Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Getting Saucy

In honor of BBQ season, here are three of my absolute favorite, easiest, spend the least time over a hot stove in summer steak sauces.

1. Chimichurri Sauce

The first time I had this amazing little sauce was in Amsterdam at an Argentinian steakhouse called Iguazu. If you're in The Netherlands and you want a steak, go there. At this place, there was on each table a little pot of some kind of olive oil based something. It was savory and powerful and tart. It was strange, all the flavors were very familiar but impossible to pin down. Whatever, it was INCREDIBLE on the meat. I have since learned of the Chimichurri Sauce, as varried in ingredients as in spelling. This is my version.

1/2 cup Olive Oil
1 tbsp + a little more red wine vinegar
1 clove Garlic, minced
1 tbsp Shallot, minced
1 tsp dried oregano
1/2 tsp fresh rosemary, finely chopped
1/2 tsp fresh thyme, finely chopped
1 bay leaf
1/4 tsp capers, rinsed (capers, disliked by most people I know, get a whole new lease on life when rinsed of their narsty brine)
1 tbsp fresh flat leaf parsley, chopped
salt and pepper to taste

  1. In a sauce pan, heat the olive oil on low. You just want to warm it.
  2. Add the remaining ingredients and gently stir. Add more vinegar for a more tart taste.
  3. Heat this very gently on the stove, warming it to just the edge of hot.
  4. Remove the bay leaf. Let cool to room temp, allowing all the flavors to mellow. Serve on the table as steak condiment


2. Horseradish Cream Sauce
This right here is some old school steak mojo. It is unabashedly rich and powerful. You could picture JFK putting this on his steak, or De Gaulle. In its flavor, it is a perfect cool and zangy counter to a nice grilled london broil. For all of its Cordon Bleu pedigree, this sauce is very easy to make.

Equipment
You'll need an electric beater or mixer.

1/2 heavy whipping cream
2 tsp dijon mustard
2 - 3 tbsp horseradish (the white kind, in the jar)

  1. In a preferably chilled metal bowl, whip the cream. You are not looking for fully formed whipped cream here. No stiff peaks and standing up on it's own. You want a light, aerated liquid with just a touch of fluff.
  2. Add the mustard and horseradish and mix. For a spicier sauce, add more horseradish.
  3. Cover with saran and chill in the fridge.
  4. Serve as a cool (not cold!) condiment
Two things -
  • Horseradish + Oxygen = really freaking spicy. The longer you leave this out, the hotter it will get. Cover it to tone down the zing.
  • You can add fresh herbs to this sauce as well. I like tarragon with this.



3. My Dad's Steak Sauce
I remember watching my dad make this for the first time. It was in our mod decorated kitchen in Albany, NY. It was summer and I was about 6. I remember all the windows were open and my dad had just come in from the back yard where he had grilled us dinner. It was comfortably lush and warm and dad just whipped this thing up without a thought. I was so impressed that he just knew what to go in to make it. This is one of the first distinct memories I have of cooking. I've used this super simple yet cannot be beat sauce for the last 30 years.

NOTE - this is a low-key sauce and therefore requires a certain easy going attitude towards measurements.

About 1/2 stick of butter
1/2 cup or so ketchup (substitute catsup if applicable)
A couple of dashes of Worcestershire sauce
A dash or so of Tabasco
Maybe a cap-full of soy sauce

  1. Melt the butter over medium-low heat in a small sauce pan. Just a slow, easy melt
  2. Add the ketchup and stir with a whisk or a fork to combine.
  3. Add the Worcestershire and the Tabasco and the Soy. Stir. Adjust these ingredients for desired flavor and heat it through, but not very hot at all.

2 comments:

  1. Want the horseradish sauce, with a london broil, while I wear my Jackie-O ensemble!

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  2. My fave summer grilled meat preparation:

    * 1" thick porterhouse, S&P, brought to room temp, rubbed with a roughed-up clove of garlic (you can roughen by dragging across the bone)
    * grill rare, let sit five minutes
    * bias slice to 1/4"
    * drizzle with flavorful EVOO, and the juice of a whole lemon

    Also: people who don't like capers are weird.

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