Category Archives: Beef

Rosh Hashana Dinner- Beef Brisket, Latkes with Apples & Honey

Please enjoy this Rosh Hashana blog from last year. One of my favorite recipes. I make for clients regularly. If you want to tone down the spice, use a bit less chili powder.

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For some reason, people regularly assume that I am Jewish. It’s also often assumed that I am a New Yorker. The truth is I am neither. Born and raised in San Jose, California by two protestant parents. (Although I am a quarter German.)

Still, I find that our culinary history is rooted in cultural traditions. All great food owes it’s creation to the chef’s cultural influences.  For that reason, I try to make food from as many different cultural backgrounds as possible.

So, with today being Rosh Hashana, the  first day of the Jewish new year and the beginning of the high holidays, I wanted to take the opportunity to visit what I feel is one of the most overlooked influences on modern cuisine: Kosher cooking.

As an outsider looking in, I wasn’t exactly sure where to begin. I mean, I knew of certain stereotypical Kosher meals like Matzoh Ball soup, Bagels and Lox, and Challah Bread, but I had no idea what traditions there might be for Rosh Hashana. So I turned to my friends. I asked all of my Jewish friends what their families ate for Rosh Hashana. I also did some of my own research.

What I found out was that, while apples and honey are the traditional food to eat for Rosh Hashana to symbolize having a sweet year, there was no official traditional dinner. Everyone I asked said virtually the same thing, “I don’t remember there being anything traditional except honey and apples… but my mom always made brisket.”

So, brisket it is. It is always one of the cheapest cuts of meat at the supermarket, so it is easy to make at five dollars per person any time of the year. The trouble is, that it is a cheap cut for a reason. It is a tough flavorless cut, that is most commonly brined to make corned beef.

While it is most traditional to boil the brisket on the stove, I decided to braise it in the oven in beef broth and beer to pump up the flavor and keep the roast nice and moist. I used He’Brew Messiah Bold Ale by Scmaltz Brewing Co. to keep the meal kosher, but any nut brown ale will do. Reducing the pan juices into a gravy after removing the brisket really made the meal amazing. When I cook this again I will serve noodles topped with the gravy.

To make this meal as traditional for Rosh Hashanah as possible, though, I made Latkes as a side dish. The crispy onion potato cakes paired amazingly with the apples and honey for a great sweet and savory flavor.

Braised Beef Brisket

Dry Rub:

2 Tablespoons chili powder (or 1 Tablespoon cayenne pepper)

2 Tablespoons salt

2 Tablespoons garlic powder

2 Tablespoons onion powder

1 tablespoon ground black pepper

1 Tablespoon sugar

2 bay leaves, crushed

Brisket and Gravy:

4 pound beef brisket, trimmed

approx. 1 cup beef stock

1 (12 oz.) dark brown beer

2 Tablespoons olive oil

2 Tablespoons butter

  1. Mix the ingredients for the dry rub, adjusting flavors to taste. Rub brisket at least 1 hour prior to cooking and up to the morning of cooking.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  3. Heat olive oil in a dutch oven. When heated brown the brisket on all sides. Once browned, roast the brisket, uncovered, for one hour.
  4. After the first hour, remove the dutch oven from the oven (be careful! Use hot pads. I can’t count how often I forget to do this and burn myself) and lower the temperature to 300 degrees.
  5. Add beer and beef stock to the bottom of the Dutch oven. There should be ½ inch of liquid in the bottom, so depending on your particular pot, you may need to increase or decrease the amount of beef stock.
  6. After allowing the oven to cool to 300 degrees (about 10 minutes) return the Dutch oven to the oven, covered, and braise for 3 more hours.
  7. After 3 hours, remove the Dutch oven. Remove the brisket and set aside on a plate covered by tin foil. Place the dutch oven on the stove over high heat and bring to a boil. (Again, use hot pads! The Dutch oven handles will remain hot as you reduce the sauce.)
  8. After the sauce has reduced by half. Add 2 Tablespoons chilled butter 1 Tablespoon at a time to help thicken the gravy.
  9. After letting the brisket sit for 15 minutes, slice against the grain (the grain is the direction all of those lines in the beef are running) and serve, passing the gravy.

Potato Latkes

1 pound gold potatoes (2 really large potatoes, or 3 to 4 smaller potatoes)

1/2 cup finely chopped onion

1 large egg

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup olive oil

thinly sliced apples and honey (optional)

  1. Coarsely grate the potatoes, transferring them to a large bowl of cold water as grated to keep them from browning. After all the potatoes are grated drain them well in a colander.
  2. Spread grated potatoes and onion on a paper towel and roll up. Twist towel tightly to wring out as much liquid as possible. Transfer potato mixture to a bowl and stir in egg and salt.
  3. Heat olive oil pan over medium high heat until hot and shimmering. Working in batches of 4 latkes, spoon  about 2 tablespoons potato mixture per latke into the pan, spreading into 3-inch rounds. Fry latkes until golden brown on each side, about 5 minutes.
  4. Serve with thinly sliced apples and honey for dipping.  These are best when a bite of apple, latke and honey are eaten all together.

Labor Day Steaks Without a Grill

So it’s Labor Day weekend and every store has their own sale on steak. 50% of Rib Eye, Buy one T-Bone get the second for free, New York strips for $1.99 per pound etc. etc.

And I have no grill anymore. Oh, sure, I’ve ordered one for my new place with money I got for my birthday, but I was waiting for the online Labor Day sales when they clear out their grills until next summer. So while I wait for my new, more modest sized, grill to arrive, these sales on steak are pure torture.

If your grill-less like me this season you’re wanting to take advantage of these great prices on steak, but you don’t know if you can really get these grills to taste decent on your stove or oven at home. Sure, you can broil the steaks, getting them cooked to the proper temperature, but with little flavor and a bland rubbery exterior. Or you can cook them on the stove top to get the perfect sear on the beef, but end up with a dry steak that is either over or under cooked.

