Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Sunday Dinner

Anyone of a reasonable age has memories of Sunday Dinner. Mom cooking up the goods and bringing it all together for a family meal!!!!!! Almost makes you want to cry just thinking about it, not to mention the five pounds it adds instantly.

Our family group doesn't do Sunday dinner very often. The girls are running in different directions and Sunday isn't my favorite day to have large groups of people to the house for food. However, everything sorta came together this past Sunday for a nice meal.

As I stated previously, we are changing the direction of the blog to be more about what is on the grill and how it got there, so ....

Sunday, we grilled ...

Garlic Bread
- Ruined it, threw it away, burnt to be disgusting
- I hope one day that I can master the bread on the grill action, it smells so good.
Corn on the Cob
- Slightly bland, used a chilli pepper and butter mixture, not enough chilli
- When you get the pepper to butter blend right, grilled corn is awesome
Green Beans
- Simple awesome, not bragging but everyone agreed, best ever
- Steam green beans, wrap in bacon (makes everything better)
- Oil up with olive oil
- Sprinkle with some red pepper flakes
Potatoes with Onions
- OK, so they didn't go on the grill (ran out of room)
- Oven 350 degrees
- Red potatoes, cut small, add whole onion cut into pieces, olive oil, salt, pepper and garlic
- mix together and place into oven until potatoes are soft to cut
- use some fresh thyme if you have it (yum!)
Green Onions
- Really simple, olive oil, salt, grill for a few minutes ...... Sweet
- and just for fun, yeah, I wrapped a couple in bacon ...... Sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeet
Cajun sausage
- Really simple, buy it, grill it, eat it (just don't burn it and you are fine)
Chicken
- mixture of boneless tenders and thinly slice breasts
- we used a variety of different rubs
- montreal chicken is awesome (thanks McCormicks)
- mesquite chicken is good (another McCormick)
- cattlemans steak shake is really good (local seasoning from the cattlemans group)
- green egg seasoning (Big Green Egg owners will know this one)
Burgers
- One goofball thought hamburgers would be better
- Two pounds of hamburger meat
- blackening seasoning, Worcestershire, pepper, salt all mixed into meat
- make FOUR patties and grill FOREVER!
- dang good but 30 minute burgers is ridiculous.

Anyway, bottom line, I grilled for about 2 and half hours and it was worth it. Yeah, it was a lot of work, we grilled, we played, we ate. It was a good day.

Until next time, I'm studying the Latin America grilling book. I hope to have a worthwhile blog on that success soon.



Friday, March 23, 2012

Cooking with Mom

You cant talk about cooking in my family without including my mom. Normally, its my mom dropping the five star dinners on us, but Tuesday night, we had a different experience.

Mom booked a little cooking class action for the two of us. The local Williams and Sonoma is offering two hour classes where they demonstrate an entire meal (sales pitch included for their products) that includes you eating the meal. Needless to say, it didnt take any arm twisting to get me to attend that class.

Menu for that night included ... French Onion Soup, Rice Pilaf with Mushrooms, Ribeye steak and some sort of chocolate dessert (kinda a look a mousse).

I'm not a fan of French Onion soup, but to be honest the recipe is far less complicated than I expected and I might consider brewing some up for guests in the future. Everyone else commented that the soup was excellent, confirming my believe that it ain't for me.

The rice was really nice. It was cool to see a rice pilaf made from scratch as opposed to buying the dollar box at Publix and mixing the packages together with water.

It was the ribeye steak that I went to see and taste though. Martha, the nice lady teaching the class, took some very nice looking (and my favorite food in the world) ribeye steaks and crusted them with a mixture of kosher salt, fresh cracked pepper and fresh rosemary. Guess the secret ingredient? Duh ... Rosemary!!!!!

Interestingly, she placed the spices on right before she started cooking. I think that she waited to spice the steaks because the salt will rob moisture from the steak when I applied for long periods ahead of time. I forgot to ask Martha about that but after doing some research, salt tends to have an adverse effect on moisture.

