Categories
noodles steak

black pepper steak stir fry

I’ve been enjoying a lot of noodles in the past year. Most of it down to MiMi’s fabulous education via her Noodle! book, which has encouraged me to explore on my own. I’ve made dozens of stir fries in 12 months, with many types of noodle and rice, meat, vegetables, the works. I’ve also made several trips to See Woo Stores to keep my cupboards stocked with fantastic ingredients!

It also means I’ve been attempting to recreate dishes I’ve had. Like this one:It’s inspired by a dish I had at Hakkasan, the stir-fry black pepper rib eye beef with merlot. It had a glutinous coating, yielding to tender beef and leaving a sticky pepper flavour on the palate. Really, seriously good Cantonese cooking with Western influences. I polished off the whole lot very quickly, and a few minutes later one of my dining companions asked me a question. I had to confess that I’d missed the question, as I was deep in thought as to how they’d achieved the textures and flavours in the beef!

So here’s my version of the Hakkasan dish. It’s not as clean tasting as their version, but retains the heart of it. It ticks all the boxes I was after and one I’ll be making many times.

You start by marinating bavette (skirt) steak. Whilst I love rib-eye – it’s probably my favourite steak – bavette is brilliant in stir fries and extremely tasty. But you must cook it very quickly to avoid it getting tough.

A quick flash-fry later:

After a period of resting, it’s thinly sliced and added to stir fried vegetables, noodles and a quick sauce. 

I think it’s a cracker-san. Give it a try!

Print

black pepper steak stir fry

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

For the beef:

  • 400 g bavette steak
  • 1 teaspoon cornflour
  • 1 teaspoon garlic powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon ginger powder
  • 1 tablespoon dark soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • A good six or seven grinds of black pepper

For the sauce

  • 300 ml beef stock
  • 1 teaspoon cornflour
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 inch piece of ginger minced
  • 1 tablespoon dark soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • Plenty of freshly ground black pepper to taste

For the stir fry:

  • 200 g sugar snap peas halved
  • 100 g asparagus halved
  • 1/2 red pepper diced
  • 2 nests egg noodles boiled, drained and rinsed

Instructions

  • Combine all the ingredients for the beef marinade well and baste liberally on the steaks. Leave covered for at least an hour.
  • Make your sauce by combining all the ingredients, whisking well to dissolve the cornflour.
  • When you're ready to cook, get your wok on screaming hot. Shake excess marinade off the beef and fry the steaks for 90 seconds on each side, until they have coloured well but still quite squishy to the touch. Leave on a board to rest on one side while you carry on with the rest.
  • Keep the wok hot and add a tablespoon of oil. Stir fry the vegetables until starting to soften. Keep stirring to avoid them catching, and then add the sauce (at this point you don't have to stir so diligently).
  • Slice the steak thinly. When the sauce in the wok is bubbling and thick, tip the steak and the cold noodles into the pan. Stir fry for another minute to warm up the beef and noodles, and serve immediately.
Categories
burger cheese food noodles pizza steak

what’s new – march round-up

There’s been a lot going on recently , so I thought I’d share with you a quick round up of what’s been happening…

Comte cheese workshop

Comte cheese held a cookery workshop. I absolutely love Comte cheese: smooth, nutty and full of flavour. And really versatile, as evidenced by what we cooked. Check out these beautiful scones:

We also made a delcious chicken and tarragon pie flavoured with Comte.

Cooksister gave it a much more thorough round up, with photos at least 800% better than mine. Go give it a read for the full recipe.

If you haven’t tried Comte, look for it in the supermarket – you won’t be disappointed.

Noodle Kids

I’ve fallen in love with this charming little book.

It uses the American meaning of the word ‘noodle’ taking in any and all pasta recipes. There’s making your own pasta, gnocchi, slurpy soups and all sorts. The book is infused with good humour and is especially written with young families in mind. We had great fun having a “ramen party” with our five year old, where I cooked up broth and noodles and provided a buffet of all sorts of tasty things to add to the bowl “provided there was at least two vegetables”.

I loved it. Available from Amazon.

