Friday 29 November 2013

Steak

When I lived in Poland, there was this twee Wild West themed steak restaurant in the centre of Łódź. A group of us would go there at least once a fortnight, and sit in Little House On The Pairie-style covered wagons for the sake of their blue cheese steak. It was a wonder.

The cold weather's been making me nostalgic, so tonight I made striploin steak with blue cheese sauce, asparagus and tomatoes. Though there were no wagons or racially insensitive costumes involved.

Below I'll outline what is the absolute best method of cooking steak I have come across, which S picked up from Tim Ferris' book The 4 Hour Body.




Firstly, get the best possible cut of meat you can afford. I know that sounds very Jamie Oliver, but it really is true. Spending even an extra euro will make such a difference.
If you can, go to a butcher and choose your own piece of meat, tell him/her how thick you want it cut.

I think fillet is the best cut of steak, hands down. However, it can be expensive. In that case, striploin is your guy. It's a great cut of steak for frying. It's generally lean, with just enough fat to give the meat some flavour. Ribeye is also a good cut, but tends to have a lot of fat running through it.

I got two gorgeous slices of striploin at Bresnan's in The English Market- they've been trading there since 1898! It was about €13, but in my defence they were very thick slices- easily an inch. Plus, it's not the kind of thing you're going to make every day.

Pretty much the whole meal was purchased in The English Market, apart from the cream. The asparagus and tomatoes came from Superfruit, and the Cashel Blue cheese I used for the sauce was from On The Pig's Back.

Pro-Tip: The meat should be fully at room temperature before cooking. Take it out of the fridge about 30 minutes before you start.


Ingredients

1 Slice of Striploin Steak per person
Sea salt & Pepper
Olive oil

5 Spears of Asparagus per person
1 bunch of cherry tomatoes on the vine (about 4 per person)

50ml Double Cream
50g Blue Cheese- I used Cashel Blue but Roquefort would work too
1 White Onion, chopped into rings or long pieces


Method

1. Preheat the oven to about 220/430 degrees.

2. In a roasting tin, place the tomatoes and asparagus. Drizzle with a small amount of olive oil and sprinkle with a little salt. Put them into the oven.

3. Get out your frying pan and put it on a high heat. I use a heavy-bottom cast iron pan as this stays evenly hot. Allow the pan to heat but don't put any oil in it.

4. Pat the steak dry with some paper towel. This sounds weird, but it will make a difference. What you are doing is drying the moisture off the surface the steak so it won't steam once it hits the pan.

5. Season the steak with sea salt, pepper and olive oil. Put it on both sides and massage it in little bit.

6. As soon as the pan is very hot, drop your piece of steak onto it. Let it sit in the same place for 2 minutes (time it, seriously!) and don't move it around the pan. Because you have oiled the steak, it shouldn't stick to even an average quality pan.

7. After two minutes, flip it over and do the same to the other side. It should look a little something like this:



8. Give it another two minutes on the second side, and then you can use tongs to turn it on its pink edge for about 30 seconds. This will caramalise all the edges.

8a. If you're doing another slice of steak, repeat the process- 2 minutes on either side. Don't wash the steak pan, you'll need it for the sauce.

9. Turn the oven down to about 100/220 degrees.

10. Place the steak on some tinfoil on an oven tray. I like to fold up the edges of the tinfoil to create a little box to catch any juices which may run off. You can add these to the sauce later. If you have a meat thermometer stick it into the centre of one of the slices.

10a. For a medium steak I like to let the internal temperature get to about 58-60C (140F) degrees. This takes about 15 minutes. Add another 5 minutes if you would like it well done.

11. Now, get to work on your sauce. Using the steak pan, add a little more oil if needed and begin to fry off the onions.

12. Once the onions have begun to soften, add the cream. Stir. Crumble in the blue cheese and allow to simmer over a low heat, stirring occasionally. Once the sauce has reached a desired thickness (about 5 minutes), take it off the heat. It should look something like this:



11. Once your thermometer beeps (or 15 minutes has passed, you cretin!) then it's time to get that meat out of the oven. Here's what my medium steak looks like:



Pro Tip: Make sure to let the steak stand for five minutes before you cut into it, this will stop all the juices from escaping immediately.