Now, to be honest, I was suspect on the idea of cooking ribeyes in a pan or oven. Strike One and Two! (She actually did BOTH!) In my mind, you grill ribeyes!!! Last, Martha and several of the attendees were slightly older ladies that wanted the meat to be cooked, "well done". Strike Three! I was confident that I was in for a slightly ruined, overly cooked, rubbery ribeye.

I will stop now and apologize, on all accounts ..... well on two out of the three accounts.

Martha did a fine job of coating the steak with the salt, pepper and rosemary spices. The rosemary was fresh, like she picked it out of her garden that afternoon fresh!!!!!! Those steaks smelled wonderful sitting on the counter (directly in front of me) waiting to be ruined by the pan and oven.

Martha informed us that she had the eye for the pan turned on HIGH, the olive oil sizzled when she poured it in (ahhh, the smell of goodness). She then placed two of the ribeyes into the pan for about 2 minutes before flipping the steaks for 2 more minutes. I was almost in tears as I listened to the steaks sizzle and as she pulled them off to place into the oven I thought about how wonderful it would be to eat them right then. Martha repeated the searing process on the rest of the steaks till all where done and she placed them in the oven (around 350 I believe).

Let me say that searing steak (or any meat for that matter) is a great way to lock in the juices. The science behind it suggests that if you scorch (not burn) the outside edges of the meat quickly, the pores of the meat will close trapping in juices. Really, this is true stuff, you can look it up! Alton Brown (the food science guy) talks about this stuff on his Food Network shows often.

Anyway, Martha seared those steaks tight, then placed them in the oven. Apparently around the 12 minute mark Martha pulled the steaks out of the oven. I didn't have a good sense of time for two reasons; one, I was fearing for the life of those steaks and two she distracted everyone else talking about that chocolate dessert stuff.

Finally, Martha reached into the oven and let the meat free!!!!!!!!

Immediately, Martha began to cut into the meat. If you are wondering about letting meat rest and all that jazz, let me say, Martha said no (in this case) and Martha was right. She cut into that steak and it was ...... a perfect medium! For me, that is a little over cooked, but the individual slices that she served could be cut with your fork and tasted like heaven.

I was wrong! I was wrong! I was wrong! A fine steak can be cooked indoors with a pan and an oven. Martha proved that well enough for me. Sure, those steaks could have been medium rare with appropriate redness inside, and I would have enjoyed them even more but Martha needed to cook them to a happy medium for everyone (I couldn't be selfish on this outing).

As for the dessert, well I ate it. That says a lot as I don't generally touch dessert. Whatever that chocolate stuff was, it was good (was that English? three "was" in a sentence, can't be good).

A couple of lessons learned from the class for me ....

1. Traditionally, if I am looking for a fine steak, I go to a real butcher but she proved to me that you can go to Publix (or any grocery store) for a really good steak. Note: she did ask the butcher there to cut them special for her, thickness, marble, etc.

2. Fresh herbs are key and rosemary on a steak is great.

3. Pan searing is awesome. I will try that at home but I will finish it in the grill next time to get some of that smoke flavor too. I will not grill the steak though, I will BBQ it with indirect heat.

4. A really good olive oil does make a difference. My Cisco brand olive oil does not produce that kind of a buttery flavor (sorry Cisco). Looks like the sales pitch for Williams and Sonoma might have worked on me.

Special thanks to mom for treating me to a great dinner and some life lessons too. I hope to attend more of their classes.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Change in direction ...

The ole blog has been slow lately. OK, so by slow, I mean DEAD. I think that as the girls have grown, one of two things have occurred .....

1. They aren't near as ridiculous as they used to be?
2. I dont really know what is going on any more?

Im betting on number 2!!!!! I know that there is a LOT more whispering in the house these days even with Big E involved. So, I figure we have reached that point where its best that I don't know what is going on around the house? Hence, the new direction......

Big E got me the best Christmas gift ever. I got a Big Green Egg grill. If you don't know what a Big Green Egg is, look it up. Bottom line, best grill, smoker and all around food entertainment ever.

Therefore, I am going to start blogging about our grilling experience. We've been averaging 2-3 grilling activities per week since Christmas, so I figure I can rely on those for some fun and insightful communication.

Let me know what you think ......