I’m here to let you in a little trick I learned recently. Do a little of both. There is one caveat, however, you need an oven safe pan or skillet. You’ll need this because this technique requires you to leave the pan inside of the oven while it preheats. This will bring the temperature of the pan up to searing heats. After 15 minutes in the oven, take the pan out (please, please use hot pads. You are so used to grabbing pans with your bare hands that it becomes instinct. If you grab this pan with a bare hand at any time during cooking you will lose skin. I have done it. Put the hot pad on your hand and leave it there, please.) Slap a well oiled piece of meat (the steak) onto the hot pan and allow it to sear for 30 seconds on both sides. Then you stick it back in the hot hot oven for 2 more minutes per side and, voila, perfectly done steaks. Now, go outside, smell the neighbors’ grills, pretend they are your own, and enjoy your off-the-grill steak as much as they enjoy their on-the-grill ones.

Steaks Without the Grill

2 steaks of your preference, 3/4 to 1 1/2 inch thick

2 tablespoons olive oil

salt & pepper

2 teaspoons of your favorite fresh herb, such as rosemary, minced (or a Tablespoon of your favorite dry rub, such as Santa Maria tri-tip rub)

1. Preheat the oven to 500 degrees with an oven safe pan or skillet inside for 15 minutes. Prepare the steaks by rubbing them with salt pepper, and minced rosemary (or other herb or dry rub) on each side and coating them in olive oil.

2. After 15 minutes, remove the pan from the oven (leave the oven on) and put the frame on a medium heat. (Please see my earlier reminder to use hot pads.) Add the well oiled steak straight into the hot pan. Sear for 30 seconds per side.

3. Return the pan to the oven for 2 minutes.

4. After 2 minutes, flip, and cook another minute for rare, minute and a half for medium rare, and 2 minutes for medium. (If you want it more done than that, take your uncooked steak to someone who will appreciate it and go buy another cut of meat that survives being cooked well done. Pork, perhaps.)

5. Let the steak sit 2 minutes before serving, then enjoy.


Grilling Season – Maui Style Short Ribs & Broccoli Slaw

Every 2 years, Jodie’s relatives on the Hawaiian Islands throw a family reunion in Oahu. We can’t afford to go every year, but I’ve been fortunate enough to attend a couple of times now. It’s always been an amazingly fun experience.

As with most family reunions, food plays a central role. The week of events always kick off with a BBQ on the beach of Waikiki with family members all taking their turn on the grill. There are those strangely pink Hawaiian hot dogs, chicken, burgers, and, of course, teriyaki short ribs. (While the reunion takes place on Oahu, the most common name for these ribs are Maui Style Short Ribs. They are also sometimes referred to as Kalbi, the Korean version of the same dish.)

I’ve been wanting to recreate this traditional Hawaiian BBQ sensation here on the mainland on my own grill for a while now. Since summer has come and grilling season is in full swing, I decided to give it a try. I slightly altered my usual teriyaki sauce recipe to add more ginger and a good amount of sesame oil to give the marinade that island flavor. Then I marinated the short ribs for four hours in the fridge.

A quick side not here about short ribs: If you’re like me, you are completely confused by what a short rib is. I thought short ribs were those braised boneless tender pieces of beef that Wolfgang Puck has made so popular at all the posh Los Angeles dinner parties. How could that and these thinly sliced pieces of bone- in rib meat, be the same part of the cow?  The simple fact is that the short ribs of a cow can be butchered in several different ways. The meat Wofgang Puck uses is a long, thick section of meat cut between two ribs, while the Maui Style Ribs are cooked from a flanken cut, or a thin cut across the bone. It makes sense, really, as whenever you have a tougher portion of meat, there are only two good ways to cook it. You can either braise a thick portion of the meat, or you can slice it thinly and sear it.

So, while that side not was not as ‘quick’ as intended, hopefully this will help you in the grocery store when you are trying to ask for the appropriate ‘short ribs’ for your recipe.

After marinating the ribs, I thickened the marinade with a little cornstarch and brushed it onto the ribs as I seared them on a hot grill. While traditionally you would serve these ribs with rice and macaroni salad, I decided to opt for a few more vegetables with my side dish.

I used my Mom’s recipe for Broccoli Slaw as a side, complete with ramen and almonds in a rice wine vinaigrette.

Then Jodie and I sat down for a nice Hawaiian inspired picnic and reminisced about our adventures on the islands.

Maui Style Short Ribs

4 racks of flanken style short ribs

1 teaspoon of cornstarch

Teriyaki Sauce

approx. 1 cup Soy sauce

approx. 1/2 cup Sake

approx. 1 cup Brown Sugar

approx. 2 Tablespoons ginger juice from 1 ginger root (To make ginger juice, grate a ginger root and squeeze the juice from the grated ginger. This is particularly easy from ginger root that you have saved in your freezer. Just let it defrost for a few minutes and then squeeze. You probably don’t even need to grate it. You could also substitute plain grated ginger or ginger powder to taste)

2 Tablespoons sesame oil

  1. Mix the teriyaki ingredients. Adjust flavors to taste.
  2. Marinate the short ribs in the teriyaki sauce for at least 4 hours and up to overnight.
  3. Preheat the grill 15 minutes prior to cooking.
  4. Meanwhile thicken the marinade into a sauce. Set aside the short ribs and the bring the sauce to a boil in a saucepan. Dissolve the cornstarch in a small amount of water and add it to the boiling sauce. Let it thicken for 5 minutes until syrupy.
  5. Sear the ribs over a hot grill for 1 to 2 minutes per side, brushing with thicken sauce. Remove from the grill and serve immediately with rice.

