I could quite happily become a Vegetarian but for one thing. Every now and then I really enjoy a nice steak. Its not something we eat really often . . . red meat, but as a treat we maybe have it once or twice a month.
The Toddster likes pork chops . . . me . . . I will always go for a good steak. I am at the point now where I never order steak if we are out for dinner however . . .
I've had far too many disappointing badly cooked steaks to want to waste my money on them when eating out. I would rather buy a good one and cook it at home. Myself.
I have come to realise that that is the only way I am going to get what I want. Sad but true.
When I was growing up my mom and dad used to buy a hind of beef every year and put it into the freezer. My mother cooked beautiful Swiss Steak . . . it was the best . . . and a lovely roast of beef . . . but she couldn't really cook a regular steak.
She never liked getting the stove dirty or anything splattering on it, and so she more or less stewed the steaks on low rather than searing them over a high heat.
Its that initial sear that packs in and seals in all the flavours. I sear. I'm not bothered about a dirty stove.
Today I used sirloin steaks, cut about 1 inch thick, with a nice mix of marbling throughout so they were juicy and tender . . .
We like our steaks between medium rare and rare . . . with a beautifully well-seared surface . . . .
It gets a simple treatment. Room temperature. Wiped dry. Chinese five spice and black pepper rubbed into the surface before searing . . .
The sauce is sublime . . . delicious . . . and goes wonderfully . . .
Its just butter, grated fresh ginger, water and soy sauce . . . and it is Perfection with a capital "P."
Yield: 4
Author: Marie Rayner
Sirloin Steak with a Ginger Butter Sauce
Tender & juicy, perfectly cooked steaks with a fabulous sauce with oriental undertones. The flavour impact of simple ingredients put together in a simple yet effective way can never be underestimated.
ingredients:
- 3 sirloin steaks, each about 1 inch thick and weighing 10 - 12 ounces each
- 1 tsp Chinese five spice powder
- freshly ground black pepper
- 1 TBS flavourless vegetable oil
- 3 TBS unsalted butter
- 2 TBS grated fresh ginger root
- 120ml water (1/2 cup)
- 4 tsp soy sauce
instructions:
How to cook Sirloin Steak with a Ginger Butter Sauce
- Wipe your steaks and pat them dry with some paper kitchen towelling. (Bring them to room temperature first.) Rub them all over with the five spice powder and some freshly ground black pepper.
- Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium high heat. When it starts to shimmer and you know it is really hot, add the steaks. Cook on both sides until well browned, about 3 to 5 minutes per side, depending on thickness. Remove to a plate and tent with foil. Set aside.
- Wipe the skillet out of any burnt bits. (Its okay to leave some brown bits as they will add flavour to the sauce.) Add the butter and melt over medium heat. Add the ginger and cook until fragrant. Stir in the water and soy sauce, scraping up any brown bits with a wooden spoon. Simmer over medium heat until the sauce is slightly thickened.
- Slice the steaks and drizzle with the sauce to serve.
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You could also grill the steak on the BBQ, but then you wouldn't have the benefit of the seared meat juices helping to flavour the sauce. It would still be quite tasty nevertheless. Enjoy!
Over here for the last few weeks a certain fast food place has been having their annual Tastes of America promotion.
We popped in last week and ordered the Alabama Chicken sandwich with a smoky white BBQ sauce, bacon, cheese and onion crisps.
There was also lettuce and the bun was supposed to be a cornbread style bun.
To say I was slightly disappointed is to say the least. I will say no more.
I came away thinking I could make a far better chicken burger at home and today (Saturday as I write this) I did just that.
It wasn't quite a copycat. I infused ours with Tex Mex Flavours . . . but it was still a chicken burger and it was mighty tasty if I don't say so myself.
Chicken Burgers and Tex Mex are two of my favourite things. Why not combine the two!
I don't think a chicken burger is all that hard to get wrong. Why is it so often it is done so very poorly???
I hate that when I eat out, more often than not, I am disappointed by food which fails to deliver what it promises.
I am probably eating in the wrong places. That's the truth of it and what it boils down to.
I have a connoisseurs appetite and a pauper's budget, which is probably the whole problem in a nutshell.
I created a coriander lime mayo to spread on the buns, using chopped fresh coriander, garlic, and some lime juice and zest, with a tiny bit of salt.
This got put into the refrigerator so that the flavours had some time to meld. I also used a low fat mayo.
I also marinated the chicken for a couple of hours.
I pounded two boneless skinless chicken breasts until they were even in size, or as even as I could get them . . .
These were marinated in a mix of beaten egg, oregano, chili powder, hot sauce and a bit of salt.
I used the Green Tabasco sauce for a real Tex Mex Jalapeno flavour . . .
