Celebrating 180 years with P&O Ferries.
The Shetland Islands are a remote island archipelago in the North Sea, 200 miles, as the crow flies, from the Scottish city of Aberdeen.
Between 1971 and 2002 P&O Ferries (known then as P&O Scottish Ferries) ran a lifeline service between Aberdeen and Lerwick in the Shetland Islands. This overnight trip took 12-14 hours (weather permitting!) and a few times a week it stopped in the Orkney Islands too.
Interestingly, one of the co-founders of P&O Ferries, Arthur Anderson, the son of a fish curer from Unst, was born in the Böd of Gremista in Lerwick. In 1844 he introduced the concept of cruising for pleasure, rather than simply for transportation from A to B. You can read more about him in the book From Bod to Boardroom by D. Hilda Peterson, a book published and available through The Shetland Times bookshop (see link at bottom of post).
In the Spring of 1999, at the tender age of ahem, my early 20s, I immigrated from Canada to Shetland, arriving at the pier in Aberdeen with just shy of £200 in my pocket and an Army Surplus rucksack on my back containing all my worldly possessions. Walking up the gang plank of the first P&O vessel I could find I enquired if I could catch a lift to Shetland.
Not a problem, the steward said, taking my £60 fee and showing me to my cabin. It was that night on the freight vessel St. Rognvald (V) I had my very first experience of the open sea. I couldn’t stand up! It’s taken me 18 years to develop sea legs, and I’ve since made that North Sea crossing many, many times. Each time it gets that little bit easier.
I am of the firm belief that if you visit Shetland you should make the journey by ferry at least once, for the full experience. Our family holidays always began on board the ferry with a meal in the restaurant. It marked the start of our adventures south.
I recently managed to track down a local man, David Leybourne, who began his sea career with a summer job in the galley on board the P&O Ferries St. Clair (V), pictured above.
The St. Clair had two restaurants – the downstairs cafe restaurant where locals and those travelling on a budget used to eat, and the upstairs restaurant providing a more upmarket dining experience with an all you could eat buffet-style menu. Downstairs, the most popular dish was fish & chips, mince & tatties and curries, while upstairs diners preferred braised beef with red wine or the non-deep-fried fish option.
David recounted how everyone on board the P&O Scottish Ferry was considered part of the crew, even the kitchen staff. This meant everyone had to be trained in sea survival, first aid and fire safety. Every day they ran through a practise emergency scenario, which sometimes involved a few stewards being launched into the lifeboat.
This often posed difficulty for the galley cooks as the alarms would go off in the middle of prepping the evening meal. They’d have to drop everything and run through the emergency training, returning afterwards to finish what they’d started, sometimes hours later.
This braised beef in red wine was a very popular choice on board the ferry restaurant, David remembers. He’d have to prepare six pans of braised beef, each with 20 or so pieces of steak in it. The recipe sounded so good I thought I’d try and recreate it at home.
The key to this recipe, David insists, is to remember to seal with pans well with several layers of aluminium foil. This keeps the moisture in so the meat cooks lovely and tender, similar to a slow cooker.
Any leftovers were fed to the fifty or so crew members on board the St. Clair. David recalled how it was more challenging to feed his fellow crew members than it was the passengers. With all the different shifts it meant food always had to be available at any time day or night. The crew were all really happy if they got leftover braised beef, it was like it was their birthday!
With huge thanks to David Leybourne for this recipe. Do you have any memories of dining on board the St. Clair during the 1980s and 90s? Visit the P&O Ferries website to find out more about their ships during this era (their Hull-Rotterdam and Hull-Zeebrugge routes were introduced then) as well as the other decades they’ve been in operation.
Braised Beef with Red Wine
Ingredients
- 2 tbsp sunflower oil
- 30 grams plain flour
- 4 6-8 oz braising steak fat trimmed
- 200 ml red wine
- 300 grams mushrooms quartered
- 2 onions
- Shetland sea salt to taste
- 1 tsp whole peppercorns
- 2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tsp English mustard
- 500 ml good quality beef stock
- 1 bouquet garni or a few fresh thyme sprigs
- 8 tsp Bisto Original gravy powder to thicken
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Instructions
- Preheat oven to 170 C/ 150 C fan.
- Heat oil in a skillet over a medium-high heat.
- Coat beef in the flour and seal on both sides in the oil and place into a deep casserole dish.
- Half and finely slice one of the onions, and finely chop the other. Layer over the onions and the mushrooms.
- Mix the beef stock, wine, peppercorns, Worcestershire sauce and mustard in a jug and pour over the top. The liquid must cover the beef; add more boiling water if needed.
- Seal with dish with a few layers of aluminium foil and bake in the centre of the oven for 3 hours.
- Drain the liquid from the dish and thicken with Bisto to make the gravy. Return the gravy to the dish and cook for a further 15-20 minutes.
