If you research the Heinz company and the how and why they got started there is a truth to this.
Heinz 57 is proof that there are 56 ways to make the wrong condiments!
Heinz 57 is proof that there are 56 ways to make the wrong condiments!
Rib roasts get salt, pepper, rosemary, and olive oil. If you ever get down to Wilmington NC, stop by for good eats and fun woodworking projects. Possibly hookers too.When I do a roast (like standing rib or tenderloin) I coat it with bacon fat mixed with mustard powder. Needs to be thick so it sticks. It is an awesome way to coat a roast. Olde English thing. If you can get the really hot Irish or Newport-Pagnell Mustard or powder... it's incredible on a roast.
Never thought of it on Brisket. But what a great idea!
Thanks for that! Another good tip for CFS!
Sirhr
You sir, know what you're doing.Snipped for the important stuff.
This is why you use cube steak. You don't pound a NY strip or a ribeye with a mallet unless you bought it from some guy with a freezer in the back of his truck in a parking lot.
I like to put Tabasco and gravy on CFS.
Is this a bring your own hammer event or will they be provided?Rib roasts get salt, pepper, rosemary, and olive oil. If you ever get down to Wilmington NC, stop by for good eats and fun woodworking projects. Possibly hookers too.
Never mix hookers and hammers. Didnāt you learn anything from the Pelosi incident?Is this a bring your own hammer event or will they be provided?
Someone needs to clean up the wood shop after we're done.Possibly hookers too.
This is not the Tenderloin, you big bully!Is this a bring your own hammer event or will they be provided?
Speaking of wrapped in bacon:Wrap the back strap in a slice of bacon and cook on the grill until the bacon is done.
Hilarious story and well written! I read it to my wife for a laugh. Sheās a ketchup person, that has learned how good steak tastes and now enjoys it without the red stuff.Nope... I am very selective about what goes on real steak. But CFS is sort of... breading and steak.
Funny story, though. Like yours!
Back in 1990's I organized a cigar dinner for a bunch of folks who needed some 'Sprucing up.' To fit in with executives and gummint officials and the like. It was put on by a super high-class restaurant. We had a private room. 7 Course meal with a cigar and a liquor/wine/adult beverage with every course. One of the best meals I ever had. Chef was a friend of mine and pulled out all the stops. The main course was ribeye... amazing pieces of meat!
So it's going great. We're having cigars... amazing aperatif's and wine's. Incredible pre-courses. The conversation is good and loud. Everyone is having a good time... and we are giving some good lessons on eating/decorum during the whole thing. Part of the point of the evening. Which napkin to use and not drinking the finger bowls.
About 1.5 hours in (long dinner) it's main course time. The steaks come out. They are incredible. There are some garnishes (horseradish, house-made steak-sauce, English Hot Mustard, etc...). But mostly the blackened steaks are just perfect they way they are. Right about the time the last steak is served, there is one of these coincidental 'pauses' in conversation. The room goes quiet. Right at that instant a man who shall be known only as "Tim" Blurts out: "Excuse me, can I have some Ketchup?"
It was like all the air was sucked out of the room. There was about this 10 second dead silence. The waiters froze. The chef Froze. I froze. Not a sound in the room.
"Tim" looked like he had been hit in the head with a bat. And said... "Never mind."
We went back to making merry.
To this day... when anyone is getting together with "Tim"... he asks if he wants some Ketchup. He gets Ketchup at Christmas. Guys from our old team send him Ketchup T-Shirts. Ketchup napkins. Ketchup aprons. Ketchup.
So I get it! But there is also a place and a time for Heinz 57. And a chicken fried steak is one of them.
Just 'sayin!
Oh and I am going to send this thread to Tim. He is still around. And has a Ketchup neurosis. I think that is because people started putting ketchup packs in his desk, his boots, his glove box... his mail box...
Ah, Tim is going to enjoy this thread. It will send him to Therapy tomorrow. It's not PTSD. It's Heinz.
Sirhr
Yeah, they were also products of the Great Depression and many grew up without refrigeration. That it can be done, in desperation, when no other options are available, does not mean that it should be done.ETA: Most every member of the silent and greatest generations that I knew ate their steaks well done with ketchup.
