Presents a delectable collection of beef, lamb, veal, and pork recipes along with a variety of white and sweet potato dishes, including soups, salads, croquettes, stews, roasts, and grilled dishes from such celebrated chefs as Bobby Flay, Patricia Yeo, Anita Lo, and Mitchel London. Original. 25,000 first printing.
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Joan Schwartz is an avid reader, writer, and cook, and the author or co-author of twelve acclaimed cookbooks, including <b>Macaroni and Cheese: 52 Recipes from Simple to Sublime</b>; Matthew Kenney’s <b>Big City Cooking</b>; Bobby Flay’s <b>Bold American Food, Boy Meets Grill</b>, and <b>From My Kitchen to Your Table</b>; and Joel Patraker’s <b>Green-market Cookbook.</b> She is a graduate of Rutgers University and received an M.A. from the University of Chicago. She is listed in <b>Who’s Who in America.</b> Schwartz lives in Westchester County, New York.
Is any culinary combination more fundamental and complete than meat and potatoes? Whether roasted, braised, or grilled, turned into soups, salads, croquettes, or stews, meat and potatoes are the stuff of endless possibilities. Joan Schwartz, author of <b>Macaroni and Cheese</b>, brings us Meat and Potatoes, a new collection of outstanding recipes from celebrated chefs across the country, including Michael Anthony and Dan Barber, Bobby Flay, Anita Lo, and Nora Pouillon. These chefs work their magic with beef, lamb, veal, and pork in combination with a variety of both white and sweet potatoes. The results are dishes that can be hot or cold, spicy or mild, sentimental or cutting-edge. <br><br><b>Meat and Potatoes</b> takes us from simple preparations such as Grilled Rosemary-Marinated New York Strip Steak with Potato Gratin to such eye-opening creations as Slow-Braised Veal and Vanilla Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie, Bomboa’s Braised Short Ribs with Mashed Boniatos and Gingered Baby Bok Choy, and Indian-Spiced Rack of Lamb with Potato Tikki and Mint Yogurt.<br><br>With the renaissance of comfort food in full swing, <b>Meat and Potatoes</b> is a must-have cookbook and an ideal gift for cooks of all levels.
Chapter 1
Introducing Meat and Potatoes
Admit it, when you're hungry, you want meat and potatoes! Put the two together and you need very little else to make a meal; their synergy in a dish always promises sustenance and comfort. But although comfort food was what I was after as I set out to collect recipes from America's finest chefs, I soon learned that the pairing of meat and potatoes goes way beyond the homey and nourishing-it provides a feast for the imagination.
The chefs who contributed to this book work their magic with beef, lamb, veal, and pork, and combine these meats with both white and sweet potatoes (including boniatos, which are a bit of each). The meats are grilled, roasted, braised, fried, or sautéed; the potatoes-whole, sliced, chunked, diced, or mashed-are braised, fried, sautéed, boiled, or simmered. The results are such creative leaps as Slow-Braised Veal and Vanilla Sweet Potato Shepherd's Pie (Gerry Hayden); Beef Short Rib Hash with Sunny Eggs and Balsamic Syrup (Deborah Stanton); Potato-Crusted Lamb Cakes (Daniel Angerer); Indian-Spiced Rack of Lamb with Potato Tikki and Mint Yogurt (Thomas John); and Roasted New Potatoes with Bacon, Chive Flowers, and Green Tomato Dressing (Ilene Rosen).
Much of the time, at home and in restaurants, meat and potatoes are cooked separately and presented together at the table. Grilled steak, for example, is just plain wonderful served with a creamy, herbal potato salad or beside a rich gratin that accents its simple perfection.
But when meat and potatoes are married in the pot, the finished dish is even more complex and nuanced, as with rib-eye steak that is oven-roasted over a bed of potatoes so that the savory and herbal flavors of the meat and its seasonings permeate the potatoes (Mitchel London); mashed potatoes that are formed into crusty cakes and stuffed with chili-spiced, braised short ribs (Andrew DiCataldo); diced potatoes combined with chorizo and layered over tortillas, to make crisp quesadillas (Sue Torres); and jalapeño-spiked mashed sweet potatoes that stuff a tender pork roulade (Glenn Harris).
Cook them separately or cook them together-both approaches show how meat and potatoes can work with one another, each highlighting the qualities of its partner. The final harmonious dish can be hot or cold, spicy or mild, sentimental or cutting edge. Just as macaroni and cheese is always greater than the sum of its parts, so is meat and potatoes.