Broccoli Slaw

1 package of broccoli slaw from your local grocer (about 12 ounces)

1 package of ramen noodles, broken into large chunks

¼ cup of sliced almonds (pine nuts also work, but are often too pricey)

4 green onion, chopped on a bias (diagonally)

Rice Wine Vinaigrette

1/4  cup rice wine vinegar (seasoned rice wine vinegar works best)

1/2 cup sugar

1/4 cup olive oil

1 Tablespoon soy sauce (I prefer reduced sodium)

1 Tablespoon sesame oil

  1. Toast the almonds (or pine nuts) and ramen in a dry skillet until lightly golden brown.
  2. Whisk vinaigrette ingredients together in a bowl.
  3. Combine slaw, green onions, ramen, and nuts in a large bowl. Toss with dressing. Mix well and serve.

Memorial Day Recipes with Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub

Not quite a year ago, a friend of ours, Gary Karp, called us up to ask a favor. He had developed a spice rub that he wanted to start selling and he needed some marketing photos. The spice rub is called Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub.

We met and brainstormed ideas together for creative ways to use the rub. Then, after a day of shopping and applying rub, Jodie, Gary, and I met up for a long day’s photo shoot that culminated in a party with many friends to promote the rub and eat all of the food we’d been cooking all day.

The Johnny Tush website just recently went live and they are having their Grand Opening Sale as we speak. The Magical Wonder Rub is currently 20% off the regular price!

With Memorial Day right around the corner, I thought I’d share some of these grilling ideas with you.

(Next week, I’ll share other creative ways to use your favorite spice rub!)

Use the rub to grill up burgers, wings, shrimp & cheesy grits, or even rub it on your corn on the cob!

All American Burger

½ pound ground beef per burger (80% lean makes the best tasting burger)

1 Tablespoon of your favorite grilling spice rub per burger (I obviously recommend Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub)

1 bun per burger

burger fixings, such as sliced tomato, lettuce, onion, ketchup, mustard and whatever else you want on your burger

  1. Preheat the grill 15 minutes in advance. Brush the grates with olive oil, using the tongs and a paper towel.
  2. Form burger patties by rolling 1/2 pound of ground beef into a ball in your hands. It is important to “knead” the meat. (Meaning continue to roll, smack, and toss the meat after it has been rolled into a ball.) You want to make sure that the patties don’t form cracks in their sides as you flatten the balls of meat. After “kneading” the meat “dough,” flatten the ground beef into patties. Press the center of the patties lower than the outsidecreating a convex burger.  This way as the center of the burger expands, you will have a uniform burger.
  3. Season generously with spice rub.
  4. Grill the burgers 3 to 4 minutes per side or until desired internal temperature. (At least 145 degrees.) Top with cheese during the last minute, if desired.
  5. Serve the burgers on a bun topped with yourfavorite burger fixings.

Spice Rubbed Shrimp over Cheesy Grits

½ pound raw shrimp

4 to 6 skewers (if using wood, soak for 10 minutes to prevent burning)

1 Tablespoon of your favorite grilling spice rub (Again, I recommend Johnny Tush’s Magical Wonder Rub)

1 cup quick grits (can also use cornmeal)

4 cups chicken broth

1 cup shredded sharp cheddar

  1. Preheat the grill. Brush the grates with olive oil, using the tongs and a paper towel.
  2. Season the shrimp generously with spice rub. Skewer the shrimp.
  3. Meanwhile, make the cheesy grits. Bring chicken broth to a boil. Once boiling, add grits while whisking heavily.
  4. Cover, reduce heat to low and cook for 5 minutes. Add cheese and stir well. Remove from heat and keep covered until ready to serve
  5. Grill the shrimp 2 to 3 minutes per side until the shrimp has turned pink. Serve on the cheesy grits.

Grilled Wings

1 pound raw chicken wings

¼ cup of your favorite grilling spice rub per burger (Do I really need to say which rub I recommend?)

  1. Season the wings generously with spice rub. Store the rubbed wings overnight or up to 24 hours.
  2. Preheat the grill. Brush the grates with olive oil, using the tongs and a paper towel.
  3. Grill the wings 10 to 15 minutes per side or until cooked to a temperature of 160 degrees.
  4. Remove from heat and serve with bleu cheese.

Ma’s Meat Sauce – Spaghetti and Meatballs (or Braciole)

When you think of food and movies, your first thought is probably of Julie & Julia or Ratatouille. Or perhaps Eat, Drink, Man, Woman if you watch more foreign films.

Well, there is another genre of movie that uses features food very regularly: Mafia movies. No, really. I mean, why else did Coppola eventually open a winery?

Seriously, though, in The Godfather, Pacino is given a lesson in making meat sauce, not to mention that Brando is shot while shopping at a fruit stand. There is even a famous quote, “leave the gun, take the cannoli.” Goodfellas features food throughout the movie, including the special deliveries they were given in jail to make feasts that remind them of home. A movie in 2000, Dinner Rush, even recognized this regular food and restaurant theme to all mafia movies and took it to the next level by setting their entire movie in one “family” owned restaurant.

While I always have loved to cook, watching these gangsters not only cook but take pride in their cooking skills really made me realize how manly cooking can be. (Not that is has to be manly.) In fact, a real man should be able to cook. Nothing will impress a women more than a delicious home-cooked meal.

Meat sauce was actually one of the first things I learned how to cook. My mother would make a huge pot of it every other month and store whatever we didn’t eat in the freezer for the rest of the two months. We never ate store bought jarred sauce. It’s a tradition I continue to this day.

Making it such large quantities is important for 3 reasons:

1)   It is very work intensive the first time, but after that you’ll have easy delicious meals easily re-warmed in the microwave.

2)   It’s cost effective. The meal isn’t expensive in the first place, and you can easily feed your family at least 8 good dinners from it. All you need to do is boil some pasta. (Although it is also good to make lasagna with.)

3)   It tastes even better after it has sat in the freezer for a while and all the flavors have time to sit together.