Pizza Express 50th Birthday

Wouldn’t you know it – Pizza Express is 50 years old this year. To celebrate Pizza Express have revamped their old classics, taking them from great to excellent. Check out the “American Hottest”, a spin on the original American Hot:

More chillies, more peppers, more pepporoni! I tried this and the other modern classics out, and they’re all great fun. They’ve also opened a competition where you can design your own pizza. The prize is £10,000 and a holiday! Try it yourself.

Sainsbury’s lunch ideas

Sainsbury’s have a new range of lunch inspirations. I’ve tried the chicken tikka masala (in a clever microwavable tin), grain pot and tom yum noodle pot as below:

They’re very tasty and a good alternative if you’re in a rush. Visit your nearest Sainsbury’s for more.

Ultimate Burger Stack

I also recently posted an super indulgent burger recipe – meat lovers, you owe it to yourself to check it out.

Chop Bloc

Revenge of the meat – I had a real treat of a visit to new Chelmsford steak house Chop Bloc. Go have a read. Spoilers: it’s fab.

And finally… the In Search of Perfection Collection

My ol’ pal In Search of Heston has finally finished cooking all 16 recipes from Heston Blumenthal’s In Search of Perfection series. A massive commitment and fascinating reading. Go enjoy.

Categories
beef burger food

ultimate burger stack

There are some days when only burgers will do. Scratch that, there are some days when only an ultimate burger will do. Better than that, an ultimate triple-tier burger!

I must have made hundreds of burgers in my life of all shapes, sizes and different meats, but I’m reckon I’m proudest of this one. It’s got all my favourite bits and pieces in, full of meat flavour and lots of fun to eat to boot. Don’t get me wrong – this one’s for sharing! You could always make them a single lever, but where’s the fun in that?

It may surprise you but I don’t do much with the patty itself. Just use decent mince (or mince your own) and season generously. My top tip is to brush with oyster sauce as it finishes cooking – this lends it a delicious savoury flavour.

I took this one to another level and made my own brioche buns for this recipe, but feel free to use your own favourite buns for the purpose. If you have the time, why not try it too? I’m not the world’s biggest brioche as a burger bun fan but this was just perfect for this type of burger.

You might want to add bacon and cheese – and why not! – but I chose not to this time. It’s the garnishes that make that perfect burger.

So for a perfect weekend indulgence, treat yourself to a mega burger!

Print

ultimate burger stack

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

For the brioche buns (makes about 6):

  • 125 ml warm water
  • 2 tablespoons warm milk
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 sachet yeast
  • 300 g strong white flour
  • 2 tablespoons butter softened
  • 2 eggs

For the meat patties:

  • 400 g minced beef as good quality as you can get hold of
  • 1 tablespoon oyster sauce

For garnish:

  • 1 onion sliced
  • 1 beef tomato sliced
  • 2 - 3 gherkins chopped
  • leaves Iceberg lettuce

For the burger sauce:

  • 50 ml tomato ketchup
  • 25 ml mayonnaise
  • 1 tablespoon burger mustard

Instructions

  • For the buns, whisk the yeast and sugar into the water and milk and leave to sit while you get on with the next bit.
  • Add a teaspoon of sea salt to the flour and rub in the butter with your fingertips until it resembles breadcrumbs. Stir in one of the eggs and the yeasty mix.
  • Tip the mix on to a generously floured surface. The dough will be super sticky but bear with it and knead for 10 minutes. Add to an oiled bowl and leave to rise for 2 hours.
  • After two hours, knock it back then reform into your bun shapes. Cover loosely and allow to prove for a further hour. Preheat the oven to 200C.
  • Beat the other egg and glaze the top of the rolls. Bake for 20 minutes or until puffed up and brown, and cool on a wire rack before using.
  • For the burgers season the beef generously with salt and pepper, then form into patties (you should get 2 - 3). Allow to rest in the fridge for 30 minutes before using, this cools the fat down to keep them together while cooking.
  • For the burger sauce, mix the ingredients together and keep refrigerated until needed.
  • Lightly fry the onion slices in olive oil until softened and keep aside until needed.
  • Get a non-stick frying pan over a medium-high heat. Cook the patties, flipping every minute until cooked to your liking. For the last minute of cooking brush the top side with oyster sauce for a beautiful shine and delicious savouriness.
  • Assemble your burger with tomato, lettuce, gherkins, onions and burger sauce in your bun. Devour messily with a dining companion.

