Showing posts with label beef. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beef. Show all posts

A Lovely Moroccan Meal

Chris might love kale, but this Valentine's Day, I'm in love with Moroccan cooking.
Ever since we returned from our fabulous holiday vacation, I've been trying to replicate the delicious food we ate there. Here at home, we've had orange slices sprinkled with cinnamon for dessert a few times, and we've made the tasty vegetable salads, zaalouk and taktouka several times, too -- I can practically make them by heart now. And, I've made a delicious fish dish with vegetables and a chermoula marinade in our new 1 1/2 quart terra cotta tagine (made in Morocco, purchased here). Tagines are awesome by the way.  You should get one.

First, a few things about cooking in a tagine: It's suggested that you cook in an un-glazed terra cotta tagine for best results, but you can then transfer your lovely dish to a decorative, (lead-free) glazed tagine for serving if you want to get fancy. Before we used our tagine for the first time, we spent a good several hours seasoning it. We had to soak it in water for about 3 hours, let it dry, then cover it in olive oil, fill the bottom with water and bake in a 250 degree oven for 2 hours more. But, that was the first and last time the tagine will be in the oven. Per our Moroccan friends, tagines are not to be used in ovens. They are to be used on the stove or over hot coals. However, you shouldn't place them directly on the heat on the stove -- always use a heat diffuser, a metal plate that most tagine vendors will also sell. I seems like a lot to do for one pot, but once you've cooked your first meal in a tagine, you'll see why all of that is worth it. The flavor is unlike anything I've ever tried.

And that wonderful flavor is best shared with the ones you love, so I'm sharing this amazing beef tagine recipe with all of you. It's one we learned to make in Morocco, with a couple minor tweaks. If you don't have a tagine, a dutch oven would work fine, although I can't promise the smoky flavor and cut-with-a -butter-knife-tender meat that comes from using a clay pot. As always, please use the best quality ingredients you can find for these dishes and enjoy the process. There are several steps, but it's the perfect opportunity to grab your significant other or a couple of friends and spend some time together in the kitchen. Pour some wine, turn up the stereo and have some fun. Isn't that what life, er cooking is all about?


Beef Tagine with Prunes and Toasted Almonds (Serves 4)
Ingredients:
Beef:
1lb beef stew meat (I used local, grass-fed, Angus beef), cut into chunks
2 TBS olive or safflower oil
1 medium onion, finely diced
3 cloves garlic, pressed
1 cinnamon stick
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
2 tsp ginger
1/2 tsp turmeric
1TBS cilantro, chopped
2 cups water
Almonds:
1 cup unsalted almonds
Prunes:
2 cups pitted prunes
1/4 cup vegetable oil
2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 cinnamon stick

To Do:
  • Place tagine on heat diffuser and turn heat to medium.
  • Add the meat, onion and oil and brown on all sides.
  • Once browned, add the garlic, cinnamon stick, salt, pepper, ginger, turmeric and cilantro along with the 2 cups of water. Cover and cook over medium heat for about 90 minutes, checking every so often for tenderness and whether you need to add more liquid, adjust heat, etc. The lid on my tagine is a bit uneven, so it allows for venting (contrary to popular belief there isn't a hole at the top of the lid, just an indentation for easy lifting) but you can also just lay a spoon in the tagine and let the lid rest on the handle for a bit of a vent.)
  • While the meat is cooking, fill a small pot with water and bring to a boil. Add the almonds and boil for a few minutes until the skin loosens. Drain and cool, then slip the almond skins off and place the peeled almonds on a paper towel to dry. Discard the skins.
  • When dry, place the almonds in a small pan over medium heat and stir constantly, until toasted and brown. Remove from heat and set aside.

