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Grilled Lamb


When start your life you have no idea who will enter it or who will leave it. Honestly when you start off life as a baby the only things you're thinking about are; "I'm hungry," "There's no way I'm cleaning up the mess I just made in my diaper," and "I'm only going to retain, at the very most, blurry shapes from this period of my life, so why am I having such complex thoughts?" The point I'm eventually going to make is that sometimes in life you meet cool people and on rarer occasions you get to work with those people. 

That's what happened with this post. See that fancy looking ice cream up above? Well it just so happened Katy's good friend Michelle has a dessert blog, called More Chocolate! So, we decided it would be a great idea to work on a post together. 

Herbs

We figured since it is summer that it's only natural that we should grill something. I decided to grill up some lamb and Michelle grilled up some peaches to go with her homemade vanilla ice cream, which you can find on her blog here. 

Grilled Lamb Chops with Peach Balsamic Sauce

Serves 3-4 people
  • 1 rack of lamb or 8 chops
Marinade:
  • 1/4 cup Balsamic vinegar
  • 1/2 cup Port
  • 1 Lemon juiced
  •  Fresh Thyme
  • 1 teaspoon Olive Oil
  • 1/2 cup Water
  • 1/2 teaspoon Kosher Salt
  1. Combine all ingredients in a large mixing bowl. If you purchased a rack of lamb because that's all the store had, slice the rack into chops. Add the chops to the marinade and let sit for 30 minutes in the fridge.
  2. Fire up that grill. Once it's hot enough grill the chops for 3-5 minutes depending on the heat of your grill, then flip and cook the other side for 2 minutes or just long enough to get some grill marks on it. Plate and serve with this other stuff that's featured below, and not just because I took the time to write all of it out.

Peach Balsamic Sauce

  • Balsamic Vinegar
  • Peaches Peeled and diced
  • Lemon Juice
  • Lemon Zest
  • Port
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Flour
  1. In a small sauce pan add everything listed except the flour and heat over high until it reaches a boil. Once the sauce reaches a boiling point reduce the heat to medium and let simmer for 20 minutes. Use a hand blender to pulverize those peach pieces into a sauce like consistency.
  2. Stir in the flour and let the sauce thicken. Serve over the grilled lamb or really anything you want - lamb, burgers, ice cream, Cheetos.

Purple Cauliflower Basil Purée

  • 1 head Purple Cauliflower
  • 3 Tablespoons Greek Yogurt
  • 1 tablespoon Olive Oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon Sea Salt
  • 5 large Fresh Basil Leaves shredded
  1. Break the cauliflower head into pieces and remove the large steam. Steam the cauliflower for 7 minutes or until it's slightly soft. 
  2. Drain the purple Kool-Aid-like water from the pan and add the yogurt, oil, salt and basil to the cauliflower. Use a food processor or a hand blender to blend into a paste-like consistency. Serve as a side.

Grilled Onion

  • 1 large Onion peeled and halved
  • 2 Tablespoons Olive Oil
  • 2 pinches of Salt
  1. Drizzle oil over onion.
  2. Sprinkle salt over onion.
  3. Grill for 15 min on side of grill where the coals aren't too hot.
  4. Slice thinly.

All wood engraving depicting images of my food by Katy Weaver. And don't forget to check out Michelle's post for dessert

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Open Face Steak Sandwich


Here's a cooking tip for everyone reading, if you want to make a sandwich fancier, make it an open face sandwich. It shows off all the content in the sandwich in an appetizing way. Want to make that PB&J sandwich more interesting? Just make it an open face sandwich. Boom! All your dinner guest will be impressed with your culinary skills. Here's another cooking tip, don't serve PB&J sandwiches at a dinner party, unless it's some weird dinner party for 8 year-olds.



Everyone loves steak, even vegetarians, they just won't admit it. Steak is amazing and an important part of a balanced diet, but sometimes just eating a hunk of meat doesn't cut it. Not even with a steak knife. And most of the time when I order a steak sandwich from a restaurant, it's either super greasy or very dry, occasionally I'll find a place that's somewhere between the two, but those places are pretty rare. That's why I wanted to make my own steak sandwich and use the most marbled pieces of meat I could find. 

