Tag Archives: salt

Meat Recipe #19 – Curried Duck

This recipe was provided to me a while back by Brent Barlow, editor of Community Capers, MC of the annual Rylstone Street Feast and one of the head honcho’s of KRR.fm.  As someone who always has a few of our ducks to spare, as well as a ton of their eggs, I’m always on the lookout for new recipes to use up our mouth-watering waterfowls.

Recipe – Curried Duck Eggs

This following has become an absolute favourite in our household!  Whilst a bit too spicy for our kids, my wife and I love it and the leftovers are great to heat up at work the next day.  So without further ado, enjoy Brent’s Curried Duck.

 

Ingredients:

 

*1 duck, quartered

*Salt

*2 tablespoons vegetable oil

* 2 cups water

*1 chopped onion

*3 cloves of garlic

*1 small cinnamon stick

*1 tablespoon minced ginger

*1 tablespoon curry powder

*1 teaspoon whole cumin

*1 teaspoon ground turmeric

*1 teaspoon whole coriander

*1 teaspoon cayenne pepper

*1 diced tomato

*1 teaspoon garam masala

*1 small can coconut milk

*Chopped fresh coriander to taste

*Lemon juice to taste

* 1 cup of Jasmin rice.

 

Meat Recipe #13 – Roasted Duck in Crabmeat Sauce

 

Method

*Choose one plump duck, pluck, gut and quarter

*Season the duck with salt, put the pan with oil on a high heat and brown on both sides.  Set aside.

*Pour oil from pan into sauspan.  Put onion in the saucepan on medium heat.  Add the garlic, ginger, whole coriander, turmeric, cayenne pepper, curry powder and cinnamon stick.  Slowly stir until the onion becomes translucent.

*Add the tomato and stir.  Add two cups of water and further stir for a few minutes.

*Add duck pieces, cover and simmer for 1 hour.

*Add coconut milk and garam masala, stir and simmer uncovered on a low heat for another 15 minutes.

*Add fresh coriander and lemon juice to taste.  Serve with Jasmin rice.

 

Meat Recipe #12 – Roasting your own Duck

 

Meat Recipe #18 – Brisket with Onions

I used to do my briskets in the oven. However for ease of being able to put a meal on in the morning, go to work, and have it ready to go that night when I get home, I switched over to using a slow cooker.  What I’ve found though is that the flavour of my briskets doesn’t pop nearly as much when slow cooked.

So after a lot of trial and error I have a recipe that works.  And the best bit is that it doesn’t take too much prep so you can still prepare it and set it going before going out for the day!

 

Ingredients:

1 tablespoon olive oil

1 large yellow onion

1.5kg beef brisket

Salt

Freshly ground black pepper

6 cloves garlic, minced

2 cups beef stock

2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce

1 tablespoon soy sauce

 

Method:

*Slice onion into thin half moons.  Put the olive oil in the pan and slowly caramelize on a low heat, then set aside.

*Put the brisket in the frypan and sear on both sides.

*Make up 2 cups of beef stock.  Mix in the two tables of Worcestershire sauce and the 1 tablespoon of soy sauce.

*Place the brisket in the slow cooker, fat side up, and season with salt and pepper. Take the minced garlic and spread it over the top of the brisket.

*Pour in the beef stock mixture.

*Put in the onions, on top and around the brisket.

*Cook on low heat for 6 – 8 hours (depending on brisket size)

*Leave on warm for half an hour before serving.

 

And that’s it!  A really simple yet really delicious way to add a bunch more flavour to your briskets.

Meat Recipe #17 – Cattleman’s Cutlet

Isn’t it wonderful when you find a new cut of meat you didn’t even know existed!

For me this Father’s Day it was the Cattleman’s Cutlet.  If, like I was, you are ignorant to what that is, it is a giant ribeye still on the bone, looking for all the world like a gigantic version of the little lamb cutlets that usually grace the BBQ.

Oh where have you been all my life!

So today I will give you a quick rundown of how I found to be the best way to cook this big hunk of meat, with a combination of searing and slow cooking.

