South African Smoke Chicken and Rice. |
This morning I had Gordon Ramsay style scrambled eggs, over a toasted whole grain pita, slice of ham, and a homemade béchamel (technically mornay) sauce made with Havarti. I substituted coconut oil for butter with everything, because, you know, cholesterol.
Crispy Shrimp Tacos. |
Crispy Shrimp Tacos. Battered fried shrimp, peeled and de-veined, wok tossed with Thai sweet chili sauce, served in a pan toasted corn tortilla with shredded cabbage. Super simple.
Cran-apple sage pork steaks. |
Cran-apple sage pork steaks. Apple goes great with pork, and cranberry goes great with apple, and sage goes great with pork too. It would make sense to throw these ingredients together. For the steaks, I used two very thick pork steaks, boneless. I seasoned with salt, pepper, and liberally with dried sage. Then I cooked those just like I cook a beef steak (see below.) Start with high heat in a skillet, preferably cast-iron, and throw the steaks in to sear over smoking high heat with a little oil. It's important to let the steaks rest to room temperature before cooking. Cook until both sides look like the picture. Serve with cran-apple compote. Apple slices (I think I used honeycrisp,) dried cranberries, a dash of honey, pinch of cinnamon, pinch of sea salt, and a pat of butter. Simmer with a little water until soft. Serve steaks on top, or thin slice the steaks, and pour compote over. I forgot to mention, after cooking, always let steaks, whether it be beef or pork rest. They will continue to cook. If you slice too early you'll lose juices. It also lets them break down a bit and become more tender.
Vietnamese fried rice. Not pictured. This is another recipe I discovered by accident. I call it Vietnamese because it tastes just like pho. Cook white rice, and sauteé it over very high heat with Chinese five spice, fish sauce, and any meat or vegetable you choose. Adding a cooked egg works well too. The texture and feel of fried rice, with the aroma and flavor of pho.
I don't want to bore you all with a crazy long update, and I've got tons more pictures and recipes to share, so I'll save them for another update, but not before how to cook a steak.
How to cook a steak. When I cook a steak, I usually go for a NY strip, cut really thick. The first thing your have to do is let the steak sit, for at least an hour, until it's room temperature. If the steak is sitting in juices, take it out (I'm talking about un-marinated steaks.) Get a skillet, preferably cast-iron, and get it smoking hot, with a high flash point oil. The pan should be very hot because you want to sear the steak. I season with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder. I season with the salt right before cooking, but apply the other seasonings when the heat isn't as high, or they'll burn.
Right, so the pan is smoking and ready, now using tongs, sear the edges of the steak. I tilt the pan towards the handle to move the oil to the edge, and hold the steak upright, searing all four corners. Next, throw on the steak. Since the pan is so hot, it doesn't take very long to sear. How long? No clue. I always guesstimate. Then I turn down the heat just a but. Once that side it done, I take the steak off, crank the pan up to full blast again, and throw it on the other side, and repeat. That's it. You MUST let the steak sit for at least ten minutes before cutting or serving, for reasons mentioned above. That's enough time to make creamed spinach from scratch. If you're wondering, the sauce is milk, AP flour, garlic powder, and onion powder. I keep some in my fridge for thickening stuff.
Room temperature steak, seared on all sides, on a pan that's hotter than the surface of the sun. If the smoke detector doesn't go off, you're doing it wrong. |
Smoky and seared on the outside, but... |
Oh yeah, let it rest. |
...but tender and juicy on the inside. |
Enjoy the food porn I have given you, but be careful.
No comments:
Post a Comment