Showing posts with label main dish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label main dish. Show all posts

Monday, October 5, 2009

Spinach and Basil Stuffed Boneless Pork Rib Roast

All measurements are approximate, I didn't measure anything I'm afraid.

3 lb boneless pork rib roast
3 tbls bread crumbs
2 tbls chopped parsley
2 tbls chopped basil
1/2 cup chopped spinach
2 cups chicken broth
1/2 cup roughly chopped onion
dried rosemary
garlic powder
olive oil
salt and pepper

Preheat oven to 350. Cut a pocket in the roast. Mix together the bread crumbs, basil, parsley and spinach. Season it with a little salt and pepper. Stuff the spinach mixture into the roast and then either tie it up or use a skewer to keep it closed. Rub the roast with rosemary, garlic powder, olive oil, salt and pepper. Place the roast in a shallow pan, preferably one that has a lid, and surround it with the onions. Put it in the oven for 15-20 minutes or until it starts to brown. Remove it and add the broth. Add a couple tsps of rosemary and some pepper to the broth, cover it tightly and return it to the oven. Cook for another hour or so, until done how you want it. Let rest for 5-10 minutes before carving. Separate the fat from the braising liquid and spoon it over the carved roast.

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My girlfriend went to the store the other day to grab some ribs. They didn't have any. Her response: Wtf, where're the ribs? But, no ribs. So she grabbed a boneless rib roast instead. I'd never made one before, so a little research was required. I found out it's from the rib section of the loin, so it's a lot like a center cut roast but with more marbling. Score. Unfortunately I don't have any prep shots, it was kind of spur of the moment and at night. I hate taking pictures at night. I did get some finished pics though, thanks to the magic of leftovers.So, this was my first stuffed roast. It came out pretty well, if I do say so myself. I could have done a better job on the pocket, but if it had been bigger (or neater) I would have needed more stuffing than I had made. So it all worked out. Heh.What I did was just cut a three inch hole in the side of the roast, stick the knife in almost to the other end and kind of wiggle it around till there was a pocket. I've seen people on TV do it a million times. But like so many other things people do on TV, it's not quite so easy to do at home.

Not that this was a fail, it was quite good. The stuffing was flavorful, the pork was moist (yay marbling) and the braising liquid made a fine sauce. Since I didn't get any prep shots I'm not going to bother going over the whole method, I'll save that for another post when I do have some. Hm, I've been wanting to do an apple stuffed pork loin for a long time, but haven't ever gotten around to it. After using the rib roast, I will probably use that instead of the center cut from now on. It didn't dry out so easily. Heh. So, anyone have tips or tricks for stuffing a roast? How about favorite ingredients?

Monday, July 27, 2009

Bacon Wrapped Brisket

Ok, so it's not really wrapped in bacon. But "bacon topped" doesn't have the same ring to it and the concept is the same. I'm not posting a recipe for this because I'm still working on the rub and I didn't get very many good pictures. I need to sit down and reevaluate my approach to photography, starting with getting myself Photoshop. Anyway, I when I saw this post over at Girlichef I remembered I had a brisket in the freezer. And since hers looked so good I had to make it. All I did was rub it with a rub and cover it with bacon. You could use whatever rub you want, the one at Girlichef looks great, this one from my barbecue pulled beef would also be good. Then I covered it and tossed it into a 300 degree oven for a couple hours. After the first hour or so I uncovered it so the bacon would crisp. This is pretty much what it looked like when it was done. It actually came out a bit dry, I think because I uncovered it. Or maybe I just didn't cook it long enough. But there were plenty of juices, so I just poured them over it and it all worked out fine. I made it into sandwiches. Good times, especially on a toasted seasame seed roll.


Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Experiment: Merlot-Pomegranate Braised Lamb Shanks

2 lamb shanks
1 cup Merlot
1 cup pomegranate juice
3 cloves of garlic, diced
1 shallot, diced
oregano
rosemary
salt and pepper

Rinse and dry the shanks. Rub them with plenty of oregano, rosemary, salt and pepper. Heat some olive oil in a dutch oven and brown them well. Remove them from the pot and add the shallots and garlic. Saute them till soft then add the wine, scrap up the fond, reduce the heat and let it simmer till it doesn't smell boozy. Add a pinch of salt, the juice and the lamb. Cover it and let it cook for 2-3 hours, till the lamb is very tender. Remove the meat, turn up the heat and let the liquid reduce for a bit. Serve with the sauce.

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I love lamb. I sometimes suggest to my girlfriend that we have it. This leads to fights. Often quite gruesome ones, involving flashing blades, furious gun play and mad nunchuck skills. The inevitable conclusion is my girlfriend with a knife to my throat, a pistol to my temple or a chair leg poised to deliver the finishing blow. I croak out something like "All right, chicken!" and then she allows me to cook dinner.