The first day you make the meat sauce I recommend making Braciole, which is flank steak stuffed with bread and cheese and simmered all day in red sauce. It makes the sauce taste better and you get a delicious roll of meat you can slice for everyone at the table to go with their Spaghetti.

Later, when you defrost the sauce for a dinner, make some meatballs. Meatballs are best cooked in a ladle or two of read sauce.

Ma’s Meat Sauce with Braciole

Braciole

1 flank steak, any size

½ cup breadcrumbs

¼ cup parmesan, romano, or asiago cheese, grated

Italian herbs, fresh or dried (basil, rosemary, oregano and/or thyme)

olive oil)

Meat Sauce

1 green bell pepper, chopped

4 large celery stalks, chopped

3 very large onions, chopped

5 garlic cloves, chopped

12 large mushrooms, chopped

2 pounds ground beef

4 29 ounce cans tomato sauce or tomato puree (I prefer 2 cans of each)

1 6 ounce can tomato paste

½ bottle red wine

salt and pepper to taste

celery salt

2 bay leaves

fresh or dried herbs to taste (the more tomato sauce used, the less needed. The more tomato puree used, the more needed): parsley, rosemary, basil, and oregano 

  1. Season both sides of the flank steak with salt and pepper. Lay the flank steak flat and spread one side with parmesan. Layer the breadcrumbs mixed with Italian herbs on top of cheese leaving a quarter inch at each side of the meat. Top breadcrumbs with another layer of parmesan cheese.
  2. Roll the flank steak lengthwise and secure with metal meat skewers.
  3. In a large dutch oven, brown rolled flank steak on each side in olive oil. Remove and set aside.
  4. Saute onion, celery, and bell pepper with salt until softened and slightly browned.
  5. Add mushrooms and garlic and cook until garlic is fragrant, about 30 seconds.
  6. Add ground beef and brown.
  7. Add wine. Bring to a simmer and cook until reduced by half or absorbed by the beef and vegetables.
  8. Add tomato paste, herbs, and bay leaves. Cook for 30 seconds.
  9. Nestle browned Braciole back into the dutch oven.
  10. Add tomato sauce and tomato puree. Mix well, taste, and add dried herbs, celery salt, salt and pepper to taste. Bring to a simmer, reduce heat to low, and cover. Cook at least 2 hours, stirring and tasting occasionally. Continue to add dried herbs to taste.
  11. Remove the braciole and slice. Serve meat sauce on top of desired cooked pasta with a slice of braciole on the side. Top with parmesan.

Freeze remaining sauce.

Meatballs

½ pound ground beef

½ pound ground pork

2 stale loaves of bread

1 egg

1 Tablespoon milk

2 garlic cloves, minced or pressed

1 teaspoon basil (or other Italian seasonings)

1 Tablespoon olive oil

2 cups Ma’s Meat Sauce

  1. In the bottom of a large bowl combine the bread milk and egg. Using your hands combine the ingredients to form a paste. This is the binding glue for your meatballs and should not be to wet.
  2. Add the beef, pork, garlic, and basil to the bread mixture. Mix well. Using both hands form the meat “dough” into balls 1 ½” in diameter.
  3. Heat the olive oil in a large skillet or pan over medium high heat.
  4. Brown the meatballs on all sides, moving them carefully so they do not stick to the bottom of the pan.
  5. After the meatballs have browned, but not cooked through add one or two ladles of meat sauce (about 2 cups) and finish cooking the meatballs through. About 10 minutes.
  6. Serve meatballs and sauce over pasta. You can pass extra sauce if needed. Top with Parmesan.

Rosh Hashana Dinner- Beef Brisket, Latkes with Apples & Honey

For some reason, people regularly assume that I am Jewish. It’s also often assumed that I am a New Yorker. The truth is I am neither. Born and raised in San Jose, California by two protestant parents. (Although I am a quarter German.)

Still, I find that our culinary history is rooted in cultural traditions. All great food owes it’s creation to the chef’s cultural influences.  For that reason, I try to make food from as many different cultural backgrounds as possible.

So, with today being Rosh Hashana, the  first day of the Jewish new year and the beginning of the high holidays, I wanted to take the opportunity to visit what I feel is one of the most overlooked influences on modern cuisine: Kosher cooking.

As an outsider looking in, I wasn’t exactly sure where to begin. I mean, I knew of certain stereotypical Kosher meals like Matzoh Ball soup, Bagels and Lox, and Challah Bread, but I had no idea what traditions there might be for Rosh Hashana. So I turned to my friends. I asked all of my Jewish friends what their families ate for Rosh Hashana. I also did some of my own research.

What I found out was that, while apples and honey are the traditional food to eat for Rosh Hashana to symbolize having a sweet year, there was no official traditional dinner. Everyone I asked said virtually the same thing, “I don’t remember there being anything traditional except honey and apples… but my mom always made brisket.”

So, brisket it is. It is always one of the cheapest cuts of meat at the supermarket, so it is easy to make at five dollars per person any time of the year. The trouble is, that it is a cheap cut for a reason. It is a tough flavorless cut, that is most commonly brined to make corned beef.

While it is most traditional to boil the brisket on the stove, I decided to braise it in the oven in beef broth and beer to pump up the flavor and keep the roast nice and moist. I used He’Brew Messiah Bold Ale by Scmaltz Brewing Co. to keep the meal kosher, but any nut brown ale will do. Reducing the pan juices into a gravy after removing the brisket really made the meal amazing. When I cook this again I will serve noodles topped with the gravy.

To make this meal as traditional for Rosh Hashanah as possible, though, I made Latkes as a side dish. The crispy onion potato cakes paired amazingly with the apples and honey for a great sweet and savory flavor.

