Can't stand the taste of alcohol of any kind. The most I can force myself choke down is a rum and coke on special occasions.
The shepherds pie.
What you'll need.
Two pounds of chopped steak or two pounds of ground beef
three large potatoes
two cups corn
two cups peas
three carrots
two stalks of celery
one onion
two cloves of minced garlic
a handful or two of sliced mushrooms
Salt and pepper to taste
rosemary, basil, and thyme (about a teaspoon each)
paprika to taste
garlic salt to taste
worcestershire sauce
oil
corn starch or flour
milk
butter
shredded cheese, your choice
A shepherd's pie is essentially a meat stew covered with mashed potatoes. The meat requires a bit of marinading as well before the real preparation can start if you are using the steak. If you have opted for the ground beef, you can skip the marinade. This recipe assumes you are using the steak.
Preperation
The night before, slice your steaks into strips and place them in a ziplock bag along with the ***** sauce, sliced onion, garlic, rosemary, basil, thyme, and about a cup of water and allow it to sit in your refrigerator until you are ready to start cooking. when the time comes, remove the steak strips and chop them into cubes. Heat up a large pan with enough oil to cover the bottom of the pan and place in it the marinaded steak bits and onions. DO NOT THROW AWAY THE MARINADE! We will be needing it. When the steak is done, withdraw them from the heat and place them in a bowl for later. This is where timing becomes a bit... tricky. Start a pot of water boiling with a pinch of salt in it, while that is going chop up your carrots, potatoes, and celery. Place the chopped potatoes in the pot of boiling water and place the carrots and celery into the pan you just cooked your steak in. Allow it to sit until the carrots are at least partially tender and add the peas, corn, and mushrooms last. add the marinade to the pan with the vegetables and let simmer for about ten to fifteen minutes. In the meantime, take half a cup of oil and a tablespoon of corn starch or flour and mix the two together the make your thickener and set it aside. Lower the temperature on your vegetables and strain your potatoes. This next bit is tricky, if you can get someone to stir for you, then you'll be fine. remove as much of the vegetables as you can from the pan and put in your thickener, stirring constantly. It will start to form nasty looking lumps unless you add milk. While you are stirring, add a milk a little at a time to keep those lumps from forming. The less milk you add, the thicker the gravy will be. Remember to keep stirring so you don't burn it. This is where having someone to help comes in handy, get them to keep the gravy moving while you turn your attention to the potatoes. Using an electric mixed (or a large spoon if you are like me) begin mashing your potatoes, adding milk and butter as you go along. Just like the gravy, the more milk you add the thinner it will get. If you add too much milk though, you can't thicken the mashed potatoes back up again. So add the milk slowly. Add the garlic salt and paprika to the mashed potatoes and set it aside. Returning your attention to the gravy, add your vegetables and your steak and stir well until everything is coated. Preheat your oven to 300 and get a large glass baking dish. Pour the stew (it is basically stew at this point) into the baking dish and with a flat spoon spread your mashed potatoes over the top. Place the glass dish onto a baking sheet (to keep the juices from splattering onto the bottom of the stove) and sprinkle salt, pepper, paprika, and your shredded cheese on the top. Bake for 30 to 40 minutes (might take longer) or until the mashed potatoes start to turn a light golden brown color. Allow the pie to sit after taking it from the oven for about ten minutes and then serve in bowls.
If you opt for ground beef instead, remember to drain off the grease and add a bit of salt or garlic salt while it's cooking.