While they were marinating I pulverized tortilla chips in the food processor until they were like fine bread crumbs.
I actually used a mix of cool ranch and lightly salted, but you could use nacho cheese, or whatever tortilla chips you enjoy.
Just make sure that your crumbs are really fine . . .
Take the chicken out of the refrigerator and remove them from the marinade, allowing any excess to drip off, and discarding the marinade. Pat the chicken into the tortilla crumbs and then brown them lightly on both sides.
I finish them off in the oven to make sure they are cooked all the way through, adding some grated pepper Jack to the top so that it melts a bit before removing them.
I served them on toasted whole wheat buns that I spread with that delicious garlicky mayo, along with some shredded lettuce and raw red onion rings for a bit of zip! Tasty tasty!
Yield: 2
Author: Marie Rayner
Spicy Chicken Burgers with Coriander Lime Mayo
Spicy chicken cutlets on a toasted bun with a delicious garlic, coriander and lime mayonnaise dressing. A garnish of shredded lettuce and sliced red onion bring additional flavour and crunch. Do note that the chicken needs to marinate for 2 hours prior to cooking.
ingredients:
For the Mayo:
- 55g low fat real mayonnaise (1/4 cup)
- 2 TBS chopped fresh coriander (cilantro)
- 1 tsp lime juice
- 1/2 tsp lime zest
- 1 small clove of garlic, peeled and minced
For the Burgers:
- 2 free range organic chicken breast fillets
- 1 small free range egg, lightly beaten
- 1 1/2 TBS Tabasco sauce
- 1/2 tsp dried oregano
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp mild chili powder
- 65g tortilla chips, pulverised (3 cups before pulverising)
- 2 TBS light olive oil
- 2 TBS grated pepper jack cheese
To serve:
- shredded lettuce
- red onion rings (raw)
- toasted whole wheat burger buns
instructions:
How to cook Spicy Chicken Burgers with Coriander Lime Mayo
- Take your chicken breast fillets and pound them out to an even layer. Prick them all over with a fork. Put them into a container along with the egg, hot sauce, oregano, chili powder and salt. Cover and shake to coat. Place into the refrigerator for 2 hours. (You can also use the milder Green Jalapeno Tabasco sauce if you want.)
- To make the mayonnaise, combine all of the ingredients well, then cover and refrigerate until you are ready to serve.
- Make sure your tortilla chips are really pulverised and fine for the chicken burgers. I do this in my food processor. Place the finely ground chips into a shallow dish.
- Working with one piece of chicken at a time., remove the chicken from the marinade, allowing any excess to drip off. Coat completely in the ground tortilla chips. Repeat until both are well coated.
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Have a small baking tray ready.
- Heat the oil in a non-stick skillet. Add the chicken breasts and cook for about 3 minutes per side. Place them onto the baking tray. Bake in the oven for about 15 to 20 minutes, until cooked through and the juices run clear. Sprinkle the top of each with 1 TBS of the pepper jack about 5 minutes before finishing so that it melts.
- Split the burger buns and toast on the cut sides under the grill. Spread the tops and bottoms of each with the mayonnaise. Place the bottoms on serving plates. Top with some shredded lettuce and onion rings. Place the chicken burgers on top. Finally place the toasted bun tops over all. Serve immediately.
- We had some leftover coleslaw vinaigrette from the other day with this along with some oven chips.
NOTES:
Note - if you wish to serve more people simply double the ingredients.
Created using The Recipes Generator
I was really, really pleased with how these turned out. I was a tiny bit worried that the tortilla chips would be too crisp, but they were perfect. I think the key is to really grind them small, almost to a powder. We enjoyed them with some oven chips and some leftover coleslaw vinaigrette!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at mariealicejoan at aol dot com.
I guess it must have been a few months ago, my friend Noelle (who lives in Nova Scotia) was talking on Facebook about her mother's recipe for a Tom & Jerry Cake that she was baking in the oven and how lovely it smelled while it was baking.
I was instantly intrigued. I had never heard of a Tom & Jerry Cake and my family goes way back in Nova Scotia's history to its very earliest days.
The fact that it was one of her family recipes really interested me.
I love recipes with a family history. Taste (in my opinion) is a really important part of the fabric of a family. It seems to me that food and recipes with a family history taste all the better for that fact.
I asked her about the recipe and she very generously shared it with me and I know she will be really pleased that I finally baked it and am sharing it with you.
Recipes shared in friendship are really special indeed. I have a big blue vinyl binder filled with such things and let me tell you it is a family treasure . . .
A real treasure trove of friendship and family and love in the form of recipes just like this one . . . with a touch of special love built into each one.
I Published a volume of some of the best of those a number of years back in a book I called, what else but . . . Recipes From the Big Blue Binder.
