Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Paul Winalski
Wok Wielder
8494
Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:16 pm
Merrimack, New Hampshire
Robin Garr wrote:3. Heat the oil in a heavy skillet and saute the onions and garlic over high heat until they're soft and starting to brown. Remove the onions and garlic to a bowl and put in the dredged beef, adding a little more olive oil if needed. Brown the meat on all sides, then return the cooked olives and garlic to the skillet.
Paul Winalski wrote:Robin Garr wrote:Robin, did you mean "return the cooked onions and garlic to the skillet"?
Robin Garr wrote:
Some of the dishes that were all the rage back in the 1970s and '80s are just as well left to history and nostalgia's warm glow. For instance, I'm not sure that I'll ever make Beef Wellington again.
Maria Samms
Picky Eater Pleaser
1272
Thu Dec 28, 2006 8:42 pm
Morristown, NJ
Dave R wrote:What's wrong with Beef Wellington? I just had it at a party last week and thought to myself that I wished I had it more often.
Maria Samms
Picky Eater Pleaser
1272
Thu Dec 28, 2006 8:42 pm
Morristown, NJ
Dave R wrote:Maria,
I wonder if it is some type of "meat combined with pastry" bigotry in the south. They probably think the two should be segregated. Whereas I am from the north and think the two should be integrated.
Sometimes temperature trumps seasonRobin Garr wrote:The other night, for instance, looking for something hearty to warm a chilly early spring evening,Frank Deis wrote: Except, have you looked at a calendar recently? Like Bouef Bourguignon, this one is probably best from October to March
Frank
ChefJCarey
Wine guru
4508
Sat Mar 10, 2007 8:06 pm
Noir Side of the Moon
Robin Garr wrote:Carbonnades a la Flamande
Some of the dishes that were all the rage back in the 1970s and '80s are just as well left to history and nostalgia's warm glow. For instance, I'm not sure that I'll ever make Beef Wellington again.
But some of the familiar classics of a generation ago are good enough to deserve a place in our modern recipe files. The other night, for instance, looking for something hearty to warm a chilly early spring evening, I thought of Carbonnades a la Flamande, a Belgian beef-and-beer stew so popular in an earlier era that versions of it appeared in both Julia Child's Mastering The Art Of French Cooking and Craig Claiborne's New York Times Cookbook. ( ... lengthy backquote deleted)
Frank Deis wrote:Delicious stuff and a good suggestion, Robin. Except, have you looked at a calendar recently? Like Bouef Bourguignon, this one is probably best from October to March.
Linda R. (NC) wrote:Sometimes temperature trumps season
Robin, do you end up with much sauce/gravy?
Robert Reynolds
1000th member!
3577
Fri Jun 08, 2007 11:52 pm
Sapulpa, OK
Dave R wrote:Maria,
I wonder if it is some type of "meat combined with pastry" bigotry in the south. They probably think the two should be segregated. Whereas I am from the north and think the two should be integrated.
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