After more delicious burger recipes?

Kavey describes the perfect burger

Dannii shows you how to make a cumin spiced lamb burger

Camilla goes Brazilian

Here’s Bintu’s chipotle venison burgers

Fancy a vegetarian option? Try quinoa burgers

Categories
eating out restaurant review steak

chop bloc restaurant review

Steakhouses are a great thing. If you live in London you are spoiled for choice with your Goodmans, Hawksmoors, Byrons etc. Steak specialists have started to spread to Essex such as Southend’s Bourgee. Now Chelmsford can claim it’s own prime steakhouse. Chop Bloc is a new opening that looks to recreate the best elements of steakhouses from London, America and Canada.

After spending years working in abbatoirs and meat distribution supplying the big high street chains, the two founding brothers wanted to make their mark with a quality steakhouse.

Four years from conception, the building is impressive from outside to in. Built into an 18th century grain house and brewer’s, there is a happy marriage of original features, nods to the past and modern flourishes. There’s exposed brickwork, thick mahogany, vaulted beams and leather banquettes. I was reminded of Gallagher’s, my favourite Manhattan steakhouse.

The rustic lighting hangers are actually abbatoir meathooks, a callback to the founders’ background.

Two floors are standard table service. Meanwhile, upstairs is Bloc Bar, a more leisurely area better suited to cocktails.

But, on to the beef. Sourced from an supplier of Hereford cattle, they take the unusual (for the UK) move of dry aging the meat onsite. There’s storage for over three tons of beef in the building, which gives the chef great flexibility to portion the meat when it’s at it’s finest.

But before we could try this meat, some starters. There were plenty of chicken wings of different flavours, as good as they should be, but I had a real gem in panko-crusted pork belly with a kecap manis dip. Perfectly crisp but melting inside, this is one I’m going to be recreating at home.

But enough of this, where’s the beef? Well, you can order pretty much any well-known cut and with a little prior notice a less well-known one too. We tried rump, fillet and picanha.

If you look at the picture above, you can probably see how good it is. Cooked in a Josper charcoal oven, the outside has a smoky bark-like char, while the middle gives way, perfectly tender. And it’s this gradation that co-founder Steve was keen to attain. Rather than a uniform sous-vide steak (not that I have a problem with that) your meat has different layers of texture and taste.

Treated with care, steak is a thing of real beauty. It’s one of those things most people can cook, but there’s a heap of work, experience and effort that goes into making it a fantastic dinner. This was everything a great steak should be. Packed with flavour, moist and tender yet still something to get your teeth round. Trust me: it’s great.

There was also a stunning range of side dishes: fries (regular and sweet potato), mash, poutine, macaroni cheese, spinach, portobello mushrooms, chipotle sweetcorn… enough to keep you going, let’s say.

Good meat does not come cheap, and here it emulates the US model which can feel unusual in this country. You buy your steak solus, then surround it with sides from the menu. A rib-eye starts at £21, rump £15. In my mind decent steak – decent food full stop – should be paid for properly. Cheap food has a price somewhere down the line. But for spoiling someone, or spoiling yourself, I can think of few better things to do than scoff down an exceptional steak. And Chop Bloc is where I’d like to go to do it. There’s passion in every element of the restaurant, from the chairs to front of house to the beer choices and everything in between, and it shows in the final product. I wish the brothers every success.

Seated opposite the kitchen, I did see fish and poussin alternatives, as well as a wide range of burgers and vegetarian dishes, but let’s not kid ourselves. This place exists to satisfy steak lovers, and it goes further than that. It excites them.

Chop Bloc is open every day for lunch and dinner. You can find it at Grays Brewery Yard, Springfield Road, Chelmsford, CM2 6QR, or visit the website.

I was a guest of Chop Bloc and didn’t pay for dinner. If they’d have told me what to say however, I would’ve laughed all the way to McDonald’s.

Exit mobile version