I made this hearty casserole the other day, and it is definitely a keeper! I'm on another** use-up-the-half-used-stuff kick, and I had an open box of pearled barley in the cupboard. You guys. In 2019, I used up the last of a box of barley that expired in 2011. And then I bought more barley! And actually used some. But not all, of course. Which is how I ended up with another open box of barley in the cupboard.
When I think of barley, I inevitably think of soup, but I just ... didn't want ... soup. But barley is a grain, just like rice, and where does rice show up, about half the time? In casserole recipes. So I went on the lookout for a barley casserole recipe. And I found one***. The problem was, it was more of a side-dish than a main dish. So I tweaked it a bit to create to this deliciousness that will probably lead to me buying more barley.
This is a filling main dish casserole, with a lovely beef flavor, complemented by the slightly nutty flavor from the toasted barley. I made mine in a 12" cast iron skillet because my main goal in life is to use as few dishes as possible, but if you don't have an oven-safe stove-top pan, you can transfer it to a greased baking dish before putting it in the oven. Try it--I think you'll love it.
- In a large oven safe skillet or Dutch oven, cook 1 lb ground beef until no pink remains. Remove from the pan and set aside. Drain excess fat.
- In the same pan, melt 1/2 c butter over medium heat. Add 1 c barley and 1 medium chopped onion and sauté until toasted and golden.
- Stir in ground beef, 1/2 c sliced almonds, 1 packet dry onion soup and 2 c chicken broth.
- Bake at 350°F for 1 hour, stirring every 20 minutes, and adding more liquid* (chicken broth or water) if needed (I used about another 1.5 c of turkey stock).
* The original recipe says to bake the casserole covered, which would reduce the need for additional liquid, but I really liked my uncovered version.
** I feel like I am almost always on a use-up-the-half-used-stuff kick...
*** I actually found another barley casserole recipe. It was a tex-mex casserole, and while it sounded good, it just wasn't what I wanted.
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