Thursday, January 25, 2007

Grilled Steak With Fries


Photo above shows grilled steak with French Fries and grilled asparagus.

The steak (in this case leftover top siroin) was prepared by defrosting, jacquarding the steak, lightly coating with oil, and massaging with Chef Paul's Blackened Steak Magic. The steak was grilled on my two-burner cast-iron grill, and finished with a dallop of Terragon Butter.

The asparagus was grilled along with the steak, with olive oil and salt.

I screwed up the French Fries and I'm not really sure why. Back when I had a roommate with a Turkey Deep-Frier we made french fries often with success. Since then I have attempted to do deep frying in a medium size saucepan with an underpowered electric range burner, and my results have been rather poor. I'm willing to blame the equipment :)

Seriously, I think there is a fair deal of nonlinearity going on with my electric range burners. At medium-high, I was struggling to keep the oil at 325F. Once set a shade below high the temperature of oil shot up almost instantly beyond 400F. Anyway, my intention had been to the fry the potatoes once at ~325F until soft, then fry a second time ~375F until fries are browned. Maybe next time.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Grilled Mahi-Mahi with Teriyaki Glaze

Photo above shows Grilled Mahi-Mahi with Teriyaki Glaze, plus Mango Salsa, Grilled Snow Peas, and Saffron Rice. The Mango Salsa is just Salsa Mexicana with mango added: tomato, jalepeno, red onion, garlic, cilantro, lime juice, and salt. The Saffron Rice is made by adding a pinch of saffron to the rice cooker before starting cooking.

Something seems missing in this dish, other than authenticity to regional styles :) Also my girlfriend says now that she doesn't like mango salsa, even though the last time I made it she made a point to say how good it was. Hmmm... I need to change some things around before trying this again.

INGREDIENTS: (serves two)

2 Mahi-Mahi fillets
Olive Oil

Teriyaki Sauce:
  • Soy Sauce
  • Mirin
  • Sake
INSTRUCTIONS:

1) Defrost, clean, trim, skin, or whatever so that you have 2 fillets ready for grilling.

2) May be done in advance. Prepare Teriyaki Sauce by combining equal parts Soy Sauce, Mirin, and Sake in a small bowl. NOTE TO SELF: I didn't have any Sake so I used rice wine vinegar - buy Sake some time.

3) Heat up grill. Coat fillets with oil so that they won't stick to the grill.

4) Once the grill is hot, put the fillets on. Brush repeatedly with Teriyaki sauce until a nice glaze forms on both sides.

Chicken Breasts with Bearnaise Sauce


The picture above shows Grilled Chicken Breast with Bearnaise Sauce, Grilled Asparagus, Sauteed Crimini Mushrooms, and Roasted Potatoes. The sauce is rather thin because, as an experiment I tried to cheat and get by with less butter. Not surprisingly it wasn't as good as the heart-attack classic recipe. A Bearnaise Sauce should have one egg yolk for every one stick of butter, for every tablespoon of cold water, as I understand...

INGREDIENTS: (serves two)

2 boneless, skinless, Chicken Breasts
Salt and Pepper to taste

Vinegar Terragon Reduction:
  • 1/2 cup Kimberley Champagne Vinegar
  • Terragon Stems from Jacobs Farm 3/4 oz. package
  • Terragon Leaves from Jacobs Farm 3/4 oz. package
  • 1 large shallot
  • ~1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns
2 sticks unsalted butter, clarified

Sabayon:
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 2 tablespoons cold water
INSTRUCTIONS:

1) This step may be done in advance. Defrost, cut up chicken, skin, debone, clean, whatever necessary so that you end up with 2 chicken breasts ready for grilling. NOTE TO SELF: If you're going to buy whole chickens, and don't plan on roasting them whole, quarter them before freezing. This makes defrosting a lot easier :)

2) This step may be done in advance. Prepare Vinegar Reduction. Wash tarragon and let dry in the bottom of a colander. Once dry, separate the terragon leaves from stems. Add stems to saucepan. Reserve a portion of the leaves to add to the sauce later. The rest may be used to make Compound Butter. Add finely chopped shallot, peppercorns, and vinegar to saucepan. Reduce until only a tablespoon of liquid is left. Strain reduction. NOTE TO SELF: Turn on the range fan before the vinegar fumes get too heady.

3) This step may be done in advance. Clarify butter by melting the 2 sticks in a medium sized saucepan. After ten minutes or so the butter will no longer be frothy and milk solids will have started to settle on the bottom of the pan. Strain through a metal strainer lined with cheesecloth.

4) Preheat cast-iron grill. The chicken breasts should be at room temperature by now. Dab a folded paper napkin with oil and with tongs rub onto the grill. Season chicken breasts with salt and pepper. Place chickens, presentation side down, on the grill. After eight or ten minutes or so, flip the breasts.

5) Prepare the Sabayon. Preheat a range burner at medium heat. Put 2 egg yolks and 2 teaspoons of cold water in a mixing bowl. Whisk for about a minute until the yolks are frothy. Take a folded up paper napkin and use this to hold the mixing bowl. Place the mixing bowl directly over the hot range burner, whisking constantly. After a minute or so the egg yolks will suddenly thicken. Remove from heat and continue whisking, a minute or so, until the mixing bowl has cooled somewhat. The sabayon should be smooth and airy. If it is grainy, start over again with another batch of egg yolks.

6) Slowly drizzle clarified butter, then the terragon-vinegar reduction in the sabayon, whisking all the time. Chop reserved terragon leaves and add to the sauce. The Bearnaise sauce is done and may be spooned over Chicken breasts as soon as they are done grilling.