Ok, so that never happens. But she really doesn't like lamb and I rarely do serious cooking for just myself. I get it at any Greek festival I happen to go to and order it at restaurants, but I hadn't actually made it before this. Then my girlfriend comes home with a package of shanks. Isn't she sweet? I pop them into the freezer and await an appropriate moment. And that moment was yesterday when she was going out to dinner with people from work. So I pull out the lamb to thaw and consult my sources (the internet, one of my brothers and my mom. The sister I called wasn't home and apparently doesn't eat lamb anyway.) Then I made this.

The first thing I decided was to keep it simple, I find that makes it harder to screw up. Shanks are best braised and I had some pomegranate juice, so I decided to use that. Wine is always good for braising, so I grabbed some Merlot. Garlic, oregano and rosemary are classic lamb seasonings so those were in. And I had a shallot that wanted using, so that finished it off. I took the lamb and dried it off. I really should have rinsed it first, but I didn't. Anyway, I rubbed it with a goodly amount of salt, pepper, rosemary and oregano. Next time I'm going to use a little more, I think. This is also a recipe that you want to use dried herbs for, they are best for slow cooking. I browned up the shanks, removed them from the pot and added the shallot and garlic. I didn't cut the garlic too small since it was going to break down over the several hours of cooking. I sauteed them till they were soft and then added the wine and juice. This was a mistake, I should have added just the wine and let it reduce a bit first to get rid of the alcohol flavor/smell, then added the juice. Then back in went the lamb and I realized I needed more liquid, so when I added the wine wouldn't have mattered anyway. Then the cover went on and it simmered for about three hours. You could do this in the oven, but I prefer to do things on the stove. Plus my dutch oven barely fits in my tiny real oven. I removed the lamb and reduced the liquid a bit to use as a sauce. I had it with some brown rice that I put a little garlic and onion in. They aren't really that pretty, but they were very tasty. So that's it, Merlot pomegranate braised lamb shanks. It was quite good, the tart/sweet juice and the strong flavors of the wine and lamb went really well together. The shanks were falling apart and very moist. It would be good with beef too, maybe brisket. Next time I make it I'm going to use more herbs, like I had mentioned, but other than the amounts I don't think I'd change anything else.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Roast Beef, Take One

Yep, take one. Until just a week or so ago I was a roast beef virgin. I had never made a beef roast other than pot roast. Large cuts that need to be timed carefully intimidated me, you see. They tend to be expensive. Which makes screwing them up much worse than, say, some chicken breasts and I have a tendency to overcook things. Plus I don't have a very good thermometer (I really need to get an instant read one) and you shouldn't really cut into it to take a peek to see how it's doing. So, I avoided oven roasts for years. Then my girlfriend came home with a three and a half pound chunk of top round roast. "Look what was on sale!", she said. Oooo-kay. Well, it's too lean to do pot roast, it really needed to be done in the oven. So I did it. And it came out spectacular. It had a great crust and rich, beefy flavor. You can't really tell from the shot, but it was just medium (my girlfriend isn't a medium rare fan). Unfortunately, almost none of my pictures came out. I don't know what happened, but almost all the shots were wicked blurry or dark. So I'm not going to post the whole dealie with this one. But I'm going to be making another one soon and I will time it to get better light and maybe put some fresh batteries in my camera before I start. I pretty much used this method from The Hungry Mouse, with a few minor changes. But like I said, I'll post a recipe after I make it again. This is the roast I made that roast beef hash with, not to mention several really good sandwiches.

Since this post is a bit scanty, here's a behind the scenes shot: The real Bob isn't usually interested when I'm taking pictures, but something about this time got his attention. Can't imagine what...

Remember what I was saying about not having a good thermometer? Check this out: I don't know what temperature you're supposed to cook prok too, but I'm never cooking chicken to 185.



Monday, April 20, 2009

Barbecue Pulled Beef

3.5 lbs chuck roast
2 tsps liquid smoke

1 tbl brown sugar
1/2 tsp paprika
2 tsps salt
1 tsp black pepper
1 tsp mustard powder
pinch of cayenne
1 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp onion powder

1/2 cup ketchup

Rub the roast with the liquid smoke. Combine all the other ingredients except ketchup, reserving 1.5 tsps, and rub them evenly over the roast. Wrap the roast loosely (but tightly sealed to keep in the juices) in foil and cook at 275 for 3-4 hours. Remove the beef from the foil, reserving the juices. Pour the juices into a gravy separator and separate out the fat. If there aren't enough juices to come over the spout of the separator, add some water. Pour the juices into a sauce pot that's big enough to hold all the beef. Add the ketchup and reserved spice rub, then reduce the sauce till it's quite thick and the flavors have mingled, stirring occasionally. While the sauce is reducing shred the beef, discarding any fat. Add the shredded beef and mix it to combine. Let it cook over medium-low heat for a couple minutes to heat it through and let the sauce caramelize a bit. Serve hot.