I finally got around to baking the cake today and let me tell you it did not disappoint! Not one whit! Not surprisingly it was a true winner of a spice cake!
It smelled like pure heavenly bliss when it was baking. The batter is broken into two layers.
You make a vanilla batter and then you remove some of it and add molasses, cocoa powder and warm baking spices to it, which creates a lovely, spiced batter that you fold sultana raisins into.
This spicy batter gets spooned into a prepped bundt tin and then the vanilla batter gets spooned over top.
I used the full amount of spice that Noelle recommended, but if you are not overly fond of spice you can cut them back a bit if you like.
When baking the vanilla batter sinks a bit into the spiced batter making a lovely pattern in the cake as you can see.
I dusted the finished cake with icing sugar . . . but that is just me, because . . . I like plain cakes prettied up a bit with a dusting of sugar.
If you are not fond of raisins, you could leave them out I guess. We like raisins so I had no problem with them being in there.
This truly is a lovely cake . . . with a moist and delicious crumb . . . somewhat dense . . .
This is a cake that goes well with hot drinks . . . or cold glasses of milk . . .
I also think for special occasions a nice scoop of vanilla on top would go down a real treat! Thank you so much for sharing with me Noelle!
Rosalie's Tom & Jerry Cake
Yield: 16
Author: Marie Rayner
A beautiful two toned cake which you can bake in either a bundt tin or a deep 9 inch cake tin. Two batters, a spicy gingerbread type studded with sultanas and a lovely vanilla cake are baked together to give you a moist and delicious cake that the whole family will enjoy. A gift from my good friend in Nova Scotia, Noelle. It is a lovely dense & delicious cake that is well enjoyed with a hot cuppa or a glass of milk.
ingredients:
Tom Layer:
- 220g butter (1 cup)
- 380g sugar (2 cups)
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla
- 3 large free range eggs
- 420g plain flour (3 cups)
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp salt
- 240ml milk (1 cup)
Jerry Layer:
- 2 TBS dark cocoa powder, sifted (not drinking mix)
- 3 TBS mild molasses
- 1 tsp ground cloves
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp ground ginger
- 115g sultana raisins (3/4 cup)
instructions:
How to cook Rosalie's Tom & Jerry Cake
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter and flour a large Bundt pan or a deep 9 inch round tin.
- Cream the butter, sugar and vanilla for the Tom layer together until very light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Sift together the flour, baking powder and salt. Beat into the creamed mixture alternately with the milk, making 3 dry and two wet additions.
- Remove 1/3 to 1/2 of the batter to another bowl. (The amount depends on your preference of how much spice batter you want. I removed 1/2 of the batter.) To this batter beat in by hand the molasses, spices, cocoa powder until well incorporated and then fold in the raisins.
- Spoon the spice batter into your prepared pan. Spoon the vanilla batter on top and smooth out. Bake for 1 1/2 hours until the cake tests done. You may need to cover the top with some aluminium foil for the last 15 minutes or so if you think it is getting too brown.
- Let sit in the tin for 15 minutes before tipping out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
- I dusted mine with icing sugar.
NOTES:
Noelle's Notes - Mom always used canned milk. My sister uses less of the molasses, spices and cocoa but I like my spice batter to be dark and rich. (I used it all and it was lovely.) I have written the recipe not as mom wrote it because as you know, the best recipes are just jotted down and never include what to do with the ingredients. At 350*F I find the cake in my oven usually bakes in about 1 1/4 hours. I have lowered the temperature to 325*F (165*C/gas mark 3) and baked it for 1 1/2 successfully.
Noelle probably doesn't know this, but when I was a small child my father used to read to me every night. One of my favourite stories was a book I had about Tom & Jerry. If I close my eyes I can still hear my father's voice in my head reading it to me.
He would affect different voices for each character. I think the high squeaky one he did for Jerry Mouse was my favourite! In the book it was a really fine day, and Jerry and his little friend Tuffy decided it was the perfect day for a picnic.
Of course this involved stealing food from the big people's kitchen. I am quite sure if this cake was there it would totally be on their menu!
My sister and I were talking earlier today. She was telling me that she had had to throw away a dozen cans of out of date Salmon from my mother's larder.
There were still about half a dozen that were still in date but that she was taking to the food bank. She wouldn't have dared throw it away while mum was alive, but now mum is gone, there is no point keeping it.
Mum did love a bargain, and tended to hoard things like tinned salmon, toilet paper and shampoo. I don't think my sister will have to buy toilet paper for years, (LOL).
The local charity shop has been gifted with a nice box of shampoos and creams for their employees to share. The things that get left behind when someone passes. It is food for thought for sure.
