Showing posts with label French. Show all posts
Showing posts with label French. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Presenting: Steak au Poivre Redux for #WeekdaySupper

Steak au Poivre




Happy April Fool's Day!

My regular readers will remember I prepared this dish a couple of months ago but I had problems with the accompanying sauce. Well, after I published it I found other versions that all had similarities that differed from the Anthony Bourdain version I adapted. The same basic recipe I found from Culinary Institute of America and Fabio Viviani used the same procedure of: sear the beef then set aside, deglaze with brandy or cognac, flambé, add veal stock then reduce, add cream and simmer until thickened.

One note I'd like to make here is that the recipe calls for 6-ounce fillets. I used 12-ounce New York strips, however almost any steak will suffice. For me, it's a personal preference. I know the fillet is renowned because it's tender but my palate isn't refined enough to detect the difference in taste. I value taste over texture. That, and the fillet is at least double the price of the New Yorks.

The Challenge

Update the recipe for a dish I previously prepared.

The Source

I adapted the dish I found on SAVEUR Magazine's website.

Ingredients

3 tablespoons black peppercorns, coarsely cracked with a heavy bottom skillet
Kosher salt
4 8- to 12-ounce New York strip steaks
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1/3 cup brandy
1 cup beef stock
1/2 cup heavy cream
French fries, for serving
1 tablespoon chives, finely chopped (for garnish)

Method

1. In a heavy bottom large skillet, melt the butter in the vegetable oil over medium-high heat. Season the steaks with the cracked black pepper and kosher salt. When the pan is hot, add the steaks and sear for approximately 4 minutes on each side for medium rare. Remove each steak to a separate warmed serving plate and set aside to allow for carryover cooking while the sauce is prepared.


2. Deglaze the hot skillet by adding the brandy to the pan and then light it on fire with a long-stemmed match. Keep a non-flammable lid nearby if the flame hasn't extinguished itself within 1 minute. Add in the stock and reduce by half, approximately 4 minutes. Then add the heavy cream and cook until the sauce thickens, approximately 3 to 5 minutes. Season the sauce with salt if necessary. Spoon one to two ounces of sauce over each steak, then top with fries, garnish with chives and serve.


Successful?

Since it is April Fool's Day, I thought I'd leave you with a funny story: I finally successfully executed a flambé. I had previously shyed away from it due to the obvious dangers, but I got the nerve the night I prepared the dish to attempt it. While my steaks were searing, I prepared my work station by turning on the vent, opening the windows so I wouldn't set off the smoke detectors and moving anything that was easily flammable away from the pan such as cardboard boxes or cans with paper labels. When I lit the brandy on fire, it was woefully anti-climatic. I had one or two flames about one inch high that lasted for maybe five seconds. I'm just thankful the fire department didn't need to be called.

I'll now leave you with the #WeekdaySupper dish that was published yesterday in addition to a preview of the dishes that will appear later in the week.

Sunday Supper Movement




Thursday, January 30, 2014

Steak au Poivre and Lessons Learned from a Broken Sauce

Steak au Poivre




Recently, I picked up some tri tip steaks on a trip to the supermarket. I wasn't sure how I was going to prepare them so an internet search yielded steak au poivre. The dish is French for a peppered steak with a pan sauce. I learned that a filet is commonly used but almost any cut of beef would work. The dish is also commonly flambéed with brandy or cognac. Normally, I'd be the first one to attempt a technique I've yet to try but I didn't want to take the risk of needing to make a claim against my renter's insurance policy. I found Anthony Bourdain's version which didn't require it so I took the out.

The Challenge

First, allow me to take you through the recipe and then I'll describe some issues I had.

The Source

I followed the version on delish.com but it appeared originally on page 130 to 131 of Anthony Bourdain's Les Halles Cookbook by Anthony Bourdain with José de Meirelles and Philippe Lajaunie.

Ingredients

4 8-ounce steaks
2 ounces olive oil
2 ounces freshly cracked peppercorns, crushed
4 ounces sweet butter
1 ounce Cognac
4 ounces beef stock
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
French fries, for serving
1 tablespoon chives, finely chopped (for garnish)

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 425° Fahrenheit. Dabble a minute amount of olive oil on each side, then dredge each steak through the crush peppercorns. Heat the remaining oil in a large oven-proof skillet over high heat. Once hot, add half the butter, then sear the steaks in the skillet on both sides, approximately 5 minutes per side but adjusting the heat so the steaks don't burn.




2. Place the skillet in the oven until desired doneness is achieved: approximately 5 to 7 minutes for rare, 10 minutes for medium-rare, etc. Once complete, remove the steaks from the pan and set aside to allow for carryover cooking while the pan sauce is prepared.


