GRILLED PORK CHOPS WITH PEANUTS, SESAME AND CILANTRO
Smoke has been called the umami of barbecue, and these pork chops, which the chef Curtis Stone cooks over wood fire at his restaurant Gwen in Los Angeles, possess it in spades. Fish sauce and soy sauce provide the salt in the marinade; hoisin sauce and honey the sweetness. The peanuts and sesame seeds in the topping reinforce the nuttiness of the sesame oil in the marinade. You can use charcoal if wood is not an option, or cook over gas if necessary.
Provided by Steven Raichlen
Categories dinner, meat, main course
Time 4h30m
Yield 4 servings
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Prepare the pork chops: Place all the ingredients except for the chops in a mixing bowl and whisk to blend.
- Arrange the chops in a baking dish. Pour the marinade over the chops, turning them to coat both sides. Marinate the chops in the refrigerator for 4 hours, turning them over a couple of times so they marinate evenly.
- Meanwhile, build a wood fire in your grill with a hot zone for searing and a medium zone for cooking. (You can do the same with charcoal. If you're using a gas grill, place a few hardwood chunks under the grate over one or two of the burners. Heat one burner on high heat and additional burners on medium heat, adjusting the heat as necessary.) Brush and oil the grill grate.
- Grill the pork chops, allowing some but not all of the marinade to drip off first, until sizzling and browned on the outside and cooked to taste. If you like your pork with a blush of pink, cook until it reads 145 degrees in the center on an instant-read thermometer (about 3 minutes per side); if you like your pork cooked all the way through, look for the meat to reach 155 degrees in the center (about 4 minutes per side). Work mostly over the medium fire, moving chops to the hot fire at the end to sear the crust. Transfer the chops to a wire rack over a sheet pan and let rest for 2 minutes.
- Garnish and serve: Combine peanuts, scallions, cilantro and sesame seeds in a bowl and toss to mix. Arrange chops on a platter or individual plates. Sprinkle with peanut mixture and serve.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 1008, UnsaturatedFat 40 grams, Carbohydrate 68 grams, Fat 56 grams, Fiber 3 grams, Protein 60 grams, SaturatedFat 12 grams, Sodium 2540 milligrams, Sugar 57 grams, TransFat 0 grams
ROMESCO SAUCE
Romesco is a rich Spanish sauce of charred tomatoes and roasted red peppers, puréed and thickened with toasted almonds and bread. The flavors are further sharpened with the addition of raw garlic, vinegar, chile powder or red pepper flakes (adjust the heat to your liking). The result is a smoky, pungent sauce, one usually served with mild-mannered vegetables and fish. (Some Spaniards say that a grilled vegetable feast is just an excuse for eating romesco.) But the sauce is just as good on a piece of toast that's been brushed with olive oil and rubbed with yet more garlic. If you have the time, let the sauce stand for an hour at room temperature before serving, allowing the flavors to meld all the more.
Provided by Martha Rose Shulman
Categories brunch, dinner, lunch, appetizer, main course, side dish
Time 30m
Yield About 2 cups
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Preheat the broiler and cover a baking sheet with foil. Place the tomatoes on the baking sheet, and place under the broiler at the highest setting. Broil for two to four minutes, until charred on one side. Turn over and broil on the other side for two to four minutes until charred. Remove from the heat, transfer to a bowl and allow to cool. Peel and core.
- Turn on a food processor fitted with the steel blade and drop in the garlic cloves. When the garlic is chopped and adheres to the sides of the bowl, stop the machine and scrape down the sides. Add the toasted almonds (or almonds and hazelnuts), bread and chile powder or flakes to the bowl and process to a paste.
- Scrape down the sides of the bowl and add the pepper, tomatoes, parsley, paprika, salt and pepper. Process until smooth, and with the machine running, add the vinegar and olive oil in a slow stream, beginning with the smaller amount of olive oil and thinning out as desired. Process until well amalgamated, then scrape into a bowl.
- Taste and adjust seasoning, adding salt or chile as desired. If possible, allow the sauce to stand for an hour at room temperature before using. Serve with fish and/or grilled vegetables, or on crostini.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 416, UnsaturatedFat 33 grams, Carbohydrate 15 grams, Fat 39 grams, Fiber 5 grams, Protein 6 grams, SaturatedFat 4 grams, Sodium 485 milligrams, Sugar 6 grams, TransFat 0 grams
STEVEN RAICHLEN'S ROMESCO SAUCE
Provided by Steven Raichlen
Categories weekday, condiments
Time 35m
Yield 2 cups
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Soak chilies in hot water until soft and pliable, 30 minutes. Drain, reserving the soaking liquid, and blot dry.