  • In a medium pot, add the prunes, oil, cinnamon and cinnamon stick and add enough water to just about cover the prunes.  Partially cover the pot and simmer over medium heat until the prunes are soft and the liquid has thickened, about 20 mins. Remove from heat and discard the cinnamon stick.
  • When the meat is very tender, and the liquid has reduced by about half, remove the cinnamon stick and turn the heat to low. 
  • Measure out about 1/2 cup of the meat juices from the tagine and add to the prunes.
  • Return the prunes to medium-low heat and cook about 5-10 minutes more, stirring until the liquid is thick and syrupy. Then, pour the prunes over the beef and stir until combined. Top with the toasted almonds and serve in the tagine or transfer to decorative one. Serve with bread for scooping. (Note: While most tagine recipes you'll find online will include couscous, we learned in Morocco that couscous is actually a meal unto itself and is not usually served as a side dish. Bread is the main accompaniment to tagines and salads.) 
Yum!

Moroccan Vegetable Salads:
Chris never liked eggplant, until he had zaalouk in Morocco. Now he can't get enough. We've been making a batch of these two salads every other week. They are pretty easy to prep and are great for light dinner with a big loaf of crusty bread for scooping. Add a bowl of olives and/or almonds and maybe some smoked cheese and you have a lovely meal. Or, serve the salads before or with the tagine for a special meal. (Like all good things, they're even better the next day.) 

Note: We learned to make both of these salads in Morocco, where I was surprised to see that a "tablespoon" just means "a large spoon," and is not necessarily the same amount as a measured tablespoon. Same thing for a "teaspoon" -- it's just a regular spoon. Thus, if you use traditional measuring spoons to measure out everything below, just keep the spices handy so you can add more to taste at the end if necessary-- you'll probably need to.

Zaalouk (Eggplant Salad)
Ingredients:
3 ripe tomatoes, peeled, seeded and diced
2 medium eggplants (I like to use about 4-5 baby eggplants since they have fewer seeds)
2 tsp fresh parsley, finely chopped
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
2 tsp sweet paprika
1 tsp cumin
1/4 cup olive or safflower oil
4 TBS lemon juice
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1/2 cup water
2 TBS tomato paste

To Do:
  • The easiest way to peel the tomatoes is to cut an X in the bottom with a knife and then put them in a pot of boiling water for a few seconds. Transfer to an ice water bath for a few seconds.  Dry, then peel the skin right off. To seed, cut in half and push out the seeds/pulp. Cut the tomato sections into strips, then dice.
  • For the eggplant, cut the top stem off and peel the skin off every other inch or so (you want some ribbons of peel for texture and color), then cut into 1-inch thick slices.  Cut those slices into 1-inch strips, then dice.
  • Place all ingredient except tomato paste in a large pan over medium heat and cook for about 25 minutes, stirring often.
  • Add the tomato paste and stir.  Cook about 20 minutes more, adjust seasonings and serve cold, hot or at room temperature with bread, pita chips, etc.
Taktouka (Cooked Tomato and Green Pepper Salad)
Ingredients:
3 large, ripe tomatoes, peeled, seeded and diced
2 large green or red peppers, roasted, peeled, seeded and diced
4 fat cloves of garlic, pressed or minced
3 TBS fresh parsley, finely chopped
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp black pepper
2 TBS paprika (I like to use hot paprika for this dish)
2 tsp cumin
1 pinch red pepper flakes or cayenne
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 cup vegetable oil

To Do:
  • See above for tomato prep.
  • Roast your peppers over a flame (carefully) until charred and blistered, then let cool.  Rub the blackened skin gently to remove it (in Morocco they used a plastic bag to rub the skin off, but I just use my clean hands).  
  • Cut off the top stem, remove the core, cut the pepper into strips, then dice.
  • Place all ingredients in a large skillet over medium heat and cook for about 30 minutes, stirring often, until the tomatoes are soft and the liquids have reduced to an oil-like consistency.
  • Remove from heat, adjust seasonings and serve hot or at room temperature (it's great cold, too), with bread, pita chips, etc. for scooping.