Video – Cooking a Tomahawk Steak

 

Preperation

  • Step 1: Weigh your meat so you get a rough idea of cooking times. Mine came to 625gms.
Any cut of beef under half a kilo isn’t worth my time
  • Step 2: Rub salt into the meat half an hour prior to cooking:
  • Step 3: Rub whatever seasonings you see fit into the meat. For me I used a Smokey BBQ one, but you can use whatever takes your fancy.

 

Cooking

  • Step 1: Bring your BBQ to a very high heat.
  • Step 2: Place your meat horinzonally and sear for approximately 10 minutes

  • Step 3: Flip your meat, turn it vertical and sear for another 10 minutes

  • Step 4: Flip your meat. Turn the heat on your BBQ to minimum. Close the lid and let it cook through slowly
A good time to add any other food you are going to cook
  • Step 5: Open the lid. Flip your meat.  Close the lid and let cook slowly for another 10 minutes.  Open up and it should be ready to go!

 

And that’s it.  40 minutes of cooking will result in a cut of meat just that bit browner than medium-rare but lighter than medium, which is just how I like my beef.  If you prefer your meat lighter or darker than adjust cooking times accordingly, as you must also do regarding the meats weight.  Serve with whatever sides you like – since you’ve got the BBQ on anyway why not chuck some corn on the grill!

 

Video: Campfire Lamb Shanks Recipe

 

Video – Cooking a Tomahawk Steak

In these days of people becoming more health-conscious and turning to alternative eating styles such as veganism, it can be damn hard to find a restaurant to do you a decent sized steak (event he King’s Hotel doesn’t do their kilo steak anymore).  In fact it seems the very biggest you can usually find is about 400gm.  400 measly grams – why don’t I just eat a pink cupcake and wash it down with magical unicorn juice while wearing a tutu?!

So, to get a decent sized steak it seems one must cook it oneself.  Of course this means that you can cook the steak to your own liking and make sure it comes out perfect!

Be still my beating heart (no, not from a coronary!)

Today on Big Angry Trev’s Fine Dinin’ we are going to look at how to cook a 900gm Tomahawk SteakOh hells yes!  This recipe results in the steak being cooked just that bit  more than medium rare, so it is lightly browned the whole way through, so adjust your cooking times accordingly as to how you like your steak.

Meat Recipe #5 – Mum’s Oven-cooked T-Bone Steak & Onions with Mushroom Gravy

Watch the video below and then at the bottom of the page find a more detailed description of how to go about evenly cooking such a thick piece of meat.

 

Method

*Rub salt into the steak thoroughly on both sides at least 20 minutes before cooking.

*Preheat your BBQ and have the flame on its lowest possible setting

*Place the steak on the metal plate side of the BBQ.  Close the top and slowly cook for 30 minutes

*Open lid.  Flip steak.  Add onions and asparagus and close for another 20 minutes.

*Turn grill side of BBQ up to maximum.  Move steak over and sear on each side for 30 seconds each.

*Serve.  Eat.

“I’m sexy and I know it”

A big steak like that is a delight for the whole family!  Yes I ate it on my own but I let my daughter gnaw at it a little and our dog got the bone afterwards so everybody wins – enjoy!

So proud of my little girl!

 

Meat Review – The Kings Hotel part 2 – Steaky Goodness!

Meat Review – Rump & Ribs in Rylstone

 

 

Meat Recipe #13 – Roasted Duck in Crabmeat Sauce

Now that we are devouring our own Muscovy ducks every couple of months, I have to keep finding new recipes to keep it interesting, as well as delicious enough it gets my wife and kids to stop complaining that ‘the ducks were so cute’.

I raised the ducks. I raised the ducks parentsI fed them, watered them, looked after them… so I say we damn well eat them!

Ahem, anyways.  The latest recipe I used came out pretty damn good.  And even tasted better as leftovers the next day! So without further ado let’s look at Shredded Roast Duck in Crabmeat Sauce on a bed of steamed Bok Choy.