- Meanwhile, preheat broiler. Arrange nuts on a foil-lined baking sheet, and broil until toasted and fragrant, 4 to 6 minutes, shaking the pan two or three times to insure even browning. Transfer nuts to a plate. When they have cooled a bit, rub hazelnuts between the palms of your hands to remove skin. (Don't worry about removing every last bit.)
- Arrange tomatoes, onion, bell pepper, jalapeno pepper and garlic on the baking sheet, and broil until darkly browned, turning to insure browning is even. This will take 4 to 6 minutes a side: remove vegetables as they are ready. Transfer vegetables to a plate and let cool.
- Place bread on baking sheet, and toast under the broiler, 2 minutes a side, until dark. Break toast into several pieces.
- Place nuts and toast in food processor, and grind to a fine powder. Add vegetables and parsley, and puree to a coarse paste. Add oil, vinegar, sugar, salt and pepper, and process to mix. The sauce should be thick but pourable: if it is too thick, add a little soaking liquid from the chili. If desired, add salt, sugar or vinegar to taste.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 366, UnsaturatedFat 27 grams, Carbohydrate 17 grams, Fat 33 grams, Fiber 5 grams, Protein 5 grams, SaturatedFat 4 grams, Sodium 559 milligrams, Sugar 6 grams, TransFat 0 grams
BACON-BARBECUED BRISKET FLAT
Packer brisket is what you order at a barbecue restaurant. The brisket flat (the leaner, flatter of the two muscles that comprise a whole brisket) is what you're more likely to find at the supermarket. Lacking the generous marbling of a packer, the flat tends to toughen and dry out during a long slow cook on your grill or smoker. But two simple techniques deliver a moist, tender brisket flat every time. The first is to cook the flat in a foil pan to shield the lean meat from the heat. The second is to drape the brisket flat with a layer of bacon, which renders its fat during cooking, basting the meat and keeping it moist. Then there's the bonus: You get to eat barbecued bacon along with your brisket.
Provided by Steven Raichlen
Categories barbecues, meat, project, main course
Time 8h
Yield 6 to 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Place the brisket in a 9-by-13-inch disposable aluminum foil drip pan and generously season the top, bottom and sides of the brisket with salt, pepper and, if you like your brisket spicy, red-pepper flakes. Set the brisket with the lean side up. (The lean side is the flatter, less fatty side.)
- Light your grill, smoker or cooker (such as a Big Green Egg) and heat it to 250 degrees. If using a kettle grill, start with less charcoal than you would for grilling a steak: A third to a half chimney starter will do it. If using a smoker, place a large heat-proof bowl of water in the smoke chamber. (This is optional, but it creates a humid environment that will keep your brisket moist and help the smoke adhere to the meat.) Add wood as specified by the manufacturer to generate smoke. If using a kamado-style cooker, set up a top-down burn: Load the fire box with lump charcoal, interspersing it with wood chunks or chips. Light 3 or 4 coals on top in the center; gradually, they'll burn down, igniting the coals and wood beneath them.)
- Transfer the brisket in its pan to the smoker and smoke for 1 hour.
- Using tongs, flip the brisket so the fat side is on top. Neatly drape the top of the brisket with half the bacon slices. Cook the brisket until the bacon is deeply browned, about 3 hours. Refuel your cooker as necessary, adding wood as needed to generate a steady stream of smoke. Remove the browned bacon slices (and feel free to snack on them as a reward for your patience). Shingle the remaining uncooked bacon slices over the top of the brisket, overlapping them slightly.
- Continue cooking the brisket until the bacon and top of the brisket are deeply browned and the internal temperature registers 200 to 205 degrees on an instant-read thermometer, another 3 to 4 hours. There should be a nice pool of bacon and brisket fat in the bottom of the pan. Refuel your cooker as needed.
- You can eat the brisket immediately, but it will be moister and more tender if you let it rest in the drip pan, covered with foil, in an insulated cooler for 1 hour.
- To serve, transfer the brisket to a cutting board. Cut across the grain into 1/4-inch slices, or as thickly or thinly as you desire, slicing the bacon along with it (or serving it on the side). Spoon any juices from the cutting board over the brisket, along with any pan drippings, to taste. Form sandwiches with bread or serve it on the side. Here, too, barbecue sauce is optional, but if you serve it, try the meat by itself first to appreciate the interplay of smoke and spice.