Happy Valentine's Day and Happy Cooking!
xoxo


Late To the Plate: Guest Blogger Jessica Schein Takes on Bittman's Basics

Stir-Fried Spicy Beef with Basil

When I was a little kid there was a popular commercial running with the tagline, “Beef. It’s what’s for dinner.” For whatever reason I thought it was a pretty funny sentiment even though in my home it wasn’t true. If my mom was going to be in the kitchen you better believe she’d be standing over some part of a chicken, not a cow.

Every now and again she would broil a filet mignon, although this was mostly to appease our dog who sometimes refused his own food in favor of the real stuff. Other than these crisped slabs of meat though, we never did eat much beef, and when we did it certainly wasn’t mixed with vegetables and soy sauce.

Yet for years friends and co-workers have been telling me that stir-fries are great weeknight meals because they’re easy and quick. I’ve been skeptical because, well, I’m me, but recently I decided to give it a go because if there’s one thing I can never have enough of it’s go-to meals for busy days.

So I went back to Bittman, as I often do, and attempted his recipe for Stir-Fried Spicy Beef with Basil.


Stir-Fried Spicy Beef with Basil

Makes:
4 to 6 servings

Bittman’s Time Estimate:
15 minutes plus one hour to marinate the meat * (I somehow missed the instruction to marinate the steak. More on that later)

The Ingredients:
1.5 lbs of flank or sirloin steak
½ cup of loosely packed fresh basil leaves
1 tablespoon of peanut oil plus 1 teaspoon for marinating
1.5 tablespoons minced garlic
¼ teaspoon hot red pepper flakes to taste
1 tablespoon soy sauce of nam pla (thai fish sauce)
Juice of ½ lime
Rice (optional)


Prep Time:
Steak: I ended up buying 4 small petite sirloin steaks. Bittman suggests slicing the steak across the grain. I had no idea what that meant so I just sliced it into thin bite-sized pieces: 12 minutes.
Basil: Wash and loosely chop basil leaves: 1 min.
Garlic: I’m a horrible mincer so assuming you don’t accidentally mince off part of your fingertip like I almost always nearly do: 7 minutes.
Measuring out the peanut oil, pepper flakes, soy sauce, and slicing/squeezing the lime: Under 2 minutes.
Total Prep Time: 22 minutes


Cooking:
  1. First and foremost, put the steak, 1 teaspoon of peanut oil, and the basil into a bowl that is then covered and put away into the fridge for 1 hour.
  2. About 30 minutes later start the rice. Check out the package your using for instructions on how to cook your grains. Personally I like my rice to be on the softer side so for the basmati type I cooked I boiled two cups of water for one cup of rice. The water took 7 minutes to boil and another 15 for the rice to fluff. So overall it took about 22 minutes in total.
  3. While the rice begins to cook start prepping the ingredients. This includes:
    • Slicing the beef across the grain as thinly as you can into bite-sized pieces. Bittman suggests freezing the steak for 15 to 30 minutes beforehand to make this part a little easier (I didn’t do this but will the next time)
    •   Washing and drying the basil. If the leaves are big coarsely chop them
    •   Chopping the garlic
  4. Lay out all of the ingredients nearby as the cooking will happen fast!
  5. Heat a wide skillet over high until it smokes (3 to 4 mins).
  6.  Lower the heat to medium and add 1 tablespoon of peanut oil to the pan. Add the garlic and stir once or twice.
  7. The garlic will color quickly, in 15 seconds or less, at which point you should return the heat to high and add in the beef and basil mixture.
  8. Stir quickly and throw in the pepper.
  9. Continue to regularly stir the meat until it loses its red color (about 3 to 4 minutes).
  10. Add soy sauce and lime juice and stir once or twice.
  11.  Serve over the rice and voila! Stir fry is done.
Total cooking with w/o marinating (w/ rice): About 1 hour, 50 minutes
Total cooking + prep time w/o marinating (w/ rice): About 50 minutes


The Verdict:
First off, I highly suggest marinating the steak. As I mentioned earlier I totally missed that instruction and my meal ended up coming out on the bland side. Additionally, and this is probably mostly because I’m a basil freak, I’d increase the amount of basil to ¾ cup. Lastly, I used reduced sodium soy sauce and I think the steak, especially, could have benefited from the salt of regular soy sauce.

