5 Days of Decadence: Day 2

I have to admit, Day 2 was a million times better than Day 1.  Oh my gosh this meal was outstanding.  It was fancy-schmancy to boot!  I took an ordinary, every day piece of meat and I fancied that sumbitch up like you wouldn’t believe!  I’m feeling quite smug and proud of myself right now!

On the menu tonight was London broil marinated in red wine and served with red wine gravy, creamed spinach, and a fresh vegetable casserole (it’s just veggies smothered in a cheese sauce!).  It was fantastic.

The cocktail for tonight was a good old fashioned Bloody Mary.  Now I know that there are 1,000,001 recipes out there for homemade Bloody Mary mix.  If you want to go through the trouble of testing them and finding the right one and going through a bunch of crap to get a good Bloody Mary, be my guest.  Or, you know, you could listen to your old pal Somer and buy a mix.  I’m not usually big on drink mixes.  Most of the time, it IS better to make your own…but not this time.  This time you have Mr. & Mrs. T’s Bloody Mary Mix!  You can find this stuff anywhere and it is seriously the BEST Bloody Mary I’ve ever had.  We buy the Bold and Spicy version because we like a bit of kick, but they make a milder version for you big babies out there.  (Note:  This is NOT a compensated endorsement of Mr. & Mrs. T’s.  I’m telling you to try this stuff because it really is kick ass.)

I love these drinks.  My father-in-law drinks one or two on Fridays and says that it is his vegetable serving for the week.  And that is all kinds of awesome.

Now on to the glorious dinner!

Like I said, this meal was fantastic.  I was so excited eating it because I couldn’t wait to write about it and share my two creations with you all!  Let’s start with the London Broil.  Here is the recipe!

Smell My Plate London Broil

My Recipe

1 London Broil

2 cups red wine

1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil

1/2 cup water

1 Tablespoon salt

1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

2 teaspoons dried oregano

2 teaspoons dried parsley

3 cloves garlic, smashed

1 teaspoon fresh ginger, minced

Red Wine Gravy (Recipe Below)

Have your London Broil defrosted by the night before you intend to serve it.  It needs to marinate over night.

Place the London Broil in a large freezer bag.  Mix all other ingredients in a bowl and pour into the freezer bag with the meat.  Seal the bag and be careful to get most of the air out.  Smoosh (yes that is a technical term!) the meat and marinade around so that the meat is well lubricated.  Then place the bag in a large dish and store in the refrigerator.  Turn the bag over once the next morning.

Lay the meat out to come to room temperature 15 minutes before cooking.  Set oven broiler on high.  Place meat on broiler pan and cook for about 9 minutes on each side for Medium to Medium Rare.

Reserve marinade for gravy!

Strain marinade through a fine mesh strainer and set aside.  Melt 4 Tablespoons butter in a saucepan.  Stir in 4 Tablespoons flour and stir.  Add 1 cup of the marinade and 1 can of beef broth.  Stir until thick.  Serve with London Broil.

Cooked to perfection and tasting oh so faintly of that wonderful Pinot Noir I used in the marinade.  Seriously, folks.  Everybody has been saying for years to only cook with a wine you would drink.  THERE IS A GOOD REASON FOR THIS.

Also, really and truly make sure that when you put the meat and marinade bag in your fridge that you put it in a dish so that it won’t leak.  Like this:

Or if you like to learn things the hard way you can ignore me.  It will only take ONE instance of having your refrigerator leaking with raw meat juice and marinade for you to never make that mistake again.  And yes, I DO know from experience.  Learn from my idiocy, people.

The other dish that I put together was Creamed Spinach.  Can you believe that I had never had it before tonight?  As much as I eat steak one would think that I would have had it by now, but no.  But seeing how I was serving a huge piece of red meat with dinner and Creamed Spinach is traditionally served with red meat, my opportunity was hard to ignore.  It’s not a fussy dish.  It’s really straight forward and seriously only takes a few minutes to make.

Creamed Spinach

My recipe

1 1-lb. bag frozen spinach

4 Tablespoons butter

1 shallot, minced

3 Tablespoons flour

2 cups half-and-half

salt and pepper

Wrap thawed spinach in a clean dish towel and squeeze as much water from it as possible.  Set aside.

