Archive for November, 2009
Steak Temperatures Are So Personal
Steaks Temps Are So Personal
The amount of time a steak is cooked is a personal preference. Shorter cooking times retain more juice, while longer times result in drier, sometimes tougher or firmer meat. Longer times do reduce concerns regarding food borne diseases. (I should not have included that sentence because now I’ve got to say that foodborne illness from steaks are astoundingly rare. Pathogens exist on the outside of the steak and even the most modest cooking time kills those off quickly. The problem is when we grind up the steak and mix the outside with the inside, allowing the pathogens a moist place to breed and grow.)
In “the business”, a vocabulary has been developed to allow effective communication between the cooks and the customers about the customers’ desires. These terms are from the least cooked to the most cooked:
RAW – yep, literally raw. Now don’t be surprised: think Steak Tartar, Carpaccio
BLUE RARE or VERY RARE – 110F core temperature – cooked very quickly, outside is seared but the inside is usually cool or barely warmed. Steak will be red on the inside and barely warmed. Sometimes referred to as BLOODY RARE
PITTSBURGH BLUE or BLACK AND BLUE – means a steak charred on the outside and Rare or Very Rare inside – black from the soot on the outside and blue from the Blue Rare inside
RARE – 120F core temperature – outside is grey-brown and the middle of the steak is red and slightly warm
MEDIUM RARE – 145F core temperature – a fully red but warm center – most upscale steakhouses recommend cooking to this temperature
MEDIUM – 150F core temperature – a hot, red center with pink surrounding the center
MEDIUM PLUS – 155F core temperature – a hot, pink center seldom used these days but still heard among the old timers.
MEDIUM WELL or MEDIUM WELL DONE– 160F core temperature – purists insist there must be just a touch of pink is allowed but the extreme vast majority prefer no pink at all.
WELL DONE – 170F core temperature – the meat is gray brown throughout and slightly charred.
The ‘Pittsburgh’ term is used for the Blue or the Rare but almost never to other temperatures. A CHICAGO style steak is cooked to the desired temperature then quickly charred on the outside. Customers order using the style and then naming the temperature desired.
PITTSBURGH BLUE CHICAGO BLUE
PITTSBURGH RARE CHICAGO RARE
CHICAGO MEDIUM RARE
CHICAGO MEDIUM
CHICAGO MEDIUM PLUS
CHICAGO MEDIUM WELL
CHICAGO WELL DONE
It’s no secret that cooks hate to overcook a steak. The more cooking time the more likely a person is to say the meat is tough. It’s a Catch-22 in which we want to please the customer but which means we must ‘ruin’ a piece of excellent beef to do it.
Christmas Cocktail Recipes
Christmas Cocktails From The Double Eagle
Enjoy!!
Champagne Cosmo
.75 oz Vodka
1.0 oz Cranberry Juice
Splash Grand Marnier
4 oz Champagne
In champagne flute, pour vodka, cranberry juice and grand marnier then fill will chilled champagne. Garnish with an orange peel twist.
Ginger Snap
1.5 oz Captain Morgan Spiced Rum
5.0 oz Egg Nog
1/8 tsp Ground Ginger
Pour over ice in a shaker, shake three times and serve in a chilled glass and sprinkle a pinch of nutmeg over the top for garnish
Cranberry Kiss
1.5 oz Captain Morgan Spiced Rum
4.0 oz Cranberry Juice
1.0 oz Sweet N Sour Mix
In a tall glass of ice, pour rum, cranberry juice and top with sweet n sour mix. Stir well and serve with a lemon wedge for garnish
Minty Mistletoe Martini
1.5 oz Bailey’s Irish Cream
1.5 oz Peppermint Schnapps
Pour over ice in a shaker, shake three times and serve in a chilled martini glass with a peppermint stick for garnish.
Bailey’s Espresso Martini
1.5 oz Bailey’s Irish Cream
2.0 oz Espresso or Dark Coffee, cooled
Pour over ice in a shaker, shake three times and serve in a chilled martini glass with a three chocolate covered coffee beans for garnish.
Cinnamon Toast
1.5 oz Captain Morgan Spiced Rum
3.5 oz Apple Cider, warmed
Pour hot water into a coffee mug to warm then pour out the water. Add the rum and the cider. Stir with a cinnamon stick for garnish.
Mango Splash
4 ripe Mangoes or 2 cups Mango Puree
1/3 cup Triple Sec
3 Tbsp Lime Juice
3 Tbsp Sugar
2 bottles California Sparkling Wine
Peel and pit mangoes and add flesh or puree to blender cup. Add triple sec, lime juice and sugar. Puree till smooth. Add 2 tbsp of puree to champagne flute and top with sparkling wine. Makes about 24 glasses.