Showing posts with label Comfort Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comfort Food. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Fajitas

There is no dish better suited to be topped with a fresh Pico De Gallo than a fajita taco.  Fajita meat is made with a cut called skirt steak.  It's typically a lower cost cut that is thin with a lot of connective tissue which makes it tough unless properly prepared and served.  A skirt steak is big on flavor, and with some simple techniques it can be tender as well.  It's all about the marinade, the rest, and the proper slice.

There are two cuts of skirt steak - outside and inside.  Inside is much more commonly found and is lower in cost. Outside skirt steak is the "real fajita" meat and costs more.  I don't find it at our market very often.  Rob Walsh wrote about this a couple of years ago.  The Japanese pay a premium for it and our fine government charges them no tariff, so off our outside skirt steak goes.

Juan Soto, owner of La Parranda, a local Tex-Mex place on Stuebner Airline has offered to sell me an outside cut. They are the only Tex-Mex place I know on the north side of Houston that uses outside skirt steak for their fajitas. Every time I get ready to take him up on that offer I just end up eating theirs because its wonderful.  They make a great hand made corn tortilla too!

Beef flavor should be the star in fajitas.  I don't mind some spice, but I don't care for it when it tastes like an over seasoned montage of something else.  I like beef.

I simply salt and pepper the meat and squeeze a generous amount of lime over the skirt steak.  Cover it or place it in an air tight bag and remove as much air as you can.  Let this sit on the counter for at least an hour.


The acid in the lime juice starts to break down the tough stuff. The beginning of tender tasty beef happiness. Some folks take off that thin membrane you see there in the picture.  I say screw that, its bringing some flavor to party. Trim it later when its done IMO.

I've never seen a Mexican grill any meat with out some green onions.  Never.  And its for good reason. Grilling green onion adds aroma that is hard to resist.  Skirt steak is absolutely best cooked over mesquite charcoal or wood. The char and light smoke are the final flavors needed for a real fajita taco.

On wonderfully hot coals sear each side for 5 - 6 minutes depending on just how hot you have this fire.  Flip it just once.  Skirt steak is a thin cut so I'm not necessarily looking for the medium rare pink center.  Once you've grilled the skirt steak immediately wrap it tightly in aluminum foil.  What is happening now is the meat will begin to slowly cool and rest.  Resting is very important for all grilled beef.  The high heat pushes the fat juices to the center compressing them.  Resting allows the juices to redistribute throughout the cut making for a moist piece of beef.

This grilled skirt steak can rest wrapped in foil for as long as 20 minutes and still be hot to the touch.  While your skirt steak is relaxing, grill some onion and bell pepper to use with your fajita taco.  Might as well char up a Serrano pepper for those looking for some heat.

This next best thing you can do for tender pieces of skirt steak is to be sure to slice it across the grain. Skirt steak is long and skinny.  It's tempting to just slice it cross ways from one end to the other, but that is actually with the grain and makes for tougher eating.  Cut the skirt steak in to 2" - 3" sections and slice down what once was the long side.  Now your cutting against the grain for a tender slice.

Wrong direction:














Here is an image from The Tasty Kitchen blog where she has it right.  I was too busy making tacos to snap a photo of mine.  That and my fingers were dripping with beef juices and I didn't want to smeg my camera.

Correct:


Cutting across the grain makes a massive difference in a skirt steak.  Really really important.

Toast up some tortillas on a comal for your taco.  Corn is my favorite, but you mostly find flour tortillas at the Tex-Mex joints.  I have noticed that most taco trucks serve corn tortillas interestingly enough.  


For me its best topped with Pico De Gallo.  Michelle likes some sour cream and cheese.  What ever tips your taco. Again, no photo.  By now I had pico de gallo stuck to my thumbs.  Sorry.

Making tacos sure is fun.



Thursday, January 20, 2011

Chili Pie


Thanks to my pals at Google I discovered that versions of this dish can be found all over.  Silly me.  I always thought the Brits had the patent on shepard's pie.  If you are sitting there snickering, and wondering what rock I've been living under, please just let me enjoy my new discovery.

For a day or two anyway.  Pretty please.

Cottage pie, shepard's pie, crofters' pie, pastel de papa, pastel de carne, and cowboy pie are some of the names for a dish made with leftover meat, a vegetable or two, and a potato crusted top.  I've been catching up on my Wikipedia research.  No way I can tackle the Russian name without buying some vowels.  After vodka my Russian annunciation is pitiful.  Looks like the Swedish, in their crofters' pie, mix in "neeps" which is a type of turnip.  Now that I would like to try.  Love a turnip.

