions, diced
    • 2cloves garlic, 1 sliced
    • ¼pound piece Serrano ham, diced
    • 1small green bell pepper, cored, seeded and diced
    • 1tablespoon flat-leaf parsley, chopped
    • 1plum tomato, finely chopped
    • 1bay leaf
    • Pinch crushed red chili flakes
    • 1cup dry red wine
    • 2cups beef stock
    • 2jars (7 8/10 ounces) piquillo peppers, drained and patted dry, about 24
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

655 calories; 45 grams fat; 18 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 19 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 7 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 49 grams protein; 991 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. For the Oxtail-stuffed Peppers

    1. Step 1

      Discard the narrow end section of each oxtail. Season the rest with salt and pepper and brown over high heat in a 6-quart casserole or braising pan. Remove. Reduce heat to low. Add ⅔ of the diced onions, the sliced garlic clove and the ham. Sauté until onions are soft.

    2. Step 2

      Meanwhile, by hand or in food processor, finely chop the remaining onion and garlic with the green pepper and the parsley. Mix with the tomato. Add to the pan when the onions are soft, and reduce heat to medium. Cook, stirring, until all vegetables are soft. Stir in the bay leaf, chili flakes, wine and stock. Raise heat and bring to a simmer.

    3. Step 3

      Return oxtails to pan, baste, cover and reduce heat to very low. Cook about 3 hours, turning once, until meat is fork tender. Remove oxtails to cool. Strain liquid and reserve, discarding solids. Finely chop or shred meat and mix with ⅔ cup of the liquid.

    4. Step 4

      Heat oven to 350 degrees. Stuff peppers with meat. Pour 1 cup liquid into a shallow baking dish. (The rest can be saved for another use.) Arrange peppers in dish and bake until heated through, 15 minutes.

Ratings

4 out of 5
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This has been a favorite recipe of mine that my culinary and literary hero Jim Harrison wrote about as well... a dish so unctuous and romantic. A celebration of humble ingredients; a dish simultaneously exotic and familiar, and one I pine for again and again.

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Credits

Adapted from Casa Mono, Manhattan

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