3. For the sauce, deglaze the hot pan off heat with the cognac, loosening the fond with a wooden spoon. Return to the stovetop burner and reduce the cognac by half. Reduce the heat to medium and stir in the beef stock. Simmer until the sauce is thick enough to coat the back of a spoon. Stir in the remaining butter, then season with salt and pepper. Spoon the sauce over the steak, serve with French fries and garnish with chives.


Successful?

Obviously not.

Part of the issue I have with this version is Chef Bourdain's units of measure of his ingredients because they are rather ambiguous. 2 ounces olive oil? Would that be 1/4 cup (i.e. fluid ounces)? I especially have this problem with the butter. 4 ounces is 1 stick. After I completed the dish, I did a little research and found an entry by Emma of the kitchn on possible causes a sauce breaks in addition to methods to fix a broken sauce. In this particular case, I believe the addition of butter caused it to separate because I prepared the dish again using ribeye steaks about a week later (picture below) but added small amounts of butter (1 teaspoon at a time; 1 1/3 tablespoons total) and it still separated. I advise to omit it all together.



Friday, February 24, 2012

Coq au Vin

Coq au Vin


For this dish I remain in Europe, but go west to France. With Mardi Gras having just past (and New Orleans cuisine heavily influenced by the French), I wanted to get in the spirit by cooking this dish. It's also a dish that has been on the To Cook list for a while now.

The Challenge

Using some advanced techniques in a braised chicken dish such as building flavor with a mirepoix, and using a roux to make a slurry.

The Source

I chose to replicate Marc Matsumoto's dish off of his site, No Recipes, partially because he created this dish from leftovers. I'm not good enough yet to be able to do this but I have taken steps towards this goal.

The only omission I made from the original was cipollini onions simply because the supermarket was out of stock when I went shopping for ingredients.

Ingredients

1/3 pound extra thick cut bacon cut into batons
8 skin-on bone-in chicken thighs
1 large onion, chopped
1 stalk celery, chopped
4 cloves garlic sliced thin
1 splash Cognac or Armanac
2 cups red wine
2 cups chicken stock
1 or 2 bay leaves
6 sprigs thyme
3 tablespoons tomato paste
2 tablespoons flour
8 ounces button mushrooms, quartered
8 ounces cipollini onions, peeled
1/3 cup flat leaf parsley, roughly chopped

Method

1. In a large chef’s pan or dutch oven, fry the bacon over medium heat until most of the fat has rendered out (but not until the bacon is crisp). Remove the bacon with a slotted spoon to a paper towel lined plate to drain. Generously salt and pepper the chicken thighs and place in the hot pan, skin side down. Leave undisturbed for 6-7 minutes or until skin is golden brown, then flip allowing to brown lightly on the second side. Transfer to plate.

Chicken Sauté

2. Remove 2 Tbs of fat from the pan and set aside in a small bowl. Add the onion, celery and garlic and saute until soft, scrapping the fond off the bottom of the pan so it doesn’t burn. Hit the pan with a generous splash of Cognac to deglaze the pan. Allow most of the liquid to evaporate, then add the red wine, chicken stock, bay leaf, thyme, and tomato paste. Return the bacon and chicken to the pan and turn several times to make sure they are well coated and submerged in the liquid. Cover with the lid slightly askew (so steam can escape) and simmer over medium low heat until the chicken is tender 35 to 45 minutes.

Reserved Fat
Deglazed mirepoix
Chicken and Bacon Added Back to the Braising Fluid

3. Add 2 Tbs flour to the fat you’ve reserved and stir until there are no lumps. When the chicken is tender, transfer to a plate and tent with foil. Add the mushrooms and onions to the pan and turn up the heat to medium, simmering uncovered for about 15 minutes or until the onions are cooked and the sauce has reduced a bit. Add a few tablespoons of sauce to the fat/flour mixture and stir to make a slurry. Add the slurry to the sauce in the pan one spoonful at a time, mixing well after each addition to make sure there are no lumps. I don’t like my sauce too thick, so I stopped about 2/3 of the way through, but if you like a very thick sauce, you can add all the roux. Salt and pepper to taste, then return the chicken to to pot to reheat and coat with the sauce. Serve over mashed potatoes, egg noodles, or as a stew with a crusty baguette. Garnish with the parsley.

Flour Added...
...to Form a Roux
Braising Fluid Added to the Roux to Form a Slurry
Mushrooms Added to Finish the Sauce

Successful?

Yes, the slurry made the sauce rich with depth of flavor that is difficult to describe.