Showing posts with label Yourself. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yourself. Show all posts

Marinating and Grilling the Perfect Steak for Yourself

Friday, September 23, 2011

Grilling a steak can make for a tasty dinner but if done incorrectly, you can end up with a charred, dry piece of charcoal and that's not good for anyone. Perfectly grilling a steak can be considered an art form. There are several components that should be considered when grilling out.

The first detail that should be considered before the meat even hits the grill is seasoning or marinade. Seasoning can be anything from just sea salt to a dry steak rub or a wet marinade. I would recommend using this steak marinade and letting the steak sit for about an hour in the refrigerator soaking up the marinade.

Steak Marinade:
½ cup soy sauce
½ cup olive oil
4 ½ T honey
6 large garlic cloves, minced
3 T chopped fresh rosemary
ground pepper
sea salt

Next you want to determine how you want your steak cooked. Do you want rare, medium, well? (Rare=red, medium=warm pink, well=cooked through) After you determine this, follow these cooking times, 4-5 mins per side for rare, 5-7 mins per side for medium and 7-8 mins a side for well. These also depend on thickness of the cut of meat.

Depending on whether you are using charcoal or gas to grill, you will have to manage the heat differently. By keeping the temperature of the grill high, you will achieve an nice sear and seal in the juiciness of the steak. When you throw your steak on the grill you want to hear a nice sizzle. The sugar in the honey will caramelize and make a nice crust on the outside of the steak.

After you have cooked your steak to the desired temperature, pull the steak off and let the meat rest for 10 minutes. Allowing the meat to rest will allow the juices to redistribute throughout and make for an extra juicy steak. By keeping these tips in mind, you will create a tasty, delicious, perfectly cooked piece of meat.




If you burn your steak and need to go out to get one try this Dallas steakhouse or even go for some lobster and the best Addison seafood

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Marinating and Grilling the Perfect Steak for Yourself

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Grilling a steak can make for a tasty dinner but if done incorrectly, you can end up with a charred, dry piece of charcoal and that's not good for anyone. Perfectly grilling a steak can be considered an art form. There are several components that should be considered when grilling out.

The first detail that should be considered before the meat even hits the grill is seasoning or marinade. Seasoning can be anything from just sea salt to a dry steak rub or a wet marinade. I would recommend using this steak marinade and letting the steak sit for about an hour in the refrigerator soaking up the marinade.

Cook Steak

Steak Marinade:
½ cup soy sauce
½ cup olive oil
4 ½ T honey
6 large garlic cloves, minced
3 T chopped fresh rosemary
ground pepper
sea salt

Next you want to determine how you want your steak cooked. Do you want rare, medium, well? (Rare=red, medium=warm pink, well=cooked through) After you determine this, follow these cooking times, 4-5 mins per side for rare, 5-7 mins per side for medium and 7-8 mins a side for well. These also depend on thickness of the cut of meat.

Depending on whether you are using charcoal or gas to grill, you will have to manage the heat differently. By keeping the temperature of the grill high, you will achieve an nice sear and seal in the juiciness of the steak. When you throw your steak on the grill you want to hear a nice sizzle. The sugar in the honey will caramelize and make a nice crust on the outside of the steak.

After you have cooked your steak to the desired temperature, pull the steak off and let the meat rest for 10 minutes. Allowing the meat to rest will allow the juices to redistribute throughout and make for an extra juicy steak. By keeping these tips in mind, you will create a tasty, delicious, perfectly cooked piece of meat.

Marinating and Grilling the Perfect Steak for Yourself

If you burn your steak and need to go out to get one try this Dallas steakhouse or even go for some lobster and the best Addison seafood

Friends Link : calphalon unison 10 piece set

You're Such a Good Cook You Need to Slap Yourself

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Okay. I'm sure you are a phenomenal cook! You should have your own show on the Food Channel, your own restaurant and all that jazz. But in the mean time, you've come to eat at the restaurant that I work at. And I need to enlighten you on a few things as far as how (and by whom) the food is prepared.

Point of Enlightenment #1: I do not cook the food that you eat at my restaurant. In fact, I pretty much can't cook at all! So, when you go into an elaborate dissertation about the way the cook should have seasoned the meat, the way they should have diced the vegetables, the way you always marinate things and so on and so on-Halt! Cease and desist!  I know less than zero about marinades, seasonings, dicing or slicing. Perhaps if we're discussing a sandwich I can hold up my end of the conversation. A good ratio of Sara Lee lunch meat to Kraft singles is something I consider myself to be a bit of an expert on. But as soon as we delve into the area of sandwiches that contain grilled meats and toasted buns (as all of our sandwiches do), then that's it, I've got to tap out.

Cook Steak

Point of Enlightenment #2: See, here's the thing. I can list all of the ingredients in the foods we serve. I can tell you that we grill everything on a flat top grill. Stuff like that. But of you want to debate the various methods of how the cook goes about conducting said grilling, again, that's a tap out on my end. What you really need to do is talk to the cook. But you can't, because that isn't allowed at just about any of your typical sit-down restaurants. They don't let you march back to the kitchen and give the cook a crash course on cooking things the way you do it at home. Sorry.