Caramelized Bourbon Onions

  • 1 large yellow onion chopped
  • 1 teaspoon minced garlic
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 shot of bourbon
Serves about 4
  1. Get a skillet, melt the butter, and add the garlic. After about 30 seconds add the onions, and sugar. Cook over medium high heat until the onions are caramelized.
  2. Add the shot of bourbon to deglaze the pan and cook until the liquid is gone.

Open Face Steak Sandwich

  • 1 lbs Denver steaks
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • a dash of salt and pepper
  • 1/2 cup shredded white cheddar
  • 1 loaf of ciabatta bread thickly sliced 
Serves about 4.
  1. Preheat your oven to 500 and place a cast iron skillet in the oven (I used my cast iron griddle and it worked just as well). 
  2. While the oven is heating up. Place the steaks in a bowl and toss them with the olive oil, salt and pepper.
  3. Once the oven reaches temperature take the skillet out of the oven and place it on the stove top over medium high heat. 
  4. Place the steaks on the skillet for 30 seconds. Flip and cook the other side for 30 seconds as well. Flip the steaks again and place the skillet back into the oven for 2 minutes. Flip the steaks one last time and let cook for another minute. Take the steaks out of the oven and let them sit on a plate for about 3 minutes before cutting them into strips.
  5. Take a slice of ciabatta and spoon enough of the bourbon onions on it to barely cover the bread.  Sprinkle the cheese over the onions, that way it gets all melty. Then slice the steaks into strips and place on top.  Enjoy!



This steak sandwich pairs nicely with the chard from this recipe, and if you're looking for an appetizer, yam hash browns make a wonderful opening to this dish.

Once again all these stunning pictures are by Katy Weaver.

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French Onion Soup

It's been kind of cloudy and grey the past couple of days in Portland, even though it's terrible June weather it does make for great soup weather. French onion soup is filling and warm, so it's a nice contrast to the cold and wet weather outside.

I'm a terrible food blogger, because when I went to the store I forgot to buy a loaf of French bread. As a replacement I used the whole grain sourdough bread that was sitting in the bread box. The sourdough was a good replacement, I recommend using sourdough if you don't have any French bread.

This is a very simple dish with only a few ingredients. The hardest part about preparing this dish is cutting the onions, it's going to make you cry, so it's a good time to work through some emotions and think about that childhood pet that's now, "living at a farm upstate." If the onions make you cry too much don't worry, eating the finished soup is like a warm hug.



French Onion Soup

(4 servings)
  • 3 1/2 medium yellow onions coarsely chopped
  • 3 TBS. butter
  • 3/4 cup dry white or red wine (just make sure it's not sweet wine)
  • 1 pint vegetable stock or beef stock
  • 1 TBS flour
  • 4 slices of french bread
  • 5 oz. grated Gruyere cheese
  • salt and pepper
  1. Find the largest pot in your kitchen, okay maybe not that big, but large enough to hold a pint of stock and three and half onions. Melt the butter in the pot over medium high heat. Once the butter has melted add the onions.
  2. Preheat the oven to 375. Toast the bread, just a little to remove most of the moisture. It should be slightly crisp. 
  3. Occasionally stir the onions, until most of them have turned golden brown. This is an import step in the soup, because it's where most of the flavor develops. Once the onions have browned add 1/2 cup of the wine. Stir occasionally until all the wine has cooked out. Then add the flour to the onions and let the flour brown and stick to the bottom of the pan. Add the stock once that's happened. Scrape the flour off the bottom of the pot and add the rest of the wine. Add salt and pepper to taste. Let the soup simmer for 5-10 minutes and allow the wine to cook off. 
  4. Grab 4 oven proof bowls and scoop the soup until it fills 3/4 of the bowl. Lay one slice of bread on top of the soup and layer the grated cheese on top of the soup until you can barely see the soup and bread. Place the bowls in the oven and bake until the cheese is melted and the edge cheese browns a bit. 
  5. Remove from oven and eat with fork.

The bowls will be very hot! It's a good idea to have a mat or pad to place the bowl on once you remove it from the oven. 

For a soup that's mostly onions, it's very filling. If you want a good red wine to pair with this soup I recommend a Cabernet Sauvignon, because of the wine's rich buttery taste. Enjoy!

Photos by Katy Weaver 

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