culinary flights of fancy

Home Cooking Adventures in Berkeley Heights


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Rare Eye of Round Roast Beef

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I cook this recipe all the time at home.  It lasts a long time and does well in the freezer if I have to freeze it.  Eye round beef is also a very lean cut of meat which is also a bonus.  One of the drawbacks is that it is a tough cut of meat and if you don’t prepare it rare, it’s not going to be very tender.  Also, it needs to be cut razor thin, which works well if you are making a sandwich or something like that.  I usually cut it as thinly as I can and usually serve it at room temperature along with a salad, some blanched broccoli or beans, some crusty bread, and/or some cheese…and I usually just put all of it on a cutting board and serve it as is.  The flavor of this roast is great, at once salty and sweet with hints of herbs and spice.  I got the recipe from this cookbook, which I’ve featured on the blog before (buy it…you won’t be sorry about the investment).  I’ve followed this recipe exactly and I’ve also made it using the same basic technique but using different spices and herbs.  I really liked the way it tasted with herbs de Provence.  However, here, I followed the recipe by and large from the book as written so that you could get a sense for what it looks like from that perspective.

Two things before the recipe that I should mention.  One, the good news is that this roast only takes about 20 minutes to cook the whole thing at 425 degrees.  Two, the bad news is that the rub of all the seasonings and herbs needs to be done two days (48 hours) in advance of cooking it.  So this involves a bit of planning to pull off.  However, the saving grace about it is that once you create the rub and season the beef, you wrap it up, pop it in the fridge and it just sits soaking up all the flavor for a couple of days.  It takes about 15 minutes to gather everything, make the rub, and season the beef.  So all in all, not a whole lot of time to prepare.  It does, though, require some forethought which may be inconvenient on occasion.  So, with those two things in mind, here is my current favorite rare roast beef recipe.  It’s almost exactly the recipe published in the book, just written in my own words with a few noted changes.  Recipe follows after the jump… Continue reading


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Fall Vegetable Salad with Roasted Apples, Fennel, and Wilted Kale

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I made a summer salad with roasted peaches and shaved fennel a few months back and decided that I could use the same basic premise for a nice salad using ingredients readily available during fall.  Kale and fennel are both widely available at any grocery store or farmer’s market at the time of year and orchard apples are plentiful right now.  I bought my apples at Vito’s in Berkeley Heights…they have a great selection and let’s face it, Vito is a hoot so it’s pretty fun to run over there.  At any rate, you can have this salad done relatively quickly given it’s served warm.  The apples take 10-15 minutes to roast and you can have the kale wilted and the fennel shaved during the roasting time.  So it’s not too bad.  It’s quite tasty as the apples bring some sweetness and the fennel tempers that a bit with its’ light anise flavor.  The kale anchors the whole thing with its’ sturdy earthiness.  Recipe follows after the jump… Continue reading