Using Dinner Leftovers for Breakfast

Last night I made two gorgeous Delmonico steaks for dinner.  They were also huge and my husband and I were unable to finish all of the meat.  I didn’t want to throw out perfectly good meat (cooked perfectly to medium-rare, by the way) so I decided to chop it up and save it for a breakfast hash this morning.

I love a good breakfast hash.  It’s something that can be easily improvised, easily throw together, and it’s a great alternative to our usual weekend pancakes or French toast.  Breakfast hash is wonderful.

You don’t really need a formal recipe for a breakfast hash.  It really is something that you just throw into a skillet and then pile on a plate.  There are a few basics that you need:

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Potatoes.  You can either cube them, or grate them (like with hash browns).  I like both, I just decided to have potato cubes today.   You also need thinly sliced onions, meat (this can range from leftover pot roast, corned beef, turkey, chicken, or leftover steak), and poached eggs.  These are the basics.  If you want to spice up your hash, add freshly chopped peppers, roasted red peppers, sun dried tomatoes, cheeses, or fresh herbs.  Since we’re still getting settled in our new home, I don’t have those things on hand so my hash was very simple, but a hash can pretty much hold any extra ingredient and still taste great!

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Soften the onions in some Extra Virgin Olive Oil.  Add some salt and pepper to taste.  Once the onions are soft, add the potatoes.  Keep your heat at medium and flatten the potatoes on the bottom of the skillet.  Cover and cook for 5 minutes.  Stir and flip the potatoes and cover for 5 minutes more.  You will start getting some gorgeous color on the potatoes.  Do this until the potatoes are tender.

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Add your meat and stir until the meat is heated through.  There’s no need to really cook the meat any further.

Now you need to poach your eggs.  I like to use a broad pan (a wok-like skillet in this case) so that my eggs have plenty of room to do their thing.

Fill your pot with water.  Add 1 Tblsp. of vinegar to the water.  This stabilizes the egg whites and keeps them from spreading all over the place.  Heat your water to just before a simmer.  If you drop your eggs into boiling water, you will destroy your eggs.  You just want your water hot and at no more than a gentle simmer.

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Crack your eggs one at a time into a small bowl.

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Slowly and gently drop your egg into the water.  Depending on whether you want a runny or hard yolk, the time can differ from 3-5 minutes.  I like my yolks runny, that way I can have warm yolk mixed all over my hash.  It’s yummy that way.

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Remove your eggs with a slotted spoon and nestle them into the top of your hash that you have piled onto your plate.  Sprinkle with scallions, red pepper flakes, hot sauce, cheese, sour cream, or fresh herbs.

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A quick note on hot sauce:  I like to keep a few different kinds of hot sauces in the house.  All have different consistencies, and tastes and are appropriate in different uses.  I encourage all people to experiment with hot sauces and to keep many different kinds handy for different uses.

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And there’s the close up.  It’s not much in the way of photographic talent, but you can see that beautiful color on the potatoes, the red pepper flakes sprinkled over the top, and the poached egg broken open so the yolk can bleed all over the delicious meat and potatoes.  It’s a great way to start the day..but you’ll want to eat light for the rest of the day after a breakfast like this.  Try it anyhow.  It’s a great way to experiment since it’s so versatile.  Enjoy!

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Potato Salad and a Picnic at Home

Happy Memorial Day!  Today is the day that rings in the summer season and we all try to celebrate this day with camping, lake trips, or picnics.  My family is preparing for a cross-country move at the end of August, so our time (and money) is at a premium right now.  Since we took advantage of this long weekend by packing and purging, I decided to bring a little bit of festivity to my family by having a little backyard picnic.  We live in a townhome and our backyard basically consists of a slab of concrete (we don’t allow our son to play in the surrounding grass because of a-hole neighbors who don’t clean up after their dogs), but I still wanted to try to have a little bit of fun tonight.

We had steak grilled on our tiny charcoal hibachi, a traditional potato salad, and peach pie.  I’ll share the recipe for the peach pie tomorrow (and believe me, you WANT that recipe) but we’ll talk steak and potato salad tonight.

As a food enthusiast, I feel that it is my duty to explain a few things to you all about steak.  A good cut of steak (ribeye is my favorite, but it’s really a personal choice) needs only salt and pepper as a seasoning.  Don’t be seduced by those “grill seasonings” because they are mostly salt and all crap.  I notice that people who eat their steaks overcooked tend to want “seasonings” or steak sauce and it really is a shame because those things ruin a perfectly good piece of meat.  If a rare steak scares you, try a medium or medium rare steak.  The meat is very juicy and very tender.  Once you taste one that is cooked just right, you understand why a bunch of bells and whistles destroy what should be the dominating flavor.  If a little bit of pink in the middle of your steak grosses you out or scares you, you shouldn’t be eating steak at all.  Stick with chicken, you chicken.

The potato salad recipe I’m going to share with you is a very traditional and very old potato salad.  I see a lot of recipes for potato salads that have vinaigrettes and are light and healthy.  I would love to try a few of these recipes because they really do look delicious.  But when I want to have a picnic, I want REAL potato salad.  I want it cold and hearty and rich.  It’s just what I crave.  It’s not something that I indulge in more than a few times a year, but when I do make it, I make HUGE batches of it so I can munch on it for lunch during the week.  I’ll warn you, though:  if you have heart problems or high cholesterol you probably shouldn’t read on.  If you’re a flavor freak with a healthy ticker, please read on!

Traditional Potato Salad

(This is my recipe)

-6-8 cups potatoes cut into large cubes

-5 hard boiled eggs

-1 cup mayonnaise

-1 cup salad dressing (Miracle Whip)

-2 Tblsp. yellow mustard

-Green onions for garnish (optional)

Yukon Gold Potatoes

I used Yukon Gold potatoes and I peeled them.  I have seen people use Russet potatoes and leave the skins on, and that is perfectly fine.  I happen to think that the Yukon Gold is potato perfection and I use it almost exculsively.

Large Chunks

Cut your potatoes into fairly large cubes so that they don’t fall apart in the boiling process.  Put the cubes in a dry pot and add cold water to the pot.  This will ensure even cooking.  Also make sure that you salt the water really well because potatoes don’t take in salt after they are cooked and you want that flavoring.

Make your hard boiled eggs.  Surely you kow how to do that, right?  Eggs in pot, water in pot, boil.  You want these cooked all the way through..more so than how you would make them if you were to eat them straight up.  That yolk needs to be cooked to death!  10 minutes at a full boil should make sure that the eggs are properly cooked to death.  Ok, I’m stupid.  I’ll move on.

Hard Boiled Eggs

Peel the eggs and cut them in half.  With some gentle manipulation, the yolk should come out of the white part.  Put the yolk in a medium sized bowl and chop the whites roughly.

Condiments

Put the mayo, salad dressing, and mustard in the bowl with the egg yolks and mash together so that it’s well combined.

Hardened Artery

Yes, this is a heart-stopping mixture but if you’ve had it before, you know how good it is.  And hey, this is how it’s made!  Try to not think about how bad it is for you….kind of like when you eat a big hamburger with a large side of fries.

When the potatoes are fork tender, drain well and gently toss with the dressing.  Toss in the egg whites.  The dish will be thick.  Chill in the refrigerator for at least 3 hours and garnish with the green onions.  This dish is very yellow, so a little green is needed if you like.

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Instead of the usual close-up picture of the finished product, I decided to showcase the people who eat my cooking the most.  This will be changing hopefully since we are moving closer to family, but these two are always more than happy to be my taste testers.  Happy Memorial Day and enjoy!

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