Braised Beef Brisket

Dry Rub:

2 Tablespoons chili powder (or 1 Tablespoon cayenne pepper)

2 Tablespoons salt

2 Tablespoons garlic powder

2 Tablespoons onion powder

1 tablespoon ground black pepper

1 Tablespoon sugar

2 bay leaves, crushed

Brisket and Gravy:

4 pound beef brisket, trimmed

approx. 1 cup beef stock

1 (12 oz.) dark brown beer

2 Tablespoons olive oil

2 Tablespoons butter

  1. Mix the ingredients for the dry rub, adjusting flavors to taste. Rub brisket at least 1 hour prior to cooking and up to the morning of cooking.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  3. Heat olive oil in a dutch oven. When heated brown the brisket on all sides. Once browned, roast the brisket, uncovered, for one hour.
  4. After the first hour, remove the dutch oven from the oven (be careful! Use hot pads. I can’t count how often I forget to do this and burn myself) and lower the temperature to 300 degrees.
  5. Add beer and beef stock to the bottom of the Dutch oven. There should be ½ inch of liquid in the bottom, so depending on your particular pot, you may need to increase or decrease the amount of beef stock.
  6. After allowing the oven to cool to 300 degrees (about 10 minutes) return the Dutch oven to the oven, covered, and braise for 3 more hours.
  7. After 3 hours, remove the Dutch oven. Remove the brisket and set aside on a plate covered by tin foil. Place the dutch oven on the stove over high heat and bring to a boil. (Again, use hot pads! The Dutch oven handles will remain hot as you reduce the sauce.)
  8. After the sauce has reduced by half. Add 2 Tablespoons chilled butter 1 Tablespoon at a time to help thicken the gravy.
  9. After letting the brisket sit for 15 minutes, slice against the grain (the grain is the direction all of those lines in the beef are running) and serve, passing the gravy.

Potato Latkes

1 pound gold potatoes (2 really large potatoes, or 3 to 4 smaller potatoes)

1/2 cup finely chopped onion

1 large egg

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup olive oil

thinly sliced apples and honey (optional)

  1. Coarsely grate the potatoes, transferring them to a large bowl of cold water as grated to keep them from browning. After all the potatoes are grated drain them well in a colander.
  2. Spread grated potatoes and onion on a paper towel and roll up. Twist towel tightly to wring out as much liquid as possible. Transfer potato mixture to a bowl and stir in egg and salt.
  3. Heat olive oil pan over medium high heat until hot and shimmering. Working in batches of 4 latkes, spoon  about 2 tablespoons potato mixture per latke into the pan, spreading into 3-inch rounds. Fry latkes until golden brown on each side, about 5 minutes.
  4. Serve with thinly sliced apples and honey for dipping.  These are best when a bite of apple, latke and honey are eaten all together.

What to Grill on Labor Day: Ribs, Burgers and more.

Labor Day is the unofficial end of summer, September begins and kids go back to school. Because of the great weather and the three day weekend, it is also a day to relax with friends and family and firing up the barbecue. But there are so many things that are great on the grill from Carne Asada to Bratwurst.

My advice: look at your local stores Weekly Ads and find something on sale that looks good.  Weekly Ads no longer have to be those annoying paper clippings that come in the mail that you ignore. Look up your local stores online. Ralph’s, Safeway, Albertsons, Fresh and Easy, and your local market have Weekly Ads on their websites. Simply go their site, click Weekly Ads and type in your zipcode to view your local supermarket’s holiday specials. Every year for Labor Day there will be tons of sales for things to grill over labor day weekend.

This year, a sale on beef ribs on sake at my local Vons appealed to me. Not Beef shortribs wich you can braise or grill Hawaiian style, but good ‘ol huge, long, beef ribs, often called “dinosaur bones.”  I say huge, because they look huge, but in fact there is not a ton of meat on each bone, so a half of a rack still feeds one person.

I decided to grill up some “dinosaur bones” for my brother and his family this year. I found 2 giant slabs for $8.46!  When I added sides of cornbread and salad it still only comes to $4.00 per person including a 6 pack of beer brewed by Craft brewery North Coast Brewing Company for Trader Joe’s at $5.99. (It’s called Black Hart, and is a hoppy stout that pairs deliciously with beef ribs. You can also serve a spicy Zinfandel, if you’re not a beer drinker.)

We had a great time.

However, over the past four months that I have been writing this blog, it has been summer in Los Angeles, and I have posted a lot of grilling recipes. Below is my recipe for Beef Ribs as well as some of my other favorites from this summer:

Beef Long Ribs

2 racks of long beef ribs

¼ cup of your favorite BBQ spice rub (I used Johnny Tush’s spice rub, as I had a ton lying around, but more on that later. You can also use my usual BBQ dry rub, found here.)

1 bottle of your favorite BBQ sauce

Olive Oil

  1. Using kitchen shears, cut the ribs into ½ racks. Rub theribs with dry rub and a little olive oil. Let stand for one hour.
  2. Preheat the oven to 250 degrees if possible. (Some ovens start at 300 degrees, which is fine as well.)
  3. Place the ribs in a roasting pan and cover tightly with foil. Roast for three to four hours. (For 2 racks, 2 roasting pans will likely be needed.)
  4. Preheat the grill. Remove the ribs from the oven and place on the grill starting with the meaty side down. Brush with BBQ sauce. Cook for ten minutes on low heat, flip, brush with more BBQ sauce, and cook for ten more minutes. This is mostly to get the ribs that cooked-on-the-fire taste.  Alternatively, you could preheat the broiler and finish the ribs off similarly that way.

 Serve with your favorite packaged corn bread (I like Trader Joe’s Cornbread) or cornbread recipe. Throw in a Tablespoon of your dry rub to give it a Labor Day BBQ flavor.

Grilled Pork Chops

Teriyaki Burgers

Steaks 

Whole Salmon

Hawaiian Spaereribs

Cedar Plank Trout

Brats

Lamb Burgers

Tri-Tip

Alright, NOW you are ready to go to the store. I am sure you can find what you need for ONE of the recipes cheaply.