Iām still partial to hash browns, and eggs sunny side up, covered and smothered with my CFS. Tobasco or El Yucatano Black as a kicker.Just so you Yankees know and don't fuck it up , a properly cooked chicken fried steak must be served with a big pile of homemade mashed potatoes with lots of lumps in it . None of that hungry jack out of the box shit !
Iāve gone from sunny side up to over easy to now frying my egg for a bit and then adding water for a fried/poached combo. Game changer. CFS is a favorite but Iāve never tried to cook it myself. Live too far north.Iām still partial to hash browns, and eggs sunny side up, covered and smothered with my CFS. Tobasco or El Yucatano Black as a kicker.
A great foundation before a competition or day at the range. Iāll usually last until supper that way.
Thatās not wrapped in bacon. Thatās ācasually associated with bacon.āSpeaking of wrapped in bacon:
View attachment 7988281
Baby back ribs wrapped in thick cut.
View attachment 7988282
Knows what ?^^^^^^^ This man knows.
Why don't you and Toto run back to Kansas before you break the thread again !Knows what ?
How to skimp on gravy ?
Yea, he has that down.
Not break again. Still broken.Why don't you and Toto run back to Kansas before you break the thread again !
But, he could break page 3. We should probably report all of his posts, just in case. You know, for the sake of the site.Not break again. Still broken.
Obviously you use toilet paper to clean up your brain matter spills.But, he could break page 3. We should probably report all of his posts, just in case. You know, for the sake of the site.
Iām willing to risk losing your ācontentā on that lack of info.Obviously you use toilet paper to clean up your brain matter spills.
Think little boy, think.
You don't know how the thread broke.....and I'm not telling you how.
But....I know.
There's a tidbit for you to peruse with your simple sub 100 mentality.
Go back to arf ya doof.
Please post your treatise on the gravy. You write how to make the steak in a clear manner. Hell, you make it sound so easy, even a caveman could do it.
Science is there, north or south, but I guess it takes a northerner to explain it.Leave it to someone north of the Mason Dixon to bring science into southern cooking.
If you are buying your ribeye and NY strip from a guy with a freezer in the back of a pickup in a parking lot go ahead and pound the shit out of them. But you should probably use them as dog food instead of CFS.
You truly just went and stuck your dick in an ant hill !My recipe is take it out of the freezer and put it in the microwave. If you're not in a hurry the oven is even better.
Thatās his specialty.
Dang those look good! I buy the whole pork loins at Costco or Sam's Club and slice the up into small roasts and chops so yeah, I'll slice some thin and try this.Folks talking about other cuts, here's nother critter. Thin porkchopd prob 5/8. Pounded out and cut up. Fried up the same way as cubesteak. I ran elec stove between around 50%, adjusting as needed. Started off hotter, turned down as cooked. I'm not the butter woman that got fired for calling folks nigger, but I bet I'm at least as country as her.
View attachment 7994667
View attachment 7994668
View attachment 7994669
Thatās never been a secret, thatās the norm.When I was young my aunt made the best fried chicken I ever ate in my life. I later found out her secret, Crisco and a cast iron pan !
My recipe is take it out of the freezer and put it in the microwave. If you're not in a hurry the oven is even better.
Sacrilege.Dang those look good! I buy the whole pork loins at Costco or Sam's Club and slice the up into small roasts and chops so yeah, I'll slice some thin and try this.
Different meal, different preparation.Sacrilege.
Put some dry rub on them, wrap in bacon strips, and smoke for about 6-8 hours on very low heat (200-225).
Just before done turn the heat up to 350-400 to crisp up bacon for maybe 5-10 minutes.
Slice very thin, put on split rolls with bbq sauce of whatever type you like.
Just get yourself a Pelosi approved California framer, so you can make your real Steak Pelosi.So it doesn't count as CFS... but your tips came in great last night. I made a couple of breaded pork chops. Baked them... didn't fry them. But the egg batter (with some heavy cream added), panko crumbs and some spices (chipotle, paprika garlic salt) in the breading... were the best pork chops I ever made. I'm actually not much of a pork chop guy. But got these 1.5" thick massive chops a friend brought from the Ft. Myers commissary.
Made white gravy as well... Now I see why folks love pork chops. I was raised on nasty thin grocery store pork chops. Oh no... now I understand!
Probably do CFS this weekend. Still need to buy a tenderizing hammer. Going near a kitchen supply place today... so may run in and grab one.
This thread is cooking gold, folks! Thanks for all your input!
Sirhr