- Serve with roast potatoes and seasonal vegetables. Leftovers reheat very well, simply wrap in foil again and bake in the oven for 30-45 minutes.
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SHOP THIS POST
From Bod to Boardroom by D. Hilda Peterson
Shallow Cast Iron Casserole Dish
Lindeman’s Gentleman’s Collection Wine
Lea & Perrin’s Worcestershire Sauce
Bisto Original Gravy Powder
Whole Black Peppercorns
This is a sponsored recipe post in collaboration with P&O Ferries. Thank you for supporting the brands who make it possible for me to do what I love: mess up my kitchen and share recipe stories.
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pavitra
Your dish look so delicious! I’ve never tried making BRAISED BEEF but after reading your recipe I feel like I have to. Thank you for sharing!
Ana De- Jesus
How amazing that you came to Shetland in 1999 with £200 to your name. Look how far you have come since. As usual your dish looks superbly made x
Catering in Zoetermeer
It looks amazing! I love the mushrooms the are great! Looks like a perfect dish!
Tanita
What an amazing story. Thank you for sharing the recipe the beef looks delicious xx
Nicole Shillings
Wow this looks so rich and comforting. I love a good braised beef dish too. I can’t wait for it to cool off around here to make something like this.
Sarah James @ Tales From The Kitchen Shed
What an amazing story, I love travelling on a ferry. Your braised beef looks delicious, I wish Brittany ferries served up food like this!
julie
Saving this one for when the weather changes – looks delicious!
Kate - gluten free alchemist
Sounds delicious Elizabeth. It must have been quite daunting emigrating at such a young age, especially to such a remote place. x
Danielle
A classic! Your photos are gorgeous!
Tara
Such gorgeous photos! This dish looks like the ultimate comfort meal. I love all the background information you provided.
Rishi Malar
A delicious food! and the picture says it all! Thanks for the recipe!
Nadia
My OH would absolutely love this dish so I’ll bookmark it and make it for him one day. Looks very tasty indeed.
Gloria @ Homemade & Yummy
What a great looking dish. Perfect comfort food. You can’t go wrong with beef and wine….this would make the perfect meal in the cold winter months.
Laur dove
This is my idea of the perfect meal!! Nothing beats slow cooked beef in red wine, it’s been my favourite my whole life. I’ll definitely try out your version.
Marie-Pierre Breton
This screams comfort food! I’m a big fan of wine stews, there is no better broth than “wine”! I love the little mustard touch in there! Gives it an extra “zing” I”m sure!
Little B & Me
That looks like the type of recipe that will make your house smell amazing FOR HOURS!
Lovely & rich, in the best possible sense!
Tom T.
Beef and wine-always a fabulous combination! Yum.
Sonia
This looks so good. My Mum always used to do braised beef when I was little and it was always a big favourite and I hardly ever have cooked it as an adult. I;m going to give this a go at the weekend. Yummy!
Tiffany
oh my, you had me at wine! this looks incredible. even those potatoes look amazing! think i need to make this this weekend 🙂
aish das-padihari
Love your recipe. You got me at red wine.
Dahn
This sounds delicious and looks amazing. I have never been to Shetland but would love to go by ferry, great story
Ginny McMeans
Passing this recipe on to my sister. She will be making this all the time!
sue | theviewfromgreatisland
WOW! That is one gorgeous meal. I love the story, and the tip about the foil, this is going to happen here the minute the temperature go down just a bit!
Suzy
This looks so hearty! And I like the addition of mushrooms a lot!
Lisa | Garlic & Zest
Alas, I’ve never visited Shetland, by ferry or otherwise. It sounds like I’ll need to add this excursion to my bucket list. I won’t have to wait that long for your braised beef, however. That’s going on the menu very soon!
Elaine @ Dishes Delish
Fun that you took that ferry trip. This dish sounds so delicious! Hearty, tasty and delicious! I look forward to trying your recipe!
Nicola
This food does look yummy!
Erica Price
Just the sort of meal you need on a cold winter’s day to keep you going. I love those intense beefy flavours that you get from cooking long and slow.
Elizabeth
Or on a Shetland summer’s day! Gosh it’s cold out there today…! 🙂
Constance Smith
This dish looks fantastic. The meat so full of flavor and tender. I have to say though, that the potatoes caught my eye as well. They look crisp and delicious!
Elizabeth
Made from scratch, those! 😉 Parboiled, drained, shake in the pan so they get some edges and then I unashamedly pour melted lard all over them, sprinkle with sea salt and bake in a hot oven for 45 minutes shaking the pan occasionally. Far too good! 🙂
prasanna Hede
Loved your clicks and such a detailed recipe. I cant have Beef but so intense in flavors!
Rebecca @ Strength and Sunshine
What a wonderful meal! Such a deep intense flavor 🙂