Teriyaki Burger

I like burgers. Especially offbeat burgers.

And, clearly, I am not the only one. Everyone in America is in search for the perfect burger. There are a ton of restaurant chains out there trying specializing in the burger: The Counter, The Habit, Inn N Out, Umami Burger, Tommy’s Burger, Fat Burger, Five Guys, Father’s Office, Fuddruckers, and so many more. I am sure I’m missing quite a few. I don’t live on the East Coast and I am sure I am missing their best burger chains.

There has even been an entire episode of How I Met Your Mother dedicated to re-discovering that restaurant where you had the perfect burger.

Well, I have something revolutionary to say. You’re not going to like it. It may cause wide-spread national panic.

There is no perfect hamburger.

There, I said it. I’m sorry, but it’s true. There is no more perfect burger than there is the perfect chicken dish, pasta dish, or steak. Nobody would go around claiming there is a perfect pasta, and they would never eat any other pasta. No, we want variety. We want ravioli or fettucine; we want red sauce, pesto sauce, or alfredo sauce. It’s just one type of dish. So is the burger. It’s one type of dish. There are a ton of different ways to manipulate bread and ground meat into a delicious sandwich. Why would you limit yourself to just one?

There are burgers with carmelized onions so soft, it tastes like BBQ sauce.

There are burgers topped with onion rings, or guacamole, or mushrooms, bacon or even a fried egg.

There are burgers on buns, French bread, rye bread, or even a lettuce wrap.

There are lamb burgers , pork burgers, beef burgers, or turkey burgers.

And the cheese. You can have, cheddar, muenster, swiss, bleu, provolone, goat, feta, brie, or any other type of cheese.

With all these possibilities, why would you ever, EVER, limit yourself to one burger? It’s craziness I tell you.

And in that vein, I will continually bring you many different burgers as I write my blog, because burgers are basically a 5ive Dollar Feast on a bun.

Today I bring you another one of my favorite burgers. The teriyaki burger. Grilled ground beef topped with a thick teriyaki sauce, grilled pineapple, on a Hawaiian sweet bread bun. It’s offbeat, it’s delicious, it’s different. It’s not perfect. There may be other burgers out there as good, but none better.

I continued my off-beat menu design with something equally crazy. I had some leftover kale, but had just made my usual kale recipe. So I decided to make kale chips. Oven baked kale pieces drizzled with olive oil and salt. They are every bit as good as a side of fries, but a billion times healthier.

 Teriyaki Burger

½ pound 80% lean ground beef per person. (If you are not cutting the beef with a fattier meat, like pork, 80% lean is important, or you will have a very bland burger)

Robinson Teriyaki sauce (below)

1 Tbsp. cornstarch

1 bun per person (I prefer Hawaiian sweet bread buns)

2 canned pineapples per person

lettuce

  1. Form burger patties by rolling 1/2 pound of ground beef into a ball in your hands. It is important to “knead” the meat. (Meaning continue to roll, smack, and toss the meat after it has been rolled into a ball.) You want to make sure that the patties don’t form cracks in their sides as you flatten the balls of meat. After “kneading” the meat “dough,” flatten the ground beef into patties. Press the center of the patties lower than the outside creating a convex burger.  This way as the center of the burger expands, you will have a uniform burger. Season with salt and pepper on both sides of the patties.
  2. Preheat grill. Brush the grates with olive oil, using the tongs and a paper towel.
  3. Mix together a batch of Robinson’s Teriyaki Sauce (below) in a saucepan. Bring to a simmer over medium heat. Dissolve cornstarch in water and add to the sauce to thicken. (This is best done concurrently with cooking the burgers, if you have a burner on the side of your grill.
  4. Grill the burgers 3 to 4 minutes per side or until desired internal temperature. (At least 145 degrees.) Also grill canned pineapple slices. Top with cheese during the last minute, if desired.
  5. Serve the burgers on a hawaiian sweet bun topped with grilled pineapples, extra teriyaki sauce and lettuce. Enjoy.

Robinson Teriyaki Sauce

There are a ton of uses for this sauce, so this is the recipe for the unthickened sauce to be used as a marinade. For the Teriyaki burger, you will be thickening this sauce with cornstarch

approx. 1 cup Soy sauce

approx. 1/2 cup Sake

approx. 1 cup Brown Sugar

Ground ginger

approx. 1/4 cup Pineapple juice (from canned pineapple in juice)

  1. Combine all ingredients in and mix well.
  2. Taste and adjust flavors to taste.
To be honest, I never measure this recipe, so mix the ingredients to your taste.

Kale Chips

Kale

Olive oil

Sea salt or other specialty salt like umami salt

  1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.
  2. On a cookie sheet, place ripped kale pieces on wax paper.
  3. Season the kale with salt (preferably a smoked sea salt, or your other favorite specialty sea salt.) Drizzle with olive oil.
  4. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes or until crisp. Let cool briefly, and serve.

Restaurant Style Steakhouse Dinner at Home

Steak Dinner for just $5.11 per person!

Going out to a chop house is expensive. A steak at a chain restaurant will run you twenty to thirty dollars. If you go to a top of the line steak house, like Ruth’s Chris, you’ll pay at least fifty dollars for the steak alone.

What if I were to tell you, you can make exactly what they make in a steak house but at home for under five dollars a head?

It’s actually not that hard, nor does it take that much time. As long as you pay close attention while you cook, you too can have a perfect steak at home.

First, you can’t do this if you go out to buy steak no matter the price. Steaks at their normal price are far out of the 5ive Dollar Feast price range.  However, if you keep an eye on your weekly ads (I like to check them online by going to each store’s website) and you swing by the meat aisle whenever your in the store, you will eventually come across a nice big beef sale.

