Beef:
A little known fact is that some of the cheapest cuts of beef are also the most flavorful. Fat is the key. It's what gives beef flavor. The drawback, though, is that these cheap cuts are usually really tough, so they require some special cooking. Namely, low heat and moisture. Brisket is the perfect example. Sloooooooooooooow smoked on a loooooooooooooow, moist, heat with a good dry rub -- it's 10x as good as a filet mignon and every bit as tender. Smoking a brisket is an all day affair and is the perfect excuse to buy a case of beer, build a charcoal fire in the smoker, and sit in the shade and totally blow a Saturday.
But one of my favorites is pot roast. Any old roast will do.
Jab the roast full of holes and put in each hole a pinch of salt, black pepper and just a hint of red pepper. Easy on the red pepper. A little goes a long, long way. Plug the hole with slivers of garlic. Then brown the roast a minute or two on each side in a heavy pan along with a chopped onion. Celery is good too. Use a little vegetable oil for the browning, more or less, depending on how much beef fat is in the roast.
In the same pot, then add water about 3/4 covering the roast. Simmer the roast until it's fork tender. Usually 4 hours or more depending on the size. The cooking temperature is important. Do not boil the meat else it will be dry. A simmer is just below the boiling point. Add some vegetables about 30 minutes before it's done. I like baby carrots, pearl onions and tiny red-skinned potatoes.
Check out this blog: http://mostlycajun.com/wordpress/
Under recipes and food he has a TON of good 'po-folks' recipes. And the blog isn't half bad either.
A little known fact is that some of the cheapest cuts of beef are also the most flavorful. Fat is the key. It's what gives beef flavor. The drawback, though, is that these cheap cuts are usually really tough, so they require some special cooking. Namely, low heat and moisture. Brisket is the perfect example. Sloooooooooooooow smoked on a loooooooooooooow, moist, heat with a good dry rub -- it's 10x as good as a filet mignon and every bit as tender. Smoking a brisket is an all day affair and is the perfect excuse to buy a case of beer, build a charcoal fire in the smoker, and sit in the shade and totally blow a Saturday.
But one of my favorites is pot roast. Any old roast will do.
Jab the roast full of holes and put in each hole a pinch of salt, black pepper and just a hint of red pepper. Easy on the red pepper. A little goes a long, long way. Plug the hole with slivers of garlic. Then brown the roast a minute or two on each side in a heavy pan along with a chopped onion. Celery is good too. Use a little vegetable oil for the browning, more or less, depending on how much beef fat is in the roast.
In the same pot, then add water about 3/4 covering the roast. Simmer the roast until it's fork tender. Usually 4 hours or more depending on the size. The cooking temperature is important. Do not boil the meat else it will be dry. A simmer is just below the boiling point. Add some vegetables about 30 minutes before it's done. I like baby carrots, pearl onions and tiny red-skinned potatoes.
Check out this blog: http://mostlycajun.com/wordpress/
Under recipes and food he has a TON of good 'po-folks' recipes. And the blog isn't half bad either.
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