12. The asparagus and tomatoes can come out now too. The tomatoes should be bursting from their skin and the asparagus should be on the softer side of al dente

13. Dish out the steak and vegetables. 

14. Put the cheese sauce back on the hob (you probably don't even have to turn the ring back on, the residual heat should be enough), and add in any delicious meat juices which were collected in the tinfoil.

15. Stir and allow to blend, then you can devour.


Wednesday 20 November 2013

Low Carb Breadless Mozzarella Sticks

Mozzarella Sticks are one of my favourite things, ever.
As a teenager my friend A and I would annoy the waiting staff in Captain America's on North Main Street by sitting in there for a whole afternoon and ordering only those golden breadcrumbed bites.

Thankfully, eating a low-carb diet doesn't mean having to give these up. Here is S's take on a brilliant starter or snack option.



Ingredients

1 Block of Mozzarella
2 Eggs
1/2 cup powdered Parmesan cheese
1-2 cups preferred cooking oil (vegetable/ sunflower oil is fine)
Garlic powder to taste
Salt to taste

Method

1. Cut mozzarella block into 'sticks'.

2. Whisk 2 eggs in a bowl.

3. Mix dry ingredients on a plate.

4. Dip the mozzarella sticks in the egg and roll in dry ingredients.

5. Re-dip the mozzarella sticks in the egg and repeat coating.

6. Place the sticks in a freezer for 30mins (This will prevent them leaking during frying).


(mozzarella sticks after freezing)

6. Heat the oil in a pan and deep fry the mozzarella sticks until golden brown. This should take 1-2 mins.

Serve with a dollop of sugar-free (diabetic) jam or a handful of fresh redcurrants. 

Tuesday 19 November 2013

Chocolate Almond Cake

This gorgeous chocolate cake is adapted from my Mother's gluten-free recipe. Have it warm, with a big dollop of double cream, or use Homemade Nutella mixed with mascarpone as icing.



Ingredients

8oz dark chocolate (at least 70% cocoa)
4 large eggs
2oz stevia
3oz sugar-free drinking chocolate (ie Options)
1 tbsp coconut flour
1 tsp baking powder
2 tbsp vegetable oil
4oz ground almonds

Method

1. Melt chocolate and leave to cool slightly.

2. Beat eggs, stevia, drinking chocolate, coconut flour and baking powder until blended.

3. Fold in the oil, almonds and melted chocolate.

4. Pour into a lined baking tin- this recipe makes enough to fill an 8 inch round tin.

5. Bake for 40-45 minutes at 180C/360F degrees. Pierce with a skewer or knife to check that the centre is fully cooked.


Of course, if you are trying to lose weight make sure to do the carb math based on the ingredients you use.

However, a good size slice of this after dinner with some double cream or a spoonful of homemade nutella icing has never kicked me out of ketosis.

Friday 1 November 2013

Homemade Nutella

This simple chocolate spread is great to dip strawberries into, or serve warm with mascarpone and crepes. It's a lovely dessert option, and tasty enough to give to carb-eating friends. It will keep in an airtight container for up to a month.




Ingredients

6oz Hazelnuts
6oz Dark chocolate (at least 70% cocoa)
3/4 Cup soya milk
3 Tablespoons sugar-free maple syrup or stevia

Method

1. Spread the hazelnuts out on a roasting tin and oven bake for 15 minutes at 180/350 degrees.

2. Let the nuts cool for 5 minutes then blitz them in a food processor until they have the same texture as smooth peanut butter. It will take a while for the oil to come out of the nuts and give the mixture a smooth consistency, but give it time and it will work.

3. Melt the chocolate.

4. Add the melted chocolate, syrup and milk to the hazelnuts and blend until smooth.


5. Pour into a jar, refrigerate or leave in a cool place for it to set. Can also be nommed immediately.

Pro-Tip: Use a spoonful as 'icing' on low-carb chocolate almond cake.

Of course, if you are trying to lose weight, make sure to do the carb math based on the ingredients you use. The last batch I made used 85% chocolate, and contained about 28g of carbs in the whole jar (about 400g). Real Nutella has 57g of carbs per 100g.