I was a little short on minced lamb (true shepard's pie), so I reckon the dish I made fits the cowboy pie label the best.  Chili was common for the cowboys on the trail, and that is the leftover meat I used for this version.  Austin had done a pretty good number on the leftover game day chili, so extra ground beef was needed to complete this dish.  There was enough chili gravy to work with.   We were just a little lite on the beef.   Seasoned beef best described as taco meat was blended in with the chili for the meat part of the dish.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Game Day Chili

Google "Chili Recipe" and you will find - About 1,120,000 results (0.13 seconds)

Click on the related search link
 "Real Texas Chili Recipe" to find
-About 178,000 results (0.19 seconds) 
The blogoshpere needs another chili recipe
about as much as Matthew McConaughey
needs more hair.


However; hesitating to offer an opinion on 
an over worked topic isn't necessarily
one of my strong points.











Warning:  What you are about to read contains the opinions of a stubborn Texan, and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions and views of both the creators of The Foodie Spot.

Friday, December 31, 2010

Christmas Casserole - Helen White's Recipe

It's December 31?  You've got to be kidding me.  Seems like it was only yesterday that I was ripping open packages, assembling new gadgets, and searching for batteries.  Before the entire holiday season slips right by me, I have to share this recipe for the brunch casserole mom makes on Christmas day.  It's yum on steroids.  This casserole has been a Christmas day tradition for as long as I can remember.  Christmas stockings waiting or the smell of this casserole oozing out of the oven, not sure which makes me crazier.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Fat Mike's at the Market


There really isn't a good explanation for me not stopping in to eat at Fat Mike's any sooner than today.  It's right next to the Theiss Farm Market in Klein, so I've seen the restaurant many many times.  I went to Klein High nearby, and still marvel at the way the area has grown.  The HEB we frequent is right there as well, but for whatever reason the mitt just never closed around the ball.  Our day job office is up in The Woodland's, so getting over to Fat Mike's for lunch isn't normally in the cards. That's the excuse I am sticking with anyway. 

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Beef and Vegetable Soup - Mom's

Mom had us over for soup on Sunday which was a really cold night.  Man was her timing good.  The food blogger in me couldn't resist snapping a few pictures.  The first thing she said after seeing this picture was "OMG the plate doesn't match the bowl".  Her reaction reminded me of the time she asked "did he have clean underwear on" as the doctor stitched up my leg from a nasty spill on a bike.  A perspective only a mom could have.  It's not like I'm real "company" anyway.  Just a son mooching some of mom's good cooking.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

King Ranch Chicken - McKenzie's

My 22 year old daughter McKenzie recently had us down to her new apartment for dinner.  She managed to get her guy Colby to bring home a Christmas tree so they are getting into full Holiday mode.  McKenzie is becoming quite the foodie herself.  As a former high school and competition cheerleader, Kenz is a caloric connoisseur.  Ever see a competition cheer team hit the complimentary breakfast buffet at an Embassy Suites?  Hungry girls camouflaged in fuzzy slippers and pretty printed jammies can leave a hotel GM re-evaluating their complimentary policies.  McKenzie parlayed efficient eating into efficient cooking, and we got a first hand look at a working college student's practical tasty dinner.

Colby and Kenz are headed to the Rose Bowl!!

Friday, November 26, 2010

The Day After

No doubt there are millions of left over turkey sandwiches being made today.  Even though the world doesn't need another blog about a turkey sandwich, I write this post as a tribute to tradition.  We love our day after sandwiches so much that we roast an extra turkey to be sure there is plenty left over.  I don't want to be the one stuck with scraping meat crumbs off the carcass trying to assemble one last sandwich to satisfy an addiction.  I want nice full slices of white breast meat.  And yes, I need this sandwich like a turbo shopper needs black Friday.  While the shoppers scramble for deals, I sit comfortably on my couch eating the perfect sandwich.

The sandwich I call "The Day After" is simple and pure.  It's one sandwich that doesn't need to be molested by a foodie trying to jazz it up. 

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Tater Tot Casserole

When dad would take us out to the old A&W drive in, I always chose tater tots over french fries.  Tater tots were just more exciting too me.   If given the choice between fries and tots, I pic tots every time.  I think its that great contrast of crunchy outside and soft inside that I like.  Sometimes I whip through a Whataburger for a taquito breakfast in a pinch.  The cool thing about their meal deal is the "hash brown" is like a tater tot slab.  Tater tots for breakfast.  How cool is that?  James Coney Island and their chili cheese tater tots also hit the spot on occasion.

So Michelle tells me she is going to make tater tot casserole.  I perked up in a hurry.  Turns out that while attending Florida University she had this cook book called Six Ingredients or Less.  She would make that dish because A) she was on a tight budget, and B) it was the pinnacle of comfort food at college at 2:00am with the drink yourself sober munchies.


These days just 6 ingredients would cramp Michelle's style, but the essence of the comfort in this dish is not lost with her additions.  Being the foodie she is, things like fresh garlic and Marsala are in play.  She ends up with a refined comfort food dish.