Salt and pepper the stew meat; take a cast iron dutch oven, put a little olive oil in it on top of the stove, heat the oil til it just begins to act like it will smoke; toss in some of the stew meat and sear it quickly. Don't put in too much of the meat or it will steam rather than sear.
When each batch of meat is deeply browned on all sides, take each batch out and place it on a paper towel on a large plate and drain. When all the meat is done and out of the dutch oven, chopped up a large onion and cook and stir (braze) that onion until it is just barely under "burnt", crispy, rather clear in color.
Then add some salt and pepper to the onion; then add 2 cups (or more) of large chunks chopped celery, cook a bit l longer, til the celery is just a bit soft.
Then pour in a 1/4 cup of good red wine, in the dutch oven on top of the onion and celery reduce that down to about 50-70%. Put the meat back in.
Take a cup of cold water or pint of darker beer in a measuring cup, add a heaping teaspoon of flour OR corn starch, whisk it in until smooth, then pour that in the dutch oven over the onions and celery. Add a teaspoon of liquid smoke, stir; add 1 tsp of chopped garlic or 1/2 tsp powdered garlic, stir. Turn off the heat. Then place the lid on the dutch oven. Put it in the oven and cook in the oven at 225-250 degrees F for 2-3 hours.
Meanwhile: take 4-6 large carrots, 3-6 med potatoes, cut them up in large bitesize chunks, (and) any other veggies you might want - like turnip chunks.
Steam or parboil those until just barely soft. Set aside.
In last 45 minutes of cooking the meat in the oven in the dutch oven, take the veggies and put them IN the dutch oven with the meat, in the oven, give it a stir and a taste, adjust whatever seasonings you want to add, then put the lid back on and continue to cook the entire thing for the other hour in the oven, slowly.
(If it liquid isn't thick enough when it is done, add in a bit more corn starch to thicken it, but have never had to do that...)
Sometimes I find a good packet of stew seasoning OR a brown or onion gravy packet mix works as a good base seasoning, but those usually have far too much salt, so I wing it with my own spices/flavors until it tastes right; Worcestershire sauce is another addition that is good for flavor too. The searing, the wine, the cooking low and slow in a cast iron cutch oven are the the most important IMHO.
Make fresh biscuits...too.
I have done the celery both ways, my DH likes it when I don't sear the celery with the onion, but parboil or steam the celery and add when I add the veggies the last hour; leaves the celery more firm.