My sister and I were remembering how in the summer when it was hot sometimes my mom would open a tin of salmon for our supper. We would each get a spoonful on our plate along with some potato salad, sliced tomatoes and cucumbers, etc. and that would be supper.
We both hated it . . .with the bones in it, the skin, etc. Just the thought of it makes me cringe.
I am still not fond of it served that way, and I confess when I buy tinned salmon, I always buy the one without any skin or bones. I don't care how much more it costs.
I am not fond of tinned salmon just sitting on my plate, on its own. I like it in a sandwich, or as a loaf, patties, etc. Not on its own.
On its own I would much rather have a nicely cooked fillet of salmon or salmon steak. Those can be very nice if cooked properly.
I do love tinned salmon in a casserole, loaf or pie. My mother made the nicest salmon pies.
It would be a shame to use a nice fillet of salmon in this way. One feels no compunction or guilt about using a nice tin of salmon for dishes such as this.
Or even if you had leftover cooked salmon. It would be nice done this way.
Simple salmon patties. Flaked and mashed tinned salmon, mixed with some breadcrumbs, milk, egg, parsley, grated onion (I use my micro plane grater) and seasoning, mixed together and spooned into well buttered muffin cups.
Make sure the muffin cups are well buttered. That way they don't stick. There is nothing more annoying than stuff stuck on muffin tins.
These are baked until set and golden brown. They have a nice crisp and buttery crust, which I love.
You could add some finely minced green pepper if you wanted to, which would be nice or even some finely chopped green olives.
I try not to pack them into the muffin cups. I want them to be light and fluffy. Compacting them would result in something heavy and leaden I fear.
I really do love the little crispy bits that you get from the uneven texture on the tops of them. My favourite bits. I love crunchy things in case you hadn't guessed.
I always like to make a sauce to serve with them. There is a nice lemon butter sauce that I make sometimes. It is a bit on the sweetish side.
Sometimes I will use creamed peas, which is very old fashioned. Old fashioned and quite delicious!
Today I made a creamy lemon sauce, which is different than my usual Lemon Butter Sauce. It is rich and creamy.
It is not translucent, but rather opague. I really liked it.
Its like a basic bechamel sauce but with the addition of lemon juice and cayenne pepper. You cannot beat a good bechamel sauce.
People think that they can't make one, but if you have made macaroni and cheese, you have made basic bechamel with cheese added.
The sauce gets spooned over the baked patties. I love that they are not fried. This can cut back on the fat.
If you are cutting back on the fat by not frying you don't mind being a bit indulgent with the sauce.
Such a simple dish, but so flavourful. I served them with some scalloped potatoes and steamed baby peas.
Peas and salmon. They are perfect partners in my opinion!
Lemon Sauced Salmon Patties
Yield: 4
Author: Marie Rayner
Simple and delicious. This is a store cupboard family favourite.
ingredients:
- 1 tall can of pink salmon, drained well, skin and bones removed & discarded and flaked
- 180ml milk (3/4 cup)
- 2 sliced white bread, made into soft crumbs
- 1 large free range egg, beaten 1 TBS minced fresh parsley
- 1 tsp grated onion
- 1/2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
- salt and black pepper to taste
Lemon sauce:
- 2 TBS butter
- 1 TBS plain flour
- 180ml milk
- 2 TBS fresh lemon juice
- pinch salt
- 1/8 to 1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
instructions:
How to cook Lemon Sauced Salmon Patties
- Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4. Butter 8 non-stick muffin cups really well. Set aside.
- Mash the salmon in a bowl really well, then add the breadcrumbs. Season lightly. Beat together the egg, milk, grated onion, parsley and Worcestershire sauce. Pour over the salmon and bread crumb mixture. Mix all together well. Spoon into the muffin cups. (I tend not to pack them down. I like them a bit fluffy. You get more crispy bits that way.)
- Place into the pre-heated oven and bake for 45 minutes, or until set and golden brown.
- While the patties are baking, make the sauce. Melt the butter in a saucepan. Whisk in the flour and cook for about 2 minutes, stirring to make a smooth paste. Slowly whisk in the flour, whisking constantly. Bring to the boil, and then cook for several minutes over low heat, stirring continuously until nicely thickened and smooth. Remove from the heat. Whisk in the lemon juice and cayenne pepper.
- Serve the patties hot, with the lemon sauce spooned over top.
Created using The Recipes Generator
I think today we can be a bit snobbish when it comes to things like this . . . thinking that tinned fish and corned beef are beneath us . . . but really these were mainstays in the kitchens of our mothers and grandmothers.
They were affordable ways to get some protein into our families and provide a bit of variety. There is a time for a whole piece of salmon . . . and there is a time for things like this. Simple and yet very, very tasty.
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