Melt butter in a large skillet.  Add shallots and stir until soft.  Add flour and cook for 1 minute, stirring the whole time.  Add half-and half.  Stir until thick.  Season to taste with salt and pepper.  Stir in spinach and heat through.

That’s it.  It’s really that easy.  And it’s really freaking good as well.  Win-Win.

The third thing that I served is a cheese-gooped vegetable casserole that comes from that cookbook I keep referencing lately.  It’s really good and really decadent.  I don’t usually serve my vegetables swimming in goopy cheese (even though I love it) so I really only make this dish around the holidays.

Fresh Vegetable Casserole

Favorite Brand Name Old-Fashioned Holiday Recipes 2004

8 small new potatoes

8 baby carrots (Did you know that baby carrots are actually mature carrots shaved down?  True story!)

1 small cauliflower, broken into florets

4 stalks asparagus, cut into 1-inch pieces

3 Tablespoons butter or margarine

3 Tablespoons flour 2 cups milk

salt

black pepper

3/4 cup (3 oz.) shredded Cheddar cheese

Chopped fresh cilantro

Cook vegetables until crisp-tender.  (I steamed all but the potatoes.  Steaming is a good option.)  Arrange vegetables in buttered 2-quart casserole.  Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

To make sauce, melt butter in medium saucepan over medium heat.  Stir in flour until smooth.  Gradually stir in milk.  Cook until thickened, stirring constantly.  Season to taste with salt and pepper.  Add cheese, stirring until cheese is melted.  Pour sauce over vegetables and sprinkle with cilantro.  Bake 15 minutes or until heated through.  YIELD:  4-6 servings.

It looks goopy and decadent, no?

3 days to go!

Enjoy!

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Cucumber Tomato Salad

I do not like salads.  There, I said it!  You will not find many salad recipes on this site because I simply do not enjoy eating them most of the time.  I really feel like I am eating rabbit food.  It’s the whole lettuce thing.  If I do eat a side salad with my dinner, I use an herb mix of greens because I really hate lettuce salads (even Romaine!).  I’ve tried all kinds of recipes, all kinds of toppings and all kinds of dressings and I really cannot get behind a salad way of life.  If you are a salad lover, I consider you an exotic and interesting creature.  I don’t judge, you simply perplex me.  Wouldn’t you rather join me for a burger (veggie or meat)?

I’m going to be sharing a salad recipe with you tonight.  It’s a lettuce-free salad that is delicious and perfect for hot weather.  It is something that, in the Southeastern U.S., every grandmother makes for picnics and Sunday dinners in the summer.  It is a dish that is perfect for those insanely hot, humid summer days.  My mom used to make it and now I make it.  I have yet to find a person who doesn’t love this dish and I encourage you to give it a try on a miserable hot day when it is too hot to cook.

Cucumber Tomato Salad

(My Recipe)

1 small onion, thinly sliced

2 medium cucumbers, peeled and sliced

3 cups chopped tomatoes

Vinaigrette:

1 lemon (use both the zest and juice)

2 Tblsp. apple cider vinegar

1/2 cup light oil

1 tsp. dried parsley flakes

1 tsp. dried oregano

1 tsp. dried basil

A pinch of salt (use only a pinch!  Any more will draw out all of the water in the veggies and you will end up with a soup and not a salad!)

1/2 tsp. black pepper

Salad Veggies

If you’ll notice a couple of things; I used grape tomatoes today.  This doesn’t need to be typical.  I’ve used regular globe tomatoes, Roma tomatoes and cherry tomatoes.  Honestly, I prefer the firmer flesh of a grape tomato for this dish, but any tomato is perfect.  Also, I do not use Hot House Cucumbers that are so popular these days.  I guess some people have a problem with the thick skin of a regular garden cucumber, but I find that silly.  I love these blue-collar cucumbers.  I slice them and eat them sprinkled with salt (skin on) and I skin them and make cucumber-yogurt sauces for pita sandwiches.  They are perfectly delicious and should not be disrespected.

Start by chopping your vegetables.

Thinly Sliced Onion

Try to slice your onions so that they are so thin that they are translucent.  Since this is a raw salad, nobody wants to bite into a big chunk of raw onion.  And yes, this is a regular white onion.  I’ve tried scallions and red onion and really, white onion is best.  This is a blue collar dish and should be appreciated for just that.

