Showing posts with label steak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steak. Show all posts

Thursday, March 30, 2023

Cowboy Up Your Steak

You can tell who takes their grilling seriously by whether or not they barbeque year-round. For some people, a little snow and ice aren't enough to keep them from cooking meat over an open flame. Even if you're one of those people who prefer not grilling in subzero temperatures, you will want to have some cowboy butter on your next steak. Adding butter to steak adds richness and can soften a steak's charred exterior, making the meat more tender. Cowboy butter is great for grilled meats, perfect for chicken and fish, and can be stirred into rice or cooked pasta, or spread on crusty French bread or cornbread. So rustle up yourself some, little dogie.

Ingredients
85 g butter, melted (grass-fed butter if possible)
21 g parsley, fresh chopped
21 g chopped chives, fresh chopped
15 g Dijon mustard
12 g minced thyme
1.5 g crushed red pepper flakes
1.5 g teaspoon paprika
4 cloves garlic, minced
juice and zest of half a lemon
salt
black pepper, freshly ground if possible
cayenne pepper
  1. In a small bowl, combine the melted butter, lemon juice, garlic, mustard, paprika, and a pinch of cayenne pepper. Whisk the sauce to combine everything.
  2. Stir in the parsley, chives, crushed red pepper flakes, lemon zest, and thyme, and season everything with salt and pepper. For a thicker butter sauce, add more mustard.
This recipe can also be made into a solid piece of cowboy butter by using a stick of softened butter instead of melting it:
  1. Place the softened butter in the bowl of a mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Whip the butter until it's fluffy. Add the remaining ingredients and mix everything until it's completely combined, scraping the sides as needed.
  2. Lay out a long piece of plastic wrap and scoop the butter mixture in a long strip down the middle of it. Carefully pull one side of the plastic wrap over the butter, squeezing it gently to form it into a log. Continue to roll the log of butter into a roll. When it's all rolled up, twist the ends (like a piece of candy) until they become very taut (this means the butter is pressing together inside the plastic to form a cohesive roll). 
  3. Place the roll of butter into either the fridge or the freezer so it will harden.

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Beef Tartare Blues

To the dismay of foodies and chefs in New Brunswick, it is now illegal to serve raw beef in a restaurant. This means that beef tartare is now off the menu. Beef tartare is made from raw minced beef and is served with onions, capers, and a raw egg yolk on top.  Along with the risk of getting salmonella from the egg, the provincial concern focuses on the fact that uncooked meat can contain bacteria that make people sick. While there haven't been any cases of anyone from the Picture Province getting sick from some tartare, health officials are erring on the side of caution after the year and a bit of dealing with a pandemic. However, when fresh meat is used and basic hygienic rules are followed, the risk of bacterial infection is low. With the recipe below, you can find out what New Brunswickers are now missing.

NOTE: IF YOU HAVE A MEDICAL CONDITION THAT PREVENTS YOU FROM INGESTING RAW MEAT OR RAW EGGS, DO NOT EAT THIS DISH.

Ingredients
400 g beef tenderloin or top round
45 mL olive oil
30 g whole-grain mustard
15 mL red wine vinegar
15 g capers, chopped
7 g flat-leaf parley, chopped
5 g Dijon mustard
1 egg yolk
1 shallot, finely chopped
sriracha, to taste (if you can get some sambal oelek, use that)
    1. Place the beef in the freezer for about an hour, until it starts to form ice crystals and gets really firm but not frozen solid; you should still be able to pierce it with the point of a sharp knife. Wash and dry your hands.
    2. Combine the olive oil, mustards, vinegar, and whatever hot sauce you're using in a bowl. Season everything with salt and pepper, and set it aside. Wash and dry your hands.
    3. When the meat is firm enough, take it from the freezer, and slice it thinly against the grain. Cut each slice into fine strips, then dice those strips as finely as you can. Continue chopping the meat with your knife until it has a coarse ground consistency, then place the meat in a mixing bowl.
    4. Add the shallots, egg yolk, chopped parsley, chopped capers, and the dressing from the bowl you set aside to the beef and mix everything delicately until it is well combined. Wash and dry your hands. 
    5. Divide the mixture into four equal servings and press each serving into either a burger press, a round cookie cutter or a cleaned tin can open at both ends. Lightly press down on the meat with a fork and then remove whatever you used to mold the dish into shape. Serve cold with fresh endives or toasted croutons.

