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Uncle Beef

Chuck Roast (Beef)

Regular price £16.49
Regular price Sale price £16.49
Sale
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Full product description

A chuck roast is comfort cooking at its best. This forequarter joint is laced with connective tissue that melts during a slow cook, giving you tender beef and a naturally glossy gravy. Sear it well, add onions, carrots and stock (or ale/red wine), then let the oven or slow cooker do the work. Carve into hearty slices for a classic Sunday pot roast—or take it further and pull/shred for rolls, tacos and pies. Big flavour, minimal faff.


Why you’ll love it

  • Slow-cook superstar with rich, beefy taste

  • Forgiving joint that turns meltingly tender with time

  • Versatile: pot roast, slow cooker, pressure cooker or BBQ/smoker

  • Butcher-prepared for even cooking and easy carving


Cut details

  • From the chuck/shoulder

  • Supplied as a tied roasting joint (string or netting)

  • Size/weight varies by joint

  • Fresh, never previously frozen (unless stated on pack)


How to cook (quick guide)

  1. Bring to room temp, pat dry and season generously.

  2. Brown all over in a hot pan with a little oil.

  3. Oven braise: Transfer to a lidded tray/casserole with onions, garlic, herbs and stock/ale/red wine. Cook at 150–160°C (fan 130–140°C) for 3½–5 hours until fork-tender.

  4. Slow cooker: Brown first if you can; cook Low 8–10 hours (or High 5–6 hours) with a little liquid.

  5. Pressure cooker: Brown; cook 60–90 mins at pressure, natural release.

  6. Rest 20–30 mins. Slice across the grain—or shred and fold back into the reduced juices.
    Food safety: Cook until piping hot throughout and tender.


Serving ideas

  • Classic pot roast with buttery mash and greens

  • Pulled chuck rolls with slaw and pickles

  • Beef & ale pie under crisp puff pastry

  • Ragù: shred the meat into the reduced liquor and toss with pappardelle


Storage & handling

  • Keep refrigerated below 5°C

  • Once opened, cook within 1 day

  • Suitable for home freezing on the day of purchase; defrost in the fridge and use within 24 hours

  • Do not refreeze once defrosted


FAQs

Is chuck lean or fatty?
Balanced—enough connective tissue and marbling to turn silky when slow-cooked.

Do I have to brown it first?
Highly recommended. Browning builds flavour and colour in the finished gravy.

Slice or pull?
Both. Cook to tender, slice for plates, or take it a bit further and shred for sandwiches and tacos.

What liquid works best?
Stock is great. Ale or red wine adds depth—finish with a splash of vinegar or a spoon of mustard to brighten.

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