PART 2:
Anyway, after discussing what to do with the entire tenderloin for that particular meal, we settled on the Chateaubriand cut. "Real" filet mignon didn't sound appealing to her. She wanted a roast that could be sliced, as she'd had it at the party. Little round discs of meat weren't gonna cut it. So to speak.
So I cut out that middle potion of the tube, tied it, dry-brined it for an hour (just a salt rub - the salt draws liquid out of the meat which then forms a saline solution and is drawn back into the meat. Cool trick that adds flavor and moisture to cuts with no interlarding) and prepped some veggies while it was resting. (I don't eat veggies myself when there is tenderloin about. They take up valuable stomach space that could be used for more meat. But my wife, also in attendance, is not as militant as I on that point.)
An hour later I smeared the thing with butter and popped it into a low oven til it hit 125 internal, then pan seared the outside til it crusted (the opposite of what I learned to do growing up, but 'Cooks Illustrated' recommended this method recently and it works great - no gray ring for the outer third of the roast, it was uniformly pink right to the very edge). Out of the pan to rest on a cutting board with a blanket of compound butter for 15 minutes.
Then...*
poof*!
It was gone. Just like that.
(Oh yeah. Since this is a wine board: '04 Navarro Correas "Alegoria" Cab Sauv. Mucho nice-o.)
"That was the BEST meat I've ever had!"
Yeah. I know.
We carted home the rest of the filet and the next day roasted off the thick end. Had that for a few days as sandwiches, etc.
Yesterday I made filet mignon. From the filet mignon part.
This time I went traditional, the way wifey likes it. 1. Blow the oven up to 450 degrees, with a roasting pan inside to get it just as hot. 2. On the stove sear tied mignons all the way around in a smokin' hot pan. 3. Move the mignons from the saute pan to the roasting pan and roast for a few minutes until...well, roasted. 4. Remove from oven. 5. Scarf.
Easy enough, right?
Well I somehow managed to botch Step 4.
Normally I would have grabbed a potholder or the dishtowel looped through my belt (vestige of my old restaurant days) but I happened to be holding a pair of tongs when I opened the oven doors to check the meat. The meat felt done and being the impatient/lazy sort, rather than take two freakin' seconds to lay the tongs down and grab something...
sane... I just pinched the front rolled edge of that glowing red half-sheet pan with the metal tongs and lifted.
I *almost* made it.
As I lifted I was concentrating so hard on keeping the pan balanced side-to-side on the tiny tong fulcrum that I neglected to account for the slight overhang at the top of the oven door.
*
snick!*
The back edge of the sheet pan caught the lip and immediately jerked downwards. Out of instinct, I yanked backwards and up to compensate.
Did you see the movie "A Christmas Story"? Remember the scene where Ralphie is helping his Old Man change the tire?
Oh, fuuuuu-
u-u-u-u-u-u-u-------dge!
For a brief instant 4 perfectly seared and roasted filet mignons were perfectly highlighted by my kitchen track lights as they arced up and over my head. Three miraculously landed on the table behind me, the fourth ended up in a Welsh Corgi. But I didn't find that out until later.
Because at the same time the 450 degree half sheet pan was also flipping over. And the same stupid instinct kicked in.
I caught it.
First with my forehead though. THEN my hands. And forearms.
I now look like I've gone through some Trobriand Island rite of passage into manhood involving fire handling followed by an ant poison poultice.
But.....
It
was some of the best meat I ever had.