Although, where I most often find steaks to cook on the cheap is in the clearance section of a grocery store’s meat department. Do you know where your store’s clearance sections are? Most stores have them. If you don’t know where they are find them. Most stores have a small area in the meat department set aside for beef, chicken and pork that have reached there sell by date, often marked down to 50% off. (There is nothing wrong with this meat, I promise. Just make sure that you use or freeze it the same day. Taking advantage of your stores clearance section requires some meal flexibility.) Sometimes stores just leave the marked down meat in the regular section, be on the lookout for that as well.  Also, don’t forget the dry goods clearance area, which is often a few shelves near the bathroom, or even just a cart left in a nook. This section can often be a jumble of things you don’t need, but sometimes you find a diamond in the rough.

After you have found your amazingly marked down steaks, you need to round out the meal. Now, I have served steak with many sides, French fries, mashed potatoes, or even pasta for a Tuscan T-bone, but what truly gives a steak dinner that steak house feel? Yup. You guessed it. A baked potato. Specifically a baked potato rubbed in sea salt and topped with butter, sour cream, and chives….heaven.

So, I grabbed some of the largest golden potatoes I could find (I’m not a fan of russet potatoes) and some kale on sale for my veggie.  While I was in the produce department, I found some mushrooms on clearance as well, so I decided to grab them to sauté up to top my steak with.

So what I specifically made that night was a Bone-In New York Steak topped with Vermouth Sautéed Mushrooms served with a Salt Scrubbed Baked Potato and Garlicky Kale. (I have already posted the recipe for garlicky kale, you can also find my bacon kale recipe here.)

With a little practice, you’ll be able to make Steak Dinners at home rival anything you can eat out. Hopefully, soon enough, you’ll be like Jodie and I and when it comes time to splurge on a bite out, those overpriced chain steakhouses won’t even come up, because, well, you have that at home all the time for a fraction of the price.  (That’s why we always seem to splurge on sushi. Still learning how to make that at home.)

Grilled Bone-In New York Steak with Vermouth Mushrooms(Also works for bone-in ribeye, porterhouse, or t-bone steaks.)

4 Bone-In Steaks

Salt & Pepper

Olive Oil

12 (or so) mushrooms, sliced thickly

1 shallot (or 3 cloves garlic,) minced

1 Tbsp fresh thyme (or other available fresh herb)

¼ cup vermouth (or sherry, sake, marsala wine, or amantillado, whatever cooking wine you have around.)

3 Tbsp. butter

  1. Season steaks with salt and pepper on both sides. Rub the seasoning in with olive oil and let sit at room temperature for a half hour.
  2. Preheat the grill at least 15 minutes before cooking.
  3. Add the steaks to the grill at a 45 degree angle. After 3 minutes (for 1 inch thick steak, for thicker steaks add 1 minute or two) turn the steak to the other 45 degree angle for the proper grill marks. Flip the steaks and repeat. Push on the steak to test for doneness. Steak doneness is easily determined by this trick.
  4. While the steaks, cook, sauté shallot (or garlic) in 1 Tbsp butter for 2 to 3 minutes over medium heat. Add the mushrooms and thyme. Cook until the mushrooms have absorbed the butter and have a slight sheen. Add the vermouth (or other cooking wine) and turn heat to high. Let the vermouth reduce for 5 minutes. Remove from flame and stir in 2 remaining Tbsps butter, chilled,1 Tbsp at a time. The chilled butter helps thicken the sauce.
  5. Let the steaks sit 5 minutes before serving, topped with mushrooms.

Tip: Steaks are also delicious simply rubbed with my Santa Maria Style Dry Rub.  Simply, substitute the rub for the salt and pepper in the recipe above, and omit the mushrooms.

30 Minute Salt Scrubbed Baked Potatoes

4 large Golden Potatoes (the largest you can find. I like the size of russet potatoes, but personally think that Gold and Red potatoes make a more airy, creamy potato)

¼ cup large crystal sea salt (or rock salt)

your favorite toppings (butter, sour cream, chives, bacon, etc.)

olive oil

  1. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees.
  2. Coat the potatoes in olive oil and then roll in salt.
  3. Prick the potato tops with a fork. This is important as you will be microwaving the potatoes and they will burst if they cannot release steam. Microwave, covered for 10 minutes.
  4. Transfer the potatoes to the hot oven and continue to roast for 15 to 20 minutes
  5. Cut an opening in the potatoes immediately to release the steam and not overcook the potatoes. Top with your favorite toppings.

Accounting: 4 steaks $12.91 + mushrooms $.99 + Shallot $.33 + fresh thyme $1.99 + golden potatoes $1.98 + sea salt $.25 + kale $1.99 = $20.44

Comes to $5.11 per person!


The Original Five Dollar Feast

As some readers may already be aware, Five Dollar Feasts was originally envisioned as a cooking show. To that end, Jodie and I produced two pilot episodes. However, while I am still proud of those episodes, we’ve decided that we need to take all the lessons we’ve learned over the last two years and re-shoot the show.  Make it better, cheaper, stronger, faster.

However, I would be remiss in not sharing with you the first meal we created.

How does Santa Maria Style Tri-Tip topped with Roasted Tomato Salsa, Garlic and Herb Roasted Potatoes, Grilled Artichokes with a Garlic Aioli, and a bottle of Shiraz sound?  For under five dollars per person?

No, it’s not impossible. I was able to serve five adults (and a two year old, whom we did not count as a head) for under $25. It can be done.

The trick is finding great deals at your grocery store and taking advantage of them.  The perfect storm of all these ingredients on sale may not happen to you or me ever again, but I hope as you read my blog, you’ll start to think like a frugal chef.  Never again do I want you to pass up a Tri-Tip roast marked down 50% because you don’t think you know how to make it.  Buy it, and if you don’t know what to do with the sale ingredient, comment on my blog, ask me on Facebook, or send me a tweet (@5iveDollarFeast,) and I am sure I, or another reader, can give you ideas.