The meal ended yielding closer to 4 pleasant servings, not 6.

All this to say I’d call this a good starter stir fry. Next time, I will marinate the meat to make sure this dish ends up with the flavor it deserves.


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Jessica Schein is a semi-novice cook & writer living in Seattle, WA. When not combing through cookbooks she can be found reading young adult fiction, wishing that Friday Night Lights would return for a sixth season, or running. You can follow her on Twitter or Tumblr.

Hello, 32!

I was 32 when I started cooking; up until then, I just ate. --Julia Child



Chris and I have been off for the past 10 days or so, celebrating the end of summer -- and the end of my 31st year.  I realized that our vacations are pretty much planned around food -- we're not even done with lunch when we start thinking about what to do for dinner.  (Love it!)

We started things off with a trip to the dentist. (Seriously.) Chris likes to schedule appointments like this on days we're off, which is fine, but for some reason, the dentist (my least favorite of these kinds of things, even though we both haven't yet had a cavity in our lives -- knock on wood) always ends up happening right before my birthday.  Ugh.

Anyway, as a reward for behaving, Chris said I could choose our lunch spot, but having my mouth full of that gritty toothpaste-type stuff the dentist uses to clean your teeth didn't really put me in the food mood. Until, I remembered we were very close in proximity to a favorite artsy cafe we used to frequent a lot when we lived in that part of the state.  It's called Van Gogh's Ear Cafe and they make this most wonderful sandwich: cucumber slices and brie on a crusty baguette, drizzled with a sweet balsamic dressing.  Yum.  It was just what I needed.  Chris had a lovely roast beef and tomato sandwich and we each split a half of the other's sandwich.  Delicious!

Later that night, we grabbed a friend and whizzed down the parkway to another former haunt Toro Loco. (I guess we were feeling nostalgic that day.)  After some margaritas and cold Corona Lights, we ordered a cheesy nacho/quesadilla appetizer and then got down to business. Chris had a tour of enchiladas -- shredded beef, chicken, and cheese.  I ordered my standby -- a plate of chayotes, hollowed out and stuffed with corn, tomatoes, onions, diced chayote, cilantro, and topped with melted cheese.  Chayotes are in the squash family and are also known as pear squash.  They look kind of like a small green pepper when hollowed out, but are a light green color (kind of like a granny smith apple).  They taste so fresh and light -- a great contrast to the creamy black beans and rice that came with the dish.  It is my absolute favorite.  I always debate whether to order something else, but I go back to the Chayote dish every time. Always a wise decision.  Awesome.

The weekend continued in Atlantic City, NJ.  We had floor seats for Aerosmith (does it surprise you that the Gourmess is a Steven Tyler fan?) for my birthday -- thanks, Chris!-- and decided to go down early and stay for awhile.  I had some friends who were in town doing some gambling, so we met up with them for some drinks (terrible!) and laughs (great!).  The concert was absolutely amazing.  The seats were fabulous -- I could see Steven Tyler's face, and the music rocked.  It was so cool. Definitely an unforgettable experience.  (Also, the fact that the beer guys were teasing Chris that he was with a 19-year old, didn't hurt.)  While in AC, we stopped at White House Sub Shop. It's a little spot that has been around since the 1940s, and some even say it is where the submarine sandwich originated.  We slid into a booth and ordered our sandwiches. Chris did their special (Italian meats, provolone, and a lovely pickled pepper topping) and I got the meatball sub. It should have been called the meatloaf sub, it was so huge. Both were fantastic and filling. We didn't eat again for the rest of the day. There are two size options on the menu -- half or whole.  We were thinking that they must just give everyone a whole without asking--until we got the  bill and realized we both had halves.  Our "half" serving was about the size of a foot long sandwich.  Their "whole" was--well, let's just say people weren't leaving with baseball bats wrapped in wax paper -- those my friend, were sandwiches.  HUGE sandwiches.  Whew! Definitely a "don't miss" when in AC.  We left AC with our bellies and our wallets full and got ready for part two of our vacation.