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Crap, I'm running out of stuff to make this way! I've already done chicken and pork, now beef. I'm going to have to start doing exotic things soon, like emu or bison. Mmmm, barbecue pulled bison.

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Sorry, I was somewhere else for a minute there. Ok, it's no secret that I love barbecue pulled stuff (it's also no secret that I have no interest in quibbling over the definition of barbecue, so consider this the mandatory "don't waste your breath telling me this isn't REAL barbecue, because I don't give a s#!t" disclaimer.). This particular version isn't that different from my pulled pork, except that it's beef and I rubbed the roast with liquid smoke before the spice rub. And the spice rub is ever so slightly different too, but not that much. No cumin, added onion powder, changed some measurements. That's it really. But the flavor is very different, especially since I used a chuck roast. You could also use a brisket if you wanted, but I had a chuck roast in the freezer. And it worked out really well, so I would probably do it with the chuck again. The strong, beefy flavor wasn't overpowered by all the spices and the big vein of fat kept it nice and moist during the long, slow cooking. Plus all that fat helped it come apart really easily in the end. So, here's what I did.

First I took a big chunk of chuck. Don't worry, most of that fat is going to be tossed out in the end. Well, what doesn't melt and soak into the meat that is. Which is why it's so damn good. Next I rubbed it with some liquid smoke. I didn't really measure it, I just used enough to give it a light coating. It gave it a nice, smoky flavor. Then, the spice rub. I liked this rub for beef, but I don't think I'd use it on chicken. Leaving out the cumin lets the meat's flavor come through a lot more (cumin being so powerful), which is good when the meat has lots of flavor. When I make pulled chicken it's with boneless, skinless breasts, so all the flavor is coming from the rub. Anyway, rub the rub, but keep one and a half teaspoons of it aside for the sauce. Don't be shy with it, there's a lot of meat there.Then wrap it loosely in foil (but seal it tightly, you don't want the juices escaping), put it in a rimmed baking dish, just in case (I used a jelly roll pan), and into the oven for three or four hours. I think I had it in for three and a half. You'd think after all this time I'd start paying more attention to times, since I almost always say something like "I wasn't paying attention, so I don't know how long it was in for" with recipes like this. But I don't. Ah well. When it's done, take it out and plop it into a large bowl. It's not very pretty, but man does it smell good. Let it cool a bit before you shred it. This gives you time to deal with the juices. Mmmm, beefy. There's a lot of fat in there. You want that gone. I use a gravy separator, but I didn't get a good picture of it. I also added some water to bring the juices above the little spout hole thingy. The water didn't affect the flavor since I reduced it a lot. Which is the next thing, pour the juices into a sauce pot and reduce them a bit. Then add the reserved spice rub and the ketchup. You could easily use pureed tomatoes or canned plain tomato sauce in this, but I didn't feel like opening up a can to use half of it. Now let it simmer to reduce to a thick sauce and to let the flavors mingle. I've always been amused by that phrase "let the flavors mingle". I picture tiny cocktail parties, jars of spices in wee dresses and suits, drinking little martinis, spreading gossip.

"Did you hear? Cilantro and Cumin are breaking up!"
"Oh no! What will happen to their baby, Adobo?"
"I hear she's going to live with her Uncle Coriander down in Arizona."

Am I the only one? I am? Ok, well, we'll pretend that never happened then. So, while the sauce is reducing, shred the beef. Discard any big pieces of fat (and there will be some big pieces of fat). Also stir the sauce occasionally, you don't want it to burn. When the sauce has reduced, toss the meat in and stir it up. Let it cook for a bit so the meat absorbs some of the sauce and it caramelizes just a bit. Then that's it. Except for taking blurry pictures.Toss it on a roll (or some fresh french bread, if you happen to have some) and mow. This is a seriously beefy, tasty, filling sandwich.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Flank Steak Lo Mein, Revisited

1 lb flank steak
1 small head of broccoli
1/2 a bunch of asparagus
1/2 a medium onion
1 red pepper
1/4 cup soy sauce
3-4 tbls hoisin sauce
1 tsp sugar
2 large cloves of garlic, minced
1/2 tbl minced ginger
1 tsp rice wine vinegar
couple turns of pepper
1/2 lb noodles, cooked al dente

