I did that.g-man wrote:i like putting a little bit of butter down to oil the pan.

I did that.g-man wrote:i like putting a little bit of butter down to oil the pan.
Step 3.5: check to see if QdEV00 is corked. If yes, then insert the following steps:DRT wrote:A stunning recipe for the Port-loving man at home alone, as DRT is this evening...
1. Go out and buy 1kg of top quality Ribeye steak.
2. Decant a bottle of Quinta da Eira Velha 2000.
3. Wait 3 hours.
4. Flash-fry 0.5kg of steak, applying liberal quantities of ground balck pepper as it cooks.
5. Pour a glass of QdEV00 to drink whilst eating steak.
6. Repeat steps 4 & 5.
7. Smugness.
Not a vegetable in sight. Excellent, not overly complicated to follow, and highly recommended.
JDAW: Please feel free to draw SCP-DFF's attention to this recipe as she may find it educational.
Note 1: Other Ports can be substituted at step 2.
Note 2: If quantity of steak is unlimited, repeat steps 4 and 5 until sated.
While the absence of salt is certainly a healthy choice, it's not necessarily a tasty choice. Liberally apply black pepper and kosher salt to steak at step 3.5. Flash fry steak with olive oil (rather than butter) for a little more healthy fry, and use a cast iron skillet. If desired done-ness is greater than "blue" and said steak is thick, consider having a 500 degree oven handy to place that steak after the 2 minutes/side searing.g-man wrote:i like putting a little bit of butter down to oil the pan.DRT wrote:A stunning recipe for the Port-loving man at home alone, as DRT is this evening...
1. Go out and buy 1kg of top quality Ribeye steak.
2. Decant a bottle of Quinta da Eira Velha 2000.
3. Wait 3 hours.
4. Flash-fry 0.5kg of steak, applying liberal quantities of ground balck pepper as it cooks.
5. Pour a glass of QdEV00 to drink whilst eating steak.
6. Repeat steps 4 & 5.
7. Smugness.
Not a vegetable in sight. Excellent, not overly complicated to follow, and highly recommended.
JDAW: Please feel free to draw SCP-DFF's attention to this recipe as she may find it educational.
Note 1: Other Ports can be substituted at step 2.
Note 2: If quantity of steak is unlimited, repeat steps 4 and 5 until sated.
Please sir, what is the chemical difference between!SushiNorth wrote:kosher salt
Kosher salt has a planar shape, standard salt has a cubic structure leading to a physical property difference as oppose to chemical.jdaw1 wrote:Derek omitted the most important step before cooking steak.
1½. Six hours before cooking, remove meat from fridge and allow to reach room temperature.
Please sir, what is the chemical difference between!SushiNorth wrote:kosher salt
My attention was drawn. I've already learned this technique for Julian. It's the tsss-tsss (with hand gestures of flipping a pancake) way of preparing Julian's dead cow. "Just wipe its bottom and bring it on a plate." And so I do. With some food in plant-form as an accompaniment. He smiles and celebrates the dead cow, but quickly scowls at the accompaniment. Tough, I say. Eat it. It won't kill you.DRT wrote:JDAW: Please feel free to draw SCP-DFF's attention to this recipe as she may find it educational.
Girls are such spoil-sports. And, incidentally, vegetables can kill you. More people have died choking on Brussels Sprouts (otherwise known as "The Devil's Testicles") that have died choking on juicy, rare lamb double-loin chops. Fact.SCP-DFF wrote: With some food in plant-form as an accompaniment...Tough, I say. Eat it. It won't kill you.
Scary. Noted very thoroughly: I shall carefully avoid eurocrat genitalia.DRT wrote:Girls are such spoil-sports. And, incidentally, vegetables can kill you. More people have died choking on Brussels Sprouts (otherwise known as "The Devil's Testicles") that have died choking on juicy, rare lamb double-loin chops. Fact.
DRT wrote:that have died
DRT wrote:add re maining LGBS.
DRT wrote:appologise
Scary.DRT wrote:appology
Oh dear. It must have been the shock of thinking about Brussels Sprouts that caused such a disasterous brain-fart. Apppolojays.jdaw1 wrote:DRT wrote:that have diedDRT wrote:add re maining LGBS.DRT wrote:appologiseScary.DRT wrote:appology
I prefer to use peanut (aka groundnut) oil as it gets hotter and can sear without the oil burning.g-man wrote: i like putting a little bit of butter down to oil the pan.
I use either 100% olive oil, or a mixture of 50% olive oil and 50% butter, depending on my mood (and as a consequence, which flavour I prefer).AHB wrote:I prefer to use peanut (aka groundnut) oil as it gets hotter and can sear without the oil burning.g-man wrote: i like putting a little bit of butter down to oil the pan.
Presumably AHB has only told us about his starter and will reveal the main course later.jdaw1 wrote:On first reading I didn’t notice the poster. My mind naturally assumed that steak joy meant DRT, but whoa! small portion. Ahhh, not DRT. That explains it.
As an outsider, I had always assumed that steak and steak was a main / pudding combination, or at least that seemed to be the form at the Crusting Pipe, I didn’t realise it could be extended to a starter / main combination, too.DRT wrote:Presumably AHB has only told us about his starter and will reveal the main course later.jdaw1 wrote:On first reading I didn’t notice the poster. My mind naturally assumed that steak joy meant DRT, but whoa! small portion. Ahhh, not DRT. That explains it.
For clarification, steak qualifies as all of the following, preferably served at least 5 minutes apart:JacobH wrote:As an outsider, I had always assumed that steak and steak was a main / pudding combination, or at least that seemed to be the form at the Crusting Pipe, I didn’t realise it could be extended to a starter / main combination, too.DRT wrote:Presumably AHB has only told us about his starter and will reveal the main course later.
And at the RAF Club it is also pudding when combined with kidney and gravy (vegetarian options are available).JacobH wrote:As an outsider, I had always assumed that steak and steak was a main / pudding combination, or at least that seemed to be the form at the Crusting Pipe, I didn’t realise it could be extended to a starter / main combination, too.DRT wrote:Presumably AHB has only told us about his starter and will reveal the main course later.jdaw1 wrote:On first reading I didn’t notice the poster. My mind naturally assumed that steak joy meant DRT, but whoa! small portion. Ahhh, not DRT. That explains it.
Even as a vegetarian, I note with sadness the lack of such fundamental British courses as pudding (before the dessert) and savoury (after). Very much limits the opportunities to try enough Port / dessert wines of different sorts.DRT wrote:For clarification, steak qualifies as all of the following, preferably served at least 5 minutes apart:
1. Amuse-bouche {although a minimum of 7 or 8 servings per person is recommended}
2. Appetiser {only 3 per person required if served following an Amuse-bouche minimum serving}
3. Sorbet {chilled and raw, obviously}
4. Entrée
5. Desert
6. With cheese
7. An after dinner snack
8. A late night supper
9. Breakfast
There are no known limits to its usefulness and no doctors that I have asked have told me it is in any way unhealthy.