A few words of advice: Although some of the dishes can be cooked relatively quickly, most of these recipes are not instant. Braises and roasts will require prep time and cooking time, and you should read each recipe carefully and plan ahead. But the good news is that nothing smells as wonderful as meat and potatoes that are gently simmering or roasting along with aromatic vegetables and herbs, wafting an atmosphere of well-being and plenty through your kitchen. Such cooking embodies the best qualities of slow food, whose preparation is a calming and gratifying activity-more pleasure than work and offering rewards you can taste.
Nevertheless, to make them more manageable, many recipes can be broken down into components that are made and refrigerated ahead and combined just before serving. A number of dishes can be cooked ahead and reheated later, and their flavor will deepen and mellow. And the bonus is that when you cook and later reheat, you get to enjoy the sensual experience (but not the work) twice.
As you become acquainted with these recipes, they will feed your own creative talents. Once you feel comfortable with the mechanics of braising, slow-roasting, and grilling, it becomes easy to choose a cut of meat and a variety of potatoes and pair them with the appropriate method. You can invent a recipe from scratch or deconstruct one of ours and reshuffle components to come up with a spontaneously delightful meal. Meat and potatoes are not only inspiring, they are forgiving.
About Meat
Buy the freshest and best-quality meat, from a butcher or supermarket you trust. If possible, buy ground meat from a butcher who grinds it to your order, rather than from a market where it has been preground and wrapped. Of course, check the date carefully on all packaged meat. As soon as possible after purchase, rewrap and refrigerate meat; use ground meat within two days and solid pieces within four days.
You will find that the more tender the cut of meat, the less time it needs to cook. Steaks and chops take only minutes from grill to table, while beef short ribs and oxtails-where flavorful morsels are hidden among the bones and fat-require longer braising. Leg and shoulder of lamb need a good amount of time in the oven to reach optimum flavor and texture. Although you can let each individual recipe be your guide, here are brief descriptions of the cooking methods used in this book:
Braising: Brown the meat in a little oil, then cook, partially submerged in a flavorful liquid, in a heavy, tightly covered pot or pan. Meat can be braised on the stovetop, in a Crock-Pot, or in the oven. Braising is the preferred method for tougher cuts of meat.
Grilling: Light an outdoor charcoal or gas grill and cook the meat quickly at a high temperature. Indoors, you can substitute an electric grill (make sure it provides enough heat to sear the meat), a stovetop grill pan, or a broiler.
Roasting: Cook the meat in a preheated oven, at a moderate to high temperature.
Sautéeing: Cook the meat in a skillet or sauté pan, in oil that has been heated until it shimmers, over medium or medium-high heat. Stir the meat as it cooks.
Stewing: Cover the meat with a flavorful liquid and cook at a simmer. This may be done on the stovetop, in a Crock-Pot, or in the oven.
The following meats are called for in our recipes:
BEEF
Cheeks
Meat near the face of the steer. Cheeks are a rich cut, with a gelatinous texture and a very intense flavor.
Chuck
Juicy and inexpensive cut from the shoulder and neck. Ground chuck goes into stew, meat loaf, and hamburger, and becomes the stuffing for chili peppers.
Oxtail
Tail of the steer; very bony meat. Chunky pieces (not from the end of the tail) are the meatiest, and become flavorful and tender when braised. Generally sold in 1- to 3-inch cross sections.
Rump
A cut from the bottom round; flavorful, a bit tougher than chuck, but very tender when braised.
Short Ribs
Cut from the prime rib and the next lower three ribs, these tasty, meaty ends of beef ribs require long cooking to become tender. They have layers of fat, meat, and bone. Fat must be removed both before and after cooking.
Shoulder
Same as chuck.
Steaks
Filet Mignon: Cut from the beef tenderloin. This is the tenderest steak, but it has a milder flavor than other steaks.
Rib Eye: Cut from the rib section. Juicy, flavorful, marbled with fat; not as tender as filet mignon.
Shell, or Strip Loin, Steak: A boneless cut from the beef short loin. Tender and mild-flavored.
Skirt Steak: Long, narrow steak, cut from the breast. A little fatty, but tender.
LAMB
Chops
Loin: From the hind saddle of the lamb. These are the tenderest lamb chops.
Rib: Cut from the rack. Tender and flavorful.
Shoulder: Cut from the lamb chuck. Juicy and marbled with fat, but not as tender as rib or loin chops. Arm chops, with a round bone, come from the lower part of the shoulder. Blade chops, with a narrow bone, are cut from the beginning of the shoulder.
Leg
Last half of the hind saddle of the lamb. A whole leg weighs from 6 to 11 pounds, but you can buy the shank end, which has more meat and less fat, or the sirloin end, which is tender but has more bone. A leg of lamb can be boned and then either...
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