Wednesday, July 30, 2008

"steak-ing" my claim :)

perfect steak

Ah, steak...is there a more perfect food, or a food that has been more ruined by the masses? cooking a perfect steak is not only a talent, but in my opinion, an art that takes years to master! I have tried to make the perfect pan-fried steak for years only to end up with overcooked, dry meat or meat that is too rare, even for me, with a burnt outer crust!



On this night, things were different. I did it...made the perfect rare (for me) and medium (for Jason) steaks.... the secret was to cook the steaks in a little canola in a screaming hot pan for 2 min on each side then to finish them in of all places, the toaster oven for 2 min (me) and 5 min (Jason). I also let the steaks rest for about 10 min before serving them. To accompany I made a horseradish cream, a basmati and onion pilaf and my favorite salad (recipe to follow).




This recipe doesn't have a name that I am aware of, so I am naming it myself....

JJ salad :)

1 tomato (best you can get)

1 avocado (must be ripe)

1 small to med sweet onion sliced thin

1/2 sliced cucumber (I like English or 1 whole seeded and peeled regular cuke)

juice of 1/2 lemon

1 tbl red wine vinegar

2 tbl evoo

1 tbl mayo (helmans is my fav)

1/2 tsp garlic powder

plenty of salt and fresh pepper

**put all veggies in a large salad bowl. In a small bowl mix all other ingredients to make a dressing. Pour over veggies and stir together (make sure to get the avocados coated so they don't turn brown). Refrigerate for up to 3 hrs (the salt will begin to leach the water out of the veggies so you don't want to let this salad hang out for too long). This salad is great with any grilled meats and I love it with seafood also.



Ps. The sandwich I made the next day with the leftovers was also amazing! Thanks Gmom J for the organic tomatoes from you garden...they were great!




steak sandwich

Some sockeye...for your viewing pleasure :)

poached sockeye salmon with sauce



My local grocery store had some incredibly fresh sockeye salmon on sale for $9.99/lb and I couldn't resist buying some to make for dinner. I love salmon and this salmon was so perfect I decided to keep the preparation fairly simple. I poached it in a stock/wine mixture with a few aromatics (lemon, parsley, tarragon, dill and 2 bay leaves). I made a reduced cream and wine sauce with herbs for the finishing sauce. The fish was super moist, tender and flavorful. I also made sauteed haricots vert with onions and a little butter and we had baked yellow potatoes (I perfer these to russets because of their soft and almost creamy texture...they aren't as dry and flaky). The meal was easy, delicious and best of all, it didn't leave my house with a fishy smell. A winner all around! Here are the pics...

An odd moment and paella

paella with sausage and chicken



Something very odd and perhaps a bit surreal happened tonight...I decided to make paella. That in itself isn't so odd, but what was odd was that on the foodnetwork, Bobby had a paella throwdown...I, having no prior knowledge of this, made my first paella. This, to me was a pretty cool and very odd. Whatever, weird moment but here's my masterpiece. Though good, I am sure not nearly as good as Bobby's. In this paella I included chicken, shrimp and some delicious garlic/pepper sausage I found at my local grocery store.



The recipe turned out pretty good for a first attempt, especially considering thatI watched the darned pot the entire time it was cooking (from start to finish about 1hr) because I was afraid of overcooking or under cooking the rice! I used jasmine instead of arborio because that's what I had on hand. I wish I had also included mussels, clams, the arborio and that I had a real paella pot on hand, but this turned out pretty good considering it was cooked in a dutch oven. I would make this again, but would use arborio next time.

Saffron broth:

chicken stock (1 small box)

1 stalk celery sliced

1/4 tsp saffron

1/2 tsp paprika

1 bay leaf

1/2 lemon

shells from a 1/2 lb shrimp

2 chicken breast carcases

1/2 onion (sweet and small)

2 c water

2 cloves garlic crushed.

Let all ingredients simmer for about 1 hour over med to low heat. If stock gets to dry add more water. Season to taste. Reserve any stock in the freezer (freezes beautifully) for another dish.



Ps. I also found some really nice plates and bowls at the thrift store today (thrift store shopping is my other hobby and passion:) and thought they displayed the meal beautifully.



besos



Julia






FYI...Here are some pics of an authentic paella Jason, my family and I had in Paraguay at a Spanish friend of my father's house, Don Pedro's.He served his Paella with mayo in lieu of aioli...another component I didn't add to my paella.