April 22nd, 2008

Steak and Potatoes — a Little Different

This recipe for steak and potatoes is a slight departure from the tried-and-true baked potato and grilled steak.

I absolutely LOVE a baked potato and grilled steak, but this combines chunks of red potatoes, mushrooms and shallots with a grilled, sliced sirloin. The photos are to die for.

Try it and impress yourself!

Here’s the link:

http://thebarefootkitchenwitch.typepad.com/the_barefoot_kitchen_witc/2008/02/valentines-da-8.html


April 21st, 2008

The Healing Powers of Steak (Maybe)

Good Monday to you!

I was watching old “Seinfeld” reruns (a common theme in my life when I can’t sleep due to an overactive mind and borderline OCD) and I caught the one where Kramer gets a nice shiner and busts into Jerry’s apartment looking for a steak to heal it.

Jerry hands him a big T-bone and Kramer puts it right on his eye with a huge, “Ahhhhh!”

Now, we see this all the time in the arts — plays, movies, TV shows, cartoons — where someone puts a raw steak on their eye to soothe a black-and-blue bruise.

Is it really true? Does steak really have healing powers?

My inquiring mind wanted to know. So I set about looking for the answer. First stop, Wikipedia. Here’s what the collective wisdom was there:

Putting a raw steak on a black eye (an old wives’ tale) has long been known to have no medicinal value; doing this will lessen the bruise, but not the inflammation.

Here’s what I found at answers.yahoo.com (if it has the word “answers” in it, it must be correct, right?):

No . . . however the coldness of raw meat act like ice. 
A bag of frozen peas is better and cheaper, but to get rid of the discolouration you need an astringent like witch hazel or good old vinegar, the white one works the best.

MotherNature.com says this:

Sirloin steak is what my father used,” says Jimmy, a second-generation butcher at Richard and Vinnie’s Quality Meats in Brooklyn, New York. “When I was a kid, I used to get a lot of black eyes, and my father, being a butcher, used to put steaks on them. And it worked!”

Jimmy’s dad had the right idea, but it was the coldness of the steak, not the meat itself, that did the trick. In fact, a vegetarian would have gotten the same results by using iceberg lettuce!

So . . . looks like our steak’s coldness is its true healing power. But my belief is:  If YOU believe it helps you, then it does! 


April 18th, 2008

10 Years of Steak and Bliss

Howdy, fellow steak lovers!

Today is my 10th wedding anniversary. My husband and I got married way back in the ’90s. Wow. Our wedding day was even in another century.

Here we are on our very special day . . .
ourwedding.jpg

Wait, that’s Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise. My bad. 

Anyway, so many things have changed for us in a decade. But one thing that has stayed the same after all these years? The way we celebrate.

For the 10th year in a row, my husband and I will be dining on two, buttery KC Strips. Yes siree, we always look forward to April 18th because we each know we’ll be chowing down on some fine food with our favorite person.

No Happy Meals, no talk of bills and no soccer balls in our peripheral vision.

Just planning for the future and laughing at the past. Now that’s my idea of a good time.

So here’s to the next decade, Snookums! (I don’t really call him that. I just wanted to use the most embarrassing name I could think of.)

This year, the steaks are on me–out of your checking account!

Photo: Robert Evans via People.com


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About Me

Hi! My name is Dena P., and I love steak. In fact, I’ve been on a quest for the perfect steak for a few years now.

I love experimenting with food and I like to get my family, friends and neighbors involved. They add a lot to my cooking experience by helping me perfect techniques and sharing recipes.

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