We were in Santa Maria on a Saturday in the late spring / early summer. If you’ve ever been to Santa Maria you know that means one thing: Tri-Tip. It’s where the cut of meat was first used as a whole roast on the grill. (Before a Santa Maria chef, tried this, Tri-tip was used in cubes or pieces.) Tri-Tip is now popular country-wide and goes on sale in the stores in the late spring as the weather gets warm.  Depending on where you live, what can cost $20 can be marked down to $10 and sometimes even less around this time of the year. It is much cheaper to buy an untrimmed Tri-Tip, but if you do, besure to take you kitchen shears to the fat side of the roast, and trim off as much as you can.

Although, it is popular to smother Tri-Tip in BBQ sauce and squeeze it into a hoagie (not to knock the BBQ Tri-Tip sandwich, it is delicious as well,) the original Santa Maria tradition is to apply a dry rub, and top it with salsa.  I was also able to find artichokes on sale (not surprising as Santa Maria is also home to many artichoke fields.) I also threw these on the grill and made up a quick garlic aioli.  I served the meal with a side of my favorite Garlic and Herb Roasted Potatoes. I even had enough room in the budget to include a bottle of  AU Shiraz I found at Grocery Outlet. They sell many high quality wines at clearance prices by buying overstock. The deal on the Tri-Tip was found at Spencer’s Fresh Markets in Santa Maria.

Tri-Tip

1 two to four pound Tri-Tip Roast, trimmed

¼ cup of Santa Maria Seasoning for the dry rub (You may also make your own rub: salt, pepper, garlic powder, onion powder, dried parsley, and optional dried rosemary in equal parts)

¼ cup olive oil

  1. Apply Dry Rub to Tri-Tip Roast. Using hands, pour olive oil onto tri-tip and rub in the dry rub. Let the Tri-Tip marinate for 1 to 4 hours.  (If you marinate over 2 hours, refrigerate the Tri-Tip, but be sure to remove it 30 minutes prior to cooking to allow it to come to room temperature.)
  2. Preheat the grill to medium heat. (If using a charcoal grill, place coals on one side. If using a gas grill, either only light one side, or, ideally, with a 4 burner grill, light all four burners, leaving the two middle burners on low.)
  3. Place the Tri-Tip, fat side up, over direct heat (the 2 middle burners set on low on a four burner grill.) Grill for 30 minutes, checking occasionally for flare-ups.
  4. Flip the Tri-Tip and place over indirect heat. (On a 4 burner grill, turn off 2 middle burners, leaving the heat on both sides of the roast.) Grill another 20 minutes, or until it reaches desired internal temperature, about 135 degrees. Remember that the roast’s internal temperature will likely rise 10 degrees before carving.
  5. Let the Tri-Tip rest at least 10 minutes before carving or you will lose much of its juiciness.  Carve against the grain. (This means cut with the knife perpendicular to the lines running along the roast)

Roasted Tomato Salsa

2 medium tomatoes

1  jalepeno

¼ cup of fresh cilantro

2 garlic cloves

¼ onion

juice from one lime

salt and pepper to taste

  1. Blacken tomatoes on grill or directly over gas burner. Once the skin is black and peeling back from the flesh of tomato, remove from heat and let cool.
  2. Roast jalepeno in the same fashion, but only until golden brown. After roasted, remove the stem, cut in half lengthwise, and remove the seeds. Be mindful to not let the seeds or jalepeno juices come in contact with your eyes. Wear gloves if necessary.
  3. Peel blackened skin from the tomatoes and quarter.
  4. Add all ingredients to a food processor, and puree. Adjust flavors to taste.

Grilled Artichokes

3 artichokes

Water

  1. Remove the top of the artichoke, and any excess stem. Using kitchen shears, remove the pointy, top portionof every leaf. Cut the artichokes in half lengthwise.
  2. Add water to double boiler or pot with a steamer basket.  Add artichoke halves.  Steam for at least 30 minutes, or until a fork slides easily in and out of the artichoke’s stems.  The leaves should be easily pulled loose. Grill the artichokes for five minutes on each side. (This should be done after removing the Tri-Tip.)

Garlic Aioli Dip

About 2 cups mayonnaise

3 cloves gar

lic, pressed or finely minced

juice of ½ lemon

dried parsley or basil

salt and pepper to taste

  1. Combine all the ingredients into a bowl. Mixwell, and adjust ingredients to taste.

Herb Roasted Potatoes

4 to 6 medium sized red, gold, and/ or purple potatoes

salt and pepper

About 2 teaspoons dried Italian herbs (Or 2 Tbsp fresh herbs)

8 to 12 cloves of garlic, peeled

2 to 4 Tbsp olive oil

  1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.
  2. Rinse the potatoes, and then chop them into ½” cubes. There is no need to peel the potatoes.
  3. Season potatoes with salt and pepper, herbs, and olive oil. Mix until all they are evenly coated with the herbs and oil.
  4. Roast for 30 minutes at 400 degrees. Remove from the oven, add whole garlic cloves and toss.
  5. Return the potatoes to theoven and continue to roast 20 more minutes, tossing the potatoes once after 10 minutes.  Remove potatoes from oven and serve immediately.

Accounting

Tri-Tip  $8.96 + ¼ container of dry rub $1.00+ 2 tomatoes $1.07 + 2 jalepenoes $0.34 + 1 onion $.34 + ½ bunch of cilantro $0.17 + 1 lime $0.39 + 5 red potatoes $1.45 + 1 head of garlic $0.59+ 3 Artichokes$2.97 + 2 cups mayonnaise $1.74 + 1 lemon  $.25 + AU Shiraz $3.99 = $23.22

÷5 People

Comes to $4.64 per person!

An example of Tri-Tip I found in the store recently


Kitchen Basics* in recipe:

salt & pepper

olive oil

Italian seasonings

dried basil  or parsley

*See the Link to “Kitchen Basics” at the top of the blog to find out what I’m talking about.


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