Sliced Cucumbers

I only peeled the cucumbers.  I didn’t seed them.  It’s ok.  Cucumber seeds are ok.  Ok?  People have to stop butchering the cucumber!  Also, the extra water is needed in this dish.  It’s why I split all of the tomatoes and don’t remove the seeds.

Grape Tomatoes

See?  Split in half and still containing seeds.  Mmmmm….I love grape tomatoes.  Ok, moving on.

Put all of your chopped vegetables in a large bowl and set aside.  Put all of the vinaigrette ingredients in a medium bowl, whisk until combined, and pour over the vegetables.  Toss lightly to coat.  Cover and refrigerate for at least two hours.  This is one of those dishes that are better the next day rather than fresh.

Cucumber Tomato Salad

While this salad is perfectly pleasant at room temperature, it really shines as a cold salad.  The freshness of the cucumbers and the light vinaigrette really offer some relief on miserably hot days.  I hope you try this on your next hot day.  Enjoy!

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Roast Chicken and Vegetables

This is a dish that I make all of the time.  It’s a dish that is satisfying in all four seasons.  I love it.

I always have at least one whole chicken in my freezer.  A chicken with the bones and skin still intact will have more flavor when you cook it.  The bones and skin lend a richness and a “chicken” taste.  I do keep a bag of boneless skinless chicken breasts as well, but when I prepare those, there has to be a lot of hoopla to make them appetizing and they certainly aren’t tasting like a chicken.  I like to roast a whole chicken or cut it up and make Coq Au Vin or fried chicken.  Whole chickens are good.

I use a roasting pan for this dish with a rack.  This is so that the chicken will cook over the vegetables and drip lovely yummy juices all over them and make them gorgeous.  I think I got it at WalMart for $10.  I use it ALL the time and I got a great big one so that I can make my 20lb. Thanksgiving turkey.  Today I made a 6lb. chicken.

Vegetables for Roasting

Cut up 4 large potatoes, 5-6 carrots, 1-2 onions, and any other root vegetable (like parsnips) that you’d like to roast.  Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil and the sprinkle with salt and pepper.

Now clean your chicken making sure you remove the neck and giblets from the cavity.  Wash the skin and pat it dry with a paper towel.  Put it on rack and place the rack in the roasting pan over the vegetables.

Depending on the size of your chicken, you add a quartered onion, 3 cloves of garlic cut in half, and 1 quarter of a lemon.  Since these won’t be eaten, you don’t need to peel them or anything.  Just shove them up in there. You’ll also need to bend the wings back on themselves..just fold them behind like the chicken is relaxing.  You don’t want them to burn.

Now this part os going to sound weird, but trust me…it adds so much.  Where I am from, you would have a hard time finding a kitchen that doesn’t keep their bacon grease stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator or in a crock on the counter.  It’s an easy way to add a smoky flavor to dishes without having to waste some perfectly good bacon that would go better on a sandwich or with eggs.  Melt about 3 Tblsp. of bacon grease and baste it over the chicken.  This will make the skin crispy and OH SO DEEEEELICIOUS.  You could also just lay 3 strips of bacon over the top of the bird but, again, I’d rather save my bacon for better things.  Add a little bit of salt and pepper to the skin.

Dressed Chicken

Now put some foil over the whole thing and place it in a 375 degree F oven.  Again, depending on the size of your bird you’ll need to cook until done.  For my little bird I cooked it covered for 2 hours and then uncovered it for 30 minutes.  When you take the roasting pan out of the oven, take the chicken (still on the rack) out of the pan and place on large cooking board or plate and cover with aluminum foil to rest.  The meat needs to rest for at least 15 minutes.  Stir the vegetables and incorporate all the flavors.

Roasted Chicken

Besides the roasted vegetables, I always like to serve a salad with this dish.  Some simple greens or a Spring Mix are perfect.  I also always like to make my own vinaigrette or dressing.  We’ll talk about those later.  For now just use up that bottled crap you’re using now, but don’t plan to buy any more.

A Gorgeous Meal

This meal is so good and it makes the house smell so damned good.  When you’re done picking most of the meat off of this, DON’T DISCARD THAT CARCASS!  We’re making chicken stock tomorrow…and you need a chicken carcass for that!  And those veggies taste magnificent cold as a quick midnight face-stuff.  Enjoy!

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