BEEF RIBS WITH MOL COLORADITO
The earthy, fruity, spicy, though not especially fiery "little red" mole -- one of Oaxaca's seven classic sauces -- is cooked separately and seared onto the ribs at the end to form a savory crust.
Provided by Steven Raichlen
Categories dinner, lunch, main course
Time 3h15m
Number Of Ingredients 27
Steps:
- Heat the oven to 300 degrees. Very generously season the ribs on all sides with salt and pepper. Heat a Dutch oven or large heavy pot over medium-high heat. Add the oil and heat for 1 minute. In a single layer, working in several batches if needed, brown the ribs well all over, 6 to 8 minutes a side. Transfer the ribs to a platter.
- Add the onion, carrot, and celery and cook until browned, 5 minutes, stirring often. Return the ribs to the pot and add the bay leaf and water to cover. Bake, tightly covered, until very tender, about 3 hours.
- Meanwhile, prepare the mole. Tear open the chilies, removing and discarding the stems and seeds. Place the chilies in a bowl with 2 cups warm water and soak until softened, 15 minutes.
- Heat the oil in a large saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the onion and garlic and cook until translucent but not brown, stirring with a wooden spoon, about 3 minutes. Stir in the cumin and cook for 1 minute.
- Transfer the chilies to the pan, reserving the soaking liquid. Sauté until fragrant, about 2 minutes. Add the soaking liquid and all remaining ingredients. Gently simmer until the plantains and raisins are soft, about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. Remove the cinnamon stick. Puree the sauce in a blender until smooth, then return it to the saucepan.
- Add 1/2 to 1 cup of the rib cooking liquid until the sauce is thick but pourable. Adjust the seasoning, adding salt, sugar, or vinegar to taste - the mole should be highly seasoned and a little sweet with just a faint hint of tartness. (The mole can be prepared up to one day ahead and reheated.)
- To serve, turn on the broiler or heat the oven to 450 degrees. Spoon half of the mole over the bottom of a baking dish just large enough to hold the ribs. Remove the ribs from their braising liquid, drain well, and place on top. Spoon the remaining mole over the ribs. Broil or bake until the mole sizzles and browns, 2 to 4 minutes on each side under the broiler, or 8 to 12 minutes in the oven.
More about "steven raichlens romesco sauce recipes"
HOW TO USE ROMESCO SAUCE | 4 WONDERFUL RECIPES
From butter-n-thyme.com
5/5 (1)Category Pasta
- You could use your hands and a large cutting board or bowl to combine the pasta ingredients or use a food processor.
- Combine the flour, or just use 4 cups of all-purpose flour. Make a well out of the flour and place the eggs in the middle along with the olive oil, plus 1/2 teaspoon to 1 tsp of sea salt. Mix together into a ball.
- Add flour + Salt, then 2 eggs and turn the machine on. Then add the last 2 eggs one at a time and allow the dough to come together, then add the olive oil.
PORK SECRETO WITH ROMESCO SAUCE RECIPE
From barbecuebible.com
EASY SPANISH ROMESCO SAUCE RECIPE - BARBECUEBIBLE.COM
From barbecuebible.com
BEST ROMESCO SAUCE RECIPE (5 MINUTES!) L THE …
From themediterraneandish.com
BARBECUED SALMON WITH BROWN SUGAR BUTTER GLAZE
From barbecuebible.com
ROMESCO SAUCE FROM THE BARBECUE BIBLE BY STEVEN RAICHLEN - CKBK
From app.ckbk.com
Cuisine SpainCategory SauceServings 2
SECRETO WITH ROMESCO SAUCE | BLUE RHINO
From bluerhino.com
STEVEN RAICHLEN’S SWEET-AND-SMOKY BARBECUE SAUCE
From foodschmooze.org
STEVEN RAICHLEN'S PROJECT FIRE: SEASON 2 | KPBS PUBLIC MEDIA
From kpbs.org
GRILLED CALCOTS (OR SCALLIONS OR LEEKS) - BARBECUEBIBLE.COM
From barbecuebible.com
ROMESCO SAUCE RECIPE | EAT YOUR BOOKS
From eatyourbooks.com
PORK SECRETO WITH ROMESCO SAUCE, A SPANISH PORK STEAK, FROM …
From pinterest.com
PORK SECRETO WITH ROMESCO SAUCE, A SPANISH PORK STEAK, FROM …
From pinterest.com
PROJECT FIRE: SEASON 2 - STEVEN RAICHLEN
From stevenraichlen.com
PROJECT FIRE RECIPES - EPISODE 205: SECRET STEAKS
From barbecuebible.com
You'll also love