After a half an hour, the onions were perfectly caramelized, so I removed them from the pan and replaced them with my chopped slab bacon, and let it cook for about 5 minutes. Meanwhile, I was also blanching the Brussels Sprouts in preparation for pulling this side dish together! I also put the steaks on the heat at this point, as well.
I don't claim to be a master chef, and everything I've learned I've either picked up from somewhere, or taught myself. I believe that anyone can eat gourmet meals at home, it just takes a little effort. I want to help you through the process. I'm going to talk food, on a daily basis. Cooking, techniques, ingredients, restaurants...you name it, you'll get it here!
Showing posts with label green peppercorn sauce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green peppercorn sauce. Show all posts
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Dinner : Late-Night
When my husband has his hockey game in the earliest time slot for his league, we eat rather late in the evening. I chose a pretty simple meal for this late-night dinner because otherwise, it's difficult to time it perfectly for when he arrives home. I had gotten another great deal on an Omaha Steaks package, which was delivered on Thursday, so I took the opportunity to use a couple of filet mignons. I turned on the Grammys and set to it.
While the Pan-Seared Beef Filet with Green Peppercorn Sauce recipe calls for a pairing of greens and mashed potatoes, I opted for Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Bacon, Caramelized Onions and Sage, from a recent TastingTable email that I received. After gathering all of my ingredients, I realized that the side dish was going to take longer than the main course, so I set to caramelizing the onions first.
After a half an hour, the onions were perfectly caramelized, so I removed them from the pan and replaced them with my chopped slab bacon, and let it cook for about 5 minutes. Meanwhile, I was also blanching the Brussels Sprouts in preparation for pulling this side dish together! I also put the steaks on the heat at this point, as well.
Once the bacon had properly rendered, I added the Brussels Sprouts, halved, with the cut sides down, allowing them to caramelize in the bacon fat before stirring everything up. After allowing the sprouts to fully cook, I added the onions back to the pan, along with some sage, lemon juice, olive oil and flaky sea salt for seasoning. I kept that on the stove on low while I finished the steak sauce.
After four minutes on one side, and three minutes on the other, I removed the steaks from the pan, allowing them to rest on a cutting board while I quickly made a sauce out of shallots, red wine, beef broth, a little bit of cornstarch, and some ground green peppercorns. The sauce was finished with a little pat of butter and we were ready to go!
I have to say, the Brussels Sprouts dish really shined tonight. I'm going to keep that recipe for sure! While the steak was good, it was a bit generic and I probably won't make it again...then again, do I ever make the same thing twice?!
After a half an hour, the onions were perfectly caramelized, so I removed them from the pan and replaced them with my chopped slab bacon, and let it cook for about 5 minutes. Meanwhile, I was also blanching the Brussels Sprouts in preparation for pulling this side dish together! I also put the steaks on the heat at this point, as well.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)