Combine the soy sauce, hoisin, sugar, ginger, garlic, vinegar and pepper in a zipper plastic bag. Add the flank steak, squeeze out as much air as possible and let marinate for at least an hour or as many as 4-5. Chop the onion into whatever size pieces you like. Cut the asparagus, broccoli and pepper into bite sized pieces. When the steak is done marinating, take it out of the bag, scrape off as much of the marinade and chunks of ginger and garlic as you can. Reserve the liquid. Pat the steak dry and cut it once along the grain, then into thin slices against the grain. Stir fry the vegetables, in several shifts if needed, till almost done and put them aside. Stir fry the steak in several shifts, then set it aside. Add the reserved marinade to the pan and bring to a boil. Add the cooked noodles and stir to coat. Add the vegetables and meat, stir to combine. Keep stirring for a minute to finish cooking everything. Then serve.

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Here is another updated recipe. Well, sort of updated. Lo mein is never the same way twice when I make it. One odd thing happened this time around, there wasn't as much sauce as there usually is. I think it's because I added the hoisin to the marinade instead of doing it the way I usually do, adding it at the end when I'm cooking the sauce. Or maybe I accidentally used more noodles than normal. I don't know exactly what happened. But it was still wicked good. Anyway, the original post for this was also my very first post. It was more than a little rough around the edges, but that particular version of this dish is by far my favorite. This one is really just an example of how you can make it with whatever you happen to have. I had asparagus. So that's went in there. I guess that makes it kind of a east/west fusion kind of thing. Some of the pictures didn't come out so hot but fortunately I'm not vain, I just use what I have. Why don't we just dive right in here.

First things first, I made the marinade. A quarter cup of soy sauce in a zipper freezer bag thingie, a couple cloves of minced garlic, a big chunk of ginger. This is the ginger that I've been keeping in vodka, it still has lots of flavor even after twenty days. I minced it and tossed it in there. Then I put in the hoisin. This I think was a mistake. If anyone decides to make this, add the hoisin after you bring the marinade to a boil at the end of the recipe. I'll point out when. But this is the way I did it and pretending I did it another way would be like lying. And I couldn't do that to you guys. Heh. Now toss in a little sugar and the vinegar, mix it up and slap the beef in there. Get out as much air as you can and stick it in the fridge for a couple hours. When that's about done, prep your veggies. This time around I'm using asparagus, a red pepper, half an onion and some broccoli. Why? They're what I had on hand. Lo mein is kind of like a casserole that way. Anyway, I diced the onion, cut the asparagus into thirds,chopped the pepper into bite sized chunks and floretted the broccoli. Is that even a word? Well, if not it is now. Next, the steak. Mmmmm, flank steak. Man, I love flank steak. I have no idea what it is about it, but I just can't get enough. You want to take it out of the marinade and scrape off most of the garlic and ginger stuck to it, put the chunks back in the liquid and set that aside. That's the sauce. Pat it dry and cut it in half along the grain. That's the way the strips of muscle go. You want a short grain in the end product, makes it more tender. Then cut each half into thin strips against the grain. Now you're ready to stir fry. First you want to do the veggies. I usually do them one at a time, just to make sure they are all done just how I like them. But if you aren't as fussy as me then you can do them all at once. Well, if you have a big enough pan that is. You would probably wind up doing them in batches anyway. But here's how I did it. First the onion. I heated up my stir fry pan wicked hot, with a little canola oil in the bottom. I browned up the onion pretty well. I much prefer it that way, especially with yellow onion. Then I tossed the asparagus in with it and cooked it for a minute or so. You don't want it cooked all the way since it will finish cooking at the end. Then I pulled that out, added a little more oil and tossed in the broccoli. Once the broccoli was almost done I put in the peppers and just tossed them around little bit to sweat. No squishy peppers. Pulled those out and put them aside and put in about a third of the meat. You want to cook the meat in shifts, otherwise it winds up braising in it's own juices. Once the meat was done I pulled it out too, poured in the leftover marinade and brought it to a boil. Here is where I normally would have added the hoisin sauce. I don't know what I was thinking adding it to the marinade. Heh, I never said I wasn't a flake. Once the sauce has boiled enough to kill any critters that might be in the raw beefyness reduce the heat to a simmer and toss in the noodles. I just use spaghetti. I know, I'm a savage. You want the pasta not quite done when you put it in, that way it will absorb the sauce and be extra good. Toss it around to coat it then dump everything back in. Now mix it all up and let it all finish cooking, stirring it every once in a while. This also lets the flavors mingle a bit. And there you have it, flank steak lo mein with the veggies I had in the fridge.

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