Point of Enlightenment #3: It doesn't matter how much of my time (and the time of the other tables around you in my section; more on The Customer Who Believes They Are the Only Customer in the Restaurant in another post) you take up with a detailed explanation of how you cook steak that you expect me to go back and relay to the cooks- you're just wasting your breath along with my time (and that of the other hungry customers). I'm not going to tell the cook the instructions you just gave me, because s/he will laugh at me at best, or tell me off in a worst case scenario. I'm not in the mood for either reaction, because the ultimate result will be the same. S/he will cook your steak according to the rules, regulations, and specifications of this restaurant.  If you want it medium, you'll get it medium. But if you want it mediumish with a hint of med well, beaten three times on one side and five on the other, with a dash of Lawry's seasoning, a soupcon of paprika and a kiss of honey, then go home and make it that way! I'm sure it will taste awesome.

Point of Enlightenment #4: I cannot stand there and monitor your steak so that it comes out in between medium and med well. A customer actually asked me to do that. I told her that we could do her steak medium, which for us is pink all the way through, or we could do it med-well, which is a thin strip of pink in the middle. She informed me that she wanted it to be in-between those two. When I informed her that the cook could only do one or the other, she demanded that I stand at the grill and stop him when the steak was in between medium and med-well.  I painstakingly and politely explained to her that was never going to happen, and then went in the back and had a serious laugh about the misguided sense of over-entitlement that people can have. Here's the deal: most restaurants do well, med-well, medium, med-rare, and rare. Period. If you want med-med-rare, well, see the italicized statement above in point #3.

Folks, here's the bottom line.  I want to make you happy, I truly do. But our cooks are not personal chefs, and if you are such a diva that you need one, I suggest you find a way to afford one. And if you can't stomach a meal unless it tastes like your food or the sumptuous eats your momma always makes, then don't go out to eat. Because your momma doesn't expect a tip.

You're Such a Good Cook You Need to Slap Yourself

Read Three Chapters of My Upcoming Book Absolutely Free! Win a Free Copy of My Book! Head over to my website: http://www.howrc.com/

God bless!

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You're Such a Good Cook You Need to Slap Yourself

Monday, January 10, 2011

Okay. I'm sure you are a phenomenal cook! You should have your own show on the Food Channel, your own restaurant and all that jazz. But in the mean time, you've come to eat at the restaurant that I work at. And I need to enlighten you on a few things as far as how (and by whom) the food is prepared.

Point of Enlightenment #1: I do not cook the food that you eat at my restaurant. In fact, I pretty much can't cook at all! So, when you go into an elaborate dissertation about the way the cook should have seasoned the meat, the way they should have diced the vegetables, the way you always marinate things and so on and so on-Halt! Cease and desist!  I know less than zero about marinades, seasonings, dicing or slicing. Perhaps if we're discussing a sandwich I can hold up my end of the conversation. A good ratio of Sara Lee lunch meat to Kraft singles is something I consider myself to be a bit of an expert on. But as soon as we delve into the area of sandwiches that contain grilled meats and toasted buns (as all of our sandwiches do), then that's it, I've got to tap out.

Point of Enlightenment #2: See, here's the thing. I can list all of the ingredients in the foods we serve. I can tell you that we grill everything on a flat top grill. Stuff like that. But of you want to debate the various methods of how the cook goes about conducting said grilling, again, that's a tap out on my end. What you really need to do is talk to the cook. But you can't, because that isn't allowed at just about any of your typical sit-down restaurants. They don't let you march back to the kitchen and give the cook a crash course on cooking things the way you do it at home. Sorry.

Point of Enlightenment #3: It doesn't matter how much of my time (and the time of the other tables around you in my section; more on The Customer Who Believes They Are the Only Customer in the Restaurant in another post) you take up with a detailed explanation of how you cook steak that you expect me to go back and relay to the cooks- you're just wasting your breath along with my time (and that of the other hungry customers). I'm not going to tell the cook the instructions you just gave me, because s/he will laugh at me at best, or tell me off in a worst case scenario. I'm not in the mood for either reaction, because the ultimate result will be the same. S/he will cook your steak according to the rules, regulations, and specifications of this restaurant.  If you want it medium, you'll get it medium. But if you want it mediumish with a hint of med well, beaten three times on one side and five on the other, with a dash of Lawry's seasoning, a soupcon of paprika and a kiss of honey, then go home and make it that way! I'm sure it will taste awesome.

Point of Enlightenment #4: I cannot stand there and monitor your steak so that it comes out in between medium and med well. A customer actually asked me to do that. I told her that we could do her steak medium, which for us is pink all the way through, or we could do it med-well, which is a thin strip of pink in the middle. She informed me that she wanted it to be in-between those two. When I informed her that the cook could only do one or the other, she demanded that I stand at the grill and stop him when the steak was in between medium and med-well.  I painstakingly and politely explained to her that was never going to happen, and then went in the back and had a serious laugh about the misguided sense of over-entitlement that people can have. Here's the deal: most restaurants do well, med-well, medium, med-rare, and rare. Period. If you want med-med-rare, well, see the italicized statement above in point #3.

Folks, here's the bottom line.  I want to make you happy, I truly do. But our cooks are not personal chefs, and if you are such a diva that you need one, I suggest you find a way to afford one. And if you can't stomach a meal unless it tastes like your food or the sumptuous eats your momma always makes, then don't go out to eat. Because your momma doesn't expect a tip.




Read Three Chapters of My Upcoming Book Absolutely Free! Win a Free Copy of My Book! Head over to my website: http://www.howrc.com/

God bless!

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