Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Cheesy Stuffed Poblano Peppers

I had an abundance of Poblano peppers this summer.  Most of them were fire-roasted and made into salsa.  I like chiles rellenos, but they seem more like an appetizer than an entree.  I was talking to a friend at work about it one night and she told me her mom stuffs the peppers with potatoes and ground meat.  Sounded like an entree to me!  This is what came out.


Here's what you'll need:
6 large poblano peppers
1 TBSP olive oil (or bacon grease)
1 lb lean ground beef
1/2 c onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 potatoes, peeled & cut into small dice
1 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1 tsp Ancho chile powder
2 c shredded cheddar or cheddar-jack cheese


Lightly roast the peppers over a burner or grill, just until a little charred.  Remove from heat.


Use a sharp knife to cut off the stem end and remove the seeds from each pepper.  Set aside.


Preheat oven to 350.

Heat the oil in a medium skillet.  Add the ground meat and the onion.  Cook until the meat is browned and the onion softens.


Add the garlic, potatoes and seasonings.  Cook 3-5 minutes or until the potatoes begin to soften.
Remove from the heat and cool slightly.  Stir in the cheese.  Spread a shallow layer of the meat mixture in the bottom of the baking dish.  Use the remaining meat mixture to fill the peppers. Arrange the peppers in the dish.  Lay the remaining tops around the peppers.


Bake at 350 for 30-35 minutes, until the peppers are fork-tender and the potatoes are thoroughly cooked.  Serve with sour cream.

Enjoy!

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Beef Bourguignon

I broke in my new cast-iron dutch oven today.  I figured a classic french dish was just the thing to do it.  This hearty, beef stew-like dinner has a lot of steps, but that doesn't translate into being hard. Take your time.  Follow the steps and success is pretty much guaranteed.  But it IS French, and it's incredibly rich.


Here's what you'll need:
6 slices of thick-cut bacon, chopped
1 TBSP olive oil
2-3 lbs lean beef roast, cut into 2" cubes
4-5 small carrots, cut in half
1/2 onion, root end in-tact
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
2 TBSP flour
3 c red wine
2-3 c beef stock
1 TBSP tomato paste
2 cloves garlic, crushed
6 sprigs fresh thyme (1/2 tsp dry)
1 bay leaf
1 TBSP butter
8 oz baby portabella mushrooms
2 TBSP fresh parsley


Preheat the oven to 450.

Saute the bacon in the olive oil in the dutch oven until crispy.


Remove the bacon; drain on a paper towel.


Reheat the oil and grease in the pan.  Add about half of the beef cubes.


This step is not about cooking the beef.  This is to develop some crust and coloring on the meat. When the meat is browned, remove to paper towels.


Repeat this step with the remaining beef.

Add the carrots and half onion to the pot, again just getting some color on the vegetables.  This adds an unbelievable depth of flavor.


When the vegetables are caramelized, remove them to paper towels.  Discard the remaining oil from the pot.

Put the beef and bacon back into the hot pot.  Sprinkle with the salt, pepper and flour.  Place the pot in the oven.  Cook at 450 for 4 minutes.


Stir the beef and cook another 4 minutes.  Remove from oven.

Reduce oven temperature to 325.

Stir the wine and enough beef stock to cover the meat into the dutch oven.  Add the tomato paste, garlic, thyme and bay leaf.  Bring to a simmer over medium heat.  Add the onion and carrots.


Cover; put the pot into the 325 oven and bake until the meat is fork-tender, 3-4 hours.

When the meat is cooked, remove from the oven.  The sauce with be pretty thick.


Drain the meat combo over a bowl.  Return the sauce to the pot; bring to a simmer over medium heat. Cook until the sauce has reduced by about half.


Remove the onion, sticks from the thyme and the bay leaf from the meat.  Place the meat and carrots in a dish; cover.

Saute the mushrooms in the butter in a small skillet, until pretty crispy.


Layer them over the meat and carrots.


Top with the reduced wine sauce.  Sprinkle with parsley.


Serve with mashed potatoes or buttered noodles.  We just ate it with crusty, well-buttered bread.  If you're going to go French, you might as well go all the way.

Serves 4-5.

Enjoy!