    Friday, April 5, 2019

    Better Steaks With Meaty Food Hacks

    After a winter that refuses to let go of its grip on the city, grillmasters are chomping at the bit to fire up their barbeques. With the chance of snow or rain constantly looming in the forecast, you may want to treat yourself to a dry-aged steak when you finally do get to cook outside.  Dry-aging removes moisture from a piece of meat and causes a breakdown of the muscle tissue - basically, this process causes your steak to decompose. As disgusting as this process may sound, it also tenderizes the meat, and gives it an amazing flavour. Aged steaks can be bought, or be made at home, but while you're waiting for the snow to melt, or the backyard to dry out in order to get to your grill, you can experiment with these cheaper and faster food hacks.

    Mushrooms

    Chefs who don't have the time to wait 30+ days for that extra burst of umami suggest you season your steak with mushroom powder. Get some dried porcinis or shiitakes and grind them up using a food processor or blender, then season your steak with it, along with some salt and black pepper. Wrap everything in plastic wrap and let the steak sit in the refrigerator until you're ready to cook it.

    Koji
    Koji is a rice grain that has been introduced with a live culture and is used in the making soy sauce and miso paste. When koji is added, the live culture helps break down the carbohydrates, amino acids, simple sugars, and proteins.  If the live culture is used to break down beans, it stands to reason it can be used to break down the connective tissue in your steak. As with the dried mushrooms, you will need to turn the koji (check your favourite Asian supermarket or order some online) into a powder and rub it all over your steak. Once that's done, put the steak on a plate and place it in your refrigerator for three days. This will cause your meat to become fuzzy in appearance, and leave a pungent smell in your fridge so you may want to place your steak in the crisper if you don't want to deal with the smell, or in a separate refrigerator like your beer fridge (give the fridge good cleaning while you're at it). After three days, rinse all the koji from the meat, pat it dry, and then season it with salt and pepper as normal.

    Fish Sauce
    This hack takes longer than the others but is one used by Nathan Myhrvold of "Modernist Cuisine" fame, so you know it's legit.  Place your steak in a Ziploc bag, pour in about 15 mL of fish sauce per steak to coat the meat, then seal the bag as tightly as possible, getting out as much air as you can; if you have access to a vacuum sealer, now would be the time to use it. Put the meat in the refrigerator for three days. Take the steak out of the bag, wrap it tightly in cheesecloth, then put it back in the fridge for another three days. Season the meat all over with salt and pepper when it's time to cook.

    Blue Cheese
    As good as fish sauce is for replicating the rich funky flavour of an aged steak, blue cheese can also be used. Lay a sheet of plastic wrap on a baking sheet, then place an equal-sized piece of cheesecloth on top. Place your steak on the cheesecloth. Fold a thin layer of the cheesecloth over the steaks, then top with some crumbled blue cheese. Fold over the plastic wrap to secure the cheese on top, then refrigerate the wrapped steaks overnight. When it's time to cook,  unwrap the steaks, take off the blue cheese, and pat the steaks dry with paper towels before seasoning both sides of the steak with salt and pepper. You now have steak that is ready for cooking and some blue cheese to use in a sauce for them when it's time to eat.

    Ingredients: Blue Cheese Sauce
    180 mL heavy cream
    35 mL Worcestershire sauce
    140 g blue cheese
    15 g unsalted butter
    1 shallot, sliced
    3 g kosher salt
    3 g coarsely ground black pepper
    1. In a small saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter. Add the shallots and cook until golden brown, about 2 to 3 minutes.
    2. Stir in the cream and Worcestershire sauce and cook for another minute. Add the salt, pepper and blue cheese and stir well. Just as the cheese begins to melt, remove from the heat.

      To serve, spoon the sauce over the steaks or whatever else needs blue cheese added to it.

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