 

Ingredients:

1 Can of flaked crabmeat

2 Tablespoons butter

2 Tablespoons flour

3 Shallots, thinly sliced

1 bunch of Parsley, chopped

6 Bok Choy

1 2kg Duck

2 Oranges, quartered.

 

Method

The Duck

*Preheat the oven to 180 degrees 

*Quarter the two oranges

*Pat the duck dry with paper towel.  Season with pepper, salt & paprika

*Stuff anal cavity with oranges

*Place duck on roasting rack, turning every half hour

*Remove from oven and let sit for 20 minutes

*Shred all meat from carcass and set aside

 

 

Crabmeat Sauce

*Melt butter in a pan.  Add shallots and sauté.

*Slowly stir in the flour to thicken and add the crab meat and mix.

*Add the shredded duck meat, mix and simmer on a very low heat for 5 minutes

 

Bok Choy

*Break into individual stems and steam for five minutes

 

Serving

Lay the Bok Choy lengthways on the plate and ladle the duck & crab meat over the top. Garnish with fresh chopped parsley.

 

Related Articles:

Meat Recipe #12 – Roasting your own Duck

Meat Recipe #8 – Roasted Lamb with Seasoned Vegetables

 

 

Meat Recipe #11 – Pork Cutlets with Creamy Mustard Sauce

My wife doesn’t like pork.  There, I’ve said it.  It’s a shameful thing to have to admit about ones spouse but there it is.  Likes ham, tolerates bacon… but hates pork.  My daughter likes pork to a small extent and my son merely tolerates it.  So in a house of four people we have a total of one pork lover – me.

As a result I am always trying new recipes to try and convince my family to eat swine flesh on a more regular basis.  Most make the meat reasonably OK for them but it never truly converts them.

However I have finally hit on a recipe that even my wife will happily eat!  Saucy and tasty, this will make even those whose religious faith make them eschew pork commit heresy and chow on down – Pork Cutlets with Creamy Mustard Sauce.

 

Ingredients

  • 6 large Potatoes
  • 2 Red Capsicum
  • 1/4 cup Wholegrain Mustard
  • 1 tablespoon Olive Oil
  • 1/3 cup Chicken Liquid Stock
  • 4 large Rindless Pork Loin Cutlets
  • 1/2 cup Thickened Cream
  • 1/4 cup Flat-leaf Parsley L:leaves
  • Salt & Pepper

 

Method

*Preheat oven at 200 degrees

*Cut the potatoes into wedges and thickly slice the capsicum, place into a baking tray.

*In a bowl, mix up the mustard, olive oil and liquid stock.

*Pour mix over the vegetables. Place loin cutlets on top and season with salt & pepper

*Place in the oven for half an hour

*While food cooks, chop up parsley leaves and put into a bowl, add the cream

*At half hour mark take out the cutlets and wrap in tinfoil.  Pour the cream and parsley mix over the vegetables and put back in the oven for another 10 minutes.

*Put the food on a plate.  Sit back and let everyone compliment you on how good it looks.

Oh hells yeah!

*Devour.  Threaten others that if they don’t do the dishes this time round that you will never make such a meal again.

 

And there ya go, a pork recipe to delight the family and ensure you actually get to eat pork once in a while.

 

Enjoy this recipe?  Lets us know in the comments section below!

 

Related Articles:

*Big Angry Trev vs the 1.5kg Pork Schnitzel

*Meat Recipe #3 – the Perfect Pork Crackling!

*Meat Recipe #9 – Marinated Lamb Cutlets

 

Meat Recipe #10 – Duck Egg & Venison Chorizo Omelette

Like many great recipies, this one came about by accident.  I had forgotten to defrost a brisket and there were no other obvious meals in the house so I gathered up what I could find in order to feed the family.  The result was surprisingly good!

So without further ado, here is now to make a family sized Duck Egg & Venison Chorizo Omelette.

 

Ingredients:

*7 Large Duck Eggs

*300gm Venison Chorizo

*Handful of Mushrooms

*Handful of grated Tasty Cheese

*Handful of fresh Coriander

*1 Red Capsicum

*2 Shallots

*Some freshly picked Rosemary

*Salt & Pepper

*3 Teaspoons of olive oil

