For all who have been waiting with watering mouths to hear how the locally sourced but still well traveled sauerbraten turned out:
Flavor: Superior. With the switch to grassfed beef from conventionally raised beef, flavor was a concern. Most of all, the "livery" taste which brings back horrors of childhood when my parents made liver and onions twice a week. There was no livery taste for this meal because these steps were followed: defrost slowly in the refrigerator, rinse thoroughly under cold running water, pat dry with copious paper towels. Well, and also I augmented the braising liquid with a full bottle of local red wine. If some is good, more is better, right?
Texture: Meh. The meat was fall apart tender, but stringy. One guest suggested that was due to having been cut with the grain rather than across the grain. Actually, there was no cutting that meat. It was so tender it wouldn't stand up to a knife. But since sauerbraten is really just a German flavored pot roast, this wasn't such a bad thing.
In the end, substituting a local sourced product into jealously regarded family recipe was as success. And as it turned out, the best way to deal with the controversial issue of whether or not to add gingersnaps to flavor the sauce was to cleverly avoided by inviting a guest with celiac disease. Some simple substitutions in the recipe were made: arrowroot starch for flour to thicken the sauce, potatoes instead of spaetzle were served. On the subject of the controversy, there was not a peep at the dinner table ;).
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Sunday, October 21, 2012
Saturday, October 13, 2012
It's a Localite Life
I know many are waiting to hear how the grassfed
sauerbraten turned out (you know who you are, and you know your mouth is
watering). But see, when it comes to sauerbraten, patience is a virtue.
It is still marinating; today is Day 6. So, since it is Sauerbraten
Eve Day, I spent some time walking around the point in Carmel with a friend and
as it turns out, a gazillions of neighbors and Carmel tourists.
Having preemptively burned off
calories I fully intend to replenish with sauerbraten and red cabbage, I
stopped by Whole Foods on the way home. I'm planning on serving a raw
beet salad with walnuts and persimmons in vinaigrette, so I picked some of
these local lovelies as I listened to a Whole Foods employee explaining
the importance to purchasing local foods to a group of children from Community
Partnerships for Youth, an organization I used to work with as a principal in
Seaside. :)
So, I was filled nirvana as a
former science teacher and middle school principal still high
on endorphins from exercise until I checked out my groceries (never
mind the total) and the checker asked me if I wanted my beet tops.
(Insert sound of needle scratching on a record here). I must have
been dismayed, because she explained "Sometimes people don't want them, so
we cut them off and Clint Eastwood comes by and feeds them to his
animals."
............Really?
I ate them sautéed in local olive
oil with black beans for supper.
Sunday, October 7, 2012
The Well Traveled Sauerbraten: Part I
For a few years now, I've been buying local, grassfed beef from Morris Grassfed Beef in San Juan Bautista. The change for the most part has been easy. The ground beef is delicious, and is usually destined for bolognese sauce. But in other aspects, change has been scary. To illustrate this point, I have been moving a roast around for about two years now. A few years ago, the house I lived in needed to be tented for termite. out went all the food, including a cross rib roast a little over three pounds in weight. Then next house I lived in had to be termite tented, too. This time the roast spend a week in a friends freezer down the road. Last spring I moved into a third house, and said roast moved in with me.
Part of the reason why this roast has become such a seasoned traveler is that grassfed beef needs to be cooked a little differently. And truthfully, I've been a little scared to cook it, fearing it would be a disaster.
It's finally Fall, and in my family we enjoy celebrating our German and German American heritage. Sauerbraten in somewhat of a cult to us. We all love it, especially when it is served with spaetzle and red cabbage. Its also somewhat of scandal. So when I ventured into the idea of making it with the family recipe with my grassfed roast, I unwittingly committed my self to a project with a lot of pressure. "How long will you marinate it?" my father interrogated. "Are you going to thicken the sauce with ginger snaps?" worried my mom. (Whether to include or not include the ginger snaps at the end has always been controversial).
Fortunately, the recent heat provided some reprieve and a handy excuse to procrastinate the venture. It would have been unseemly to cook a roast in 100 degree plus heat, right?
Finally, it has become a now or never situation. The marinade is made, and cooling to room temperature. Next: commence marination (one week).
Monday, November 21, 2011
Taste of the Season, Moss Landing
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Buenas Tardes, Martes
Yellow Cauliflower and Romanesco |
I am astonished at the lack of etiquette I've experienced at the Tuesday market. Why must people wander aimlessly, stopping to eat their sample strawberry in the middle of a stream of foot traffic? At many of my favorite vendor's stands, people pick their produce and thrust their bags at the vendor without even greeting them. I'm an educator and truly love children, but I don't love it when I am cut off by their parents pushing their double wide high tech strollers while the whole family shares a gyro. What bothers me the most is the total lack of awareness of others that some people have.
I asked the vendor who sold me snap peas and oranges about the day and he shared my sentiment: "Not a good crowd. People just here to look."
Bah, humbug. Better luck on Friday. In the meantime, tomorrow's menu includes a twist on Mom's Cream of Cauliflower Soup. I wonder what she would say to see me substitute the giant chartreuse and purple monster pictured above?
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Farm Fresh Produce
Highway 1, Moss Landing |
This sign makes me wonder if the produce stand and the San Jose market are connected. Inside, I find local honey and cheap produce. I know the asparagus, avocados, and pineapple I buy are not organic and likely seconds that were not selected for store retail, but I don't care. I buy them all in a trance caused by this scent that has awakened something in the depths of my memory.
Dusty packages of dried fruits are stacked on shelves next to orchids plants and candy I remember wanting as a child. There are sesame crisps made with honey that my mother used to give me. As when I was a child, there are all sorts of things to discover. Today's discovery is a sort of citrus I have never seen before: Shasta tangerines. They look warty and alien to me, but I buy one anyway, just to see what it tastes like. I smile to myself as I pick the ugliest one. As a child I used to pick the ugliest pumpkin on the patch, imagining that its feelings would be hurt to be overlooked by children wanting a perfect jack-o-lantern pumpkin. I must have watched too many Charlie Brown specials.
Shasta tangerines |
I have very few childhood memories, and I can't recall a specific day of being at the San Jose flea market. I will probably never fully recall this memory or know anymore about it, since I have no sibling with whom I shared the experience. I was probably there often. All I know is that there is an ephemeral smell that hits me when I walk near this produce stand, and sensing it makes me feel happy.
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Incredibly Cool Discovery in Monterey County
According to the The Monterey Herald, "The bones of a juvenile Ice Age Columbian mammoth have been found in a field near Castroville, the first discovery of its kind in Monterey County." See Localite Links for more information.
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