Vacation continued with a drive up north to Shelburne, VT.  There's a lovely old, elegant inn on the lake with big, airy rooms, hammocks hidden by shade trees, and beautifully manicured lawns and gardens. It has such a peaceful, relaxing charm and we look forward to unwinding there at the end of every summer.


The Inn at Shelburne Farms is part of a working farm and almost everything we ate was grown on the property or from a nearby spot.  Cheese, bread, vegetables, berries, beef, pork, chicken, butter, eggs, wine.  All real, all fresh.  To get there, we had to take the ferry over from NY to VT, which is one of my favorite parts of the trip.  We got to the ferry dock around lunchtime, with just enough time to stop at a deli where we split the world's best roast beef sub (White House, not included).  Piled high with cheese, mushrooms, peppers, tomatoes, lettuce, pickles, olives, etc.  The bread is chewy and crusty -- yummy!




Once we arrived at the inn, we unpacked, grabbed a glass of fresh brewed iced tea and headed out to the hammock for a few hours.  When it was almost "Attitude Adjustment" time, we headed back to the room, changed into our dinner clothes, and split a bottle of sparkling wine we had brought along.  Then, it was down to the sun-filled parlor, where we sipped a lovely heirloom tomato elixir cocktail, made with heirloom tomato water, organic vodka, fresh basil, lemon peel, and garnished with zebra tomatoes.  It went down so smooth...and got us ready for our lovely dinner.

View from our room
To start, I ordered the "Feast of the Fields," which is a selection of fresh vegetables from the Inn's garden, served on a wooden board. It is rustic and lovely -- grilled squash, potatoes, cucumbers, tomatoes, beets, etc.  So fresh and flavorful. I look forward to it every year. Chris ordered the house-made lamb sausage, which came with apples and celeriac and a lovely farm-made cheddar cheese and mustard sauce.  It was beyond words.  Just a perfect dish.  For our main dishes, Chris ordered a ribeye of veal that was divine and came with potatoes that melted in your mouth.  I chose the mixed lamb grill, which was a sampling of shank, leg, and loin. It came with a warm, garlicky, chickpea and tomato salad that was the perfect accompaniment to the dish. After downing those dishes and a bottle of wine, we settled on dessert. A creamy corn crème brûlée for Chris, and a fresh blueberry cheesecake for me.  I couldn't have asked for a lovelier birthday meal.


The next few days were filled with more lazy naps in the hammock, swimming in Lake Champlain, a packed picnic in a hidden spot, a hike to the farm barn, a lunch from the farm stand (lovely sandwiches with fresh farm ingredients on fresh-baked bread), a special picnic in our room with local wine, breads, cheeses, summer sausage, and a selection of mustards and relishes from the farm store, and of course several more of those tomato elixirs.  Our final night in the dining room started with beef tartare for Chris and a wax bean, heirloom tomato, and house-made mozzarella salad for me.  Then, for the main course, Chris had another lovely veal dish, this time with capers, lemon butter sauce, and homemade tagliatelle pasta. It was a farm-fresh version of veal scallopine.  I got a lovely grass-fed beef filet served with baby leeks, horseradish mashed parsnips, and chard.  The meat was cooked perfectly (medium rare) and topped with a pat of Merlot butter.  I couldn't eat the whole thing...but I wanted to!  We finished the wine and split the last piece of blueberry cheesecake for the season.  Another terrific meal to end a perfect getaway. Such bliss!

When we got home, a special surprise was waiting for me.  Chris, the sweetheart that he is, bought me a toque (chef's hat) and a custom chef's jacket as a congratulations gift for finishing my course.  The coat is white with pink accents and says "La Petite Gourmess" on the left side.  Is he the best or what?  Now, methinks I have to start taking this thing seriously and get moving on a business plan.  After all, I'm already dressed for it.



xoxoxo