Sarasota Creamy Swiss Steak With Horseradish Mashed Spuds

"True comfort food ... I love this dish and make it often. It truly is just heavenly. Serve this with my horseradish mashed potatoes and maybe some baby peas with pearl onions and garlic butter and you have traditional great diner food."
 
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Ready In:
2hrs 30mins
Ingredients:
25
Serves:
8
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ingredients

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directions

  • Steak -- First prepare the meat. Cut the steak into several pieces and then pound fairly thin. Once pounded, add flour, salt and pepper to a large baggie and then dredge each piece of the round steak and get ready to pan sear.
  • Meat -- In a large saute pan, heat to medium high and add the olive oil. Add the meat dredged in flour a few pieces at a time to cook. Saute each piece until golden brown just a couple of minutes per side. Once all done, remove to a plate while you cook the vegetables.
  • Vegetables -- In the same pan add a little bit more olive oil, just a teaspoon, and saute the onions, peppers, carrots, celery and mushrooms and cook 3-4 minutes until lightly soft, then return the meat to the pan.
  • Sauce -- In a small bowl, add the broth, soup, tomato paste, diced tomatoes, worcestershire, herbs, salt, and pepper and mix well. Add this to the pan with the steak and vegetables and lightly fold in so everything is mixed through.
  • Bring to a medium boil and then reduce to low and cook covered on the stove for 2 hours until the meat falls apart. Just low and slow is the only way for this to turn out right.
  • Potatoes -- As the steak is cooking, it is "spud" time. In a medium pot of salted water, add the potatoes and cook on medium high until soft. Once soft, drain well and return back to the pan to lightly dry out.
  • Mash the spuds with a potato masher (personally I like mine a rough mash vs a creamy type with a mixer). And for the cream or milk, I like to heat mine up just a bit in the microwave, 20-30 seconds just so it isn't ice cold. It just makes for a smoother sauce. Then add it to the potatoes along with the horseradish, sour cream, salt and pepper and combine.
  • Enjoy! Serve the swiss steak and vegetable sauce over the horseradish creamy potatoes.

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>Growing up in Michigan, I spent my summers at my cottage in the Northern part up by Traverscity. On a lake, big garden which had all the vegetables you could imagine. My mom taught school, so summers were our vacation time. Gramps and I fished all the time so fresh fish was always on the menu, perch, blue gill, walleye and small and large mouth bass. At age 5 I learned how to clean my own fish and by 10 I was making dinner, canning vegetables and fruits, making pies and fresh breads. Apples fresh picked every fall, strawberries in June and July, Cherries at the Cherry Festival in Traverscity. So fresh foods always were a big part. Mom worked as a teacher during the year so dinner was more traditional with pot roasts, meatloaf, etc, but it seemed we always had fresh fruits and vegetables as part of the meal. Mom also didn't use as many spices as I do, but times were different back then. <br /> <br />So ... My motto is ... There is NO Right and NO Wrong with cooking. So many people thing they have to follow a recipe. But NO ... a recipe is a method and directions to help and teach someone. Cooking is about personal tastes and flavors. I love garlic ... and another person may not. I like heat ... but you may not. Recipes are building blocks, NOT text ground in stone. Use them to make and build on. Even my recipes I don't follow most times --They are a base. That is what cooking is to me. A base of layer upon layer of flavors. <br /> <br />I still dislike using canned soups or packaged gravies/seasoning ... but I admit, I do use them. I have a few recipes that use them. But I try to strive to teach people to use fresh ingredients, they are first ... so much healthier for you ... and second, in the end less expensive. But we all have our moments including me. <br /> <br />So, lets see ... In the past, I have worked as a hostess, bartender, waitress, then a short order cook, salad girl in the kitchen, sort of assistant chef, head chef, co owner of a restaurant ... now a consultant to a catering company/restaurant, I cater myself and I'm a personal chef for a elderly lady. I work doing data entry during the day, and now and then try to have fun which is not very often due to my job(s). <br /> <br />I have a 21 year old who at times is going on 12, aren't they all. Was married and now single and just trying to enjoy life one day at a time. I'm writing a cookbook ... name is still in the works but it is dedicated to those people who never learned, to cook. Single Moms, Dads, or Just Busy Parents. Those individuals that think you can't make a great dinner for not a lot of money. You can entertain on a budget and I want people to know that gourmet tasting food doesn't have to be from a can of soup or a box, and healthy food doesn't come from a drive through. There are some really good meals that people can make which are healthy and will save money but taste amazing. So I guess that is my current goal. We all take short cuts and I have no problem with that - I do it too. I volunteer and make food for the homeless every couple of months, donating my time and money. I usually make soup for them and many times get donations from a local grocery stores, Sams Club, Walmart etc, with broth, and vegetables. It makes my cost very little and well worth every minute I spend. Like anyone, life is always trying to figure things out and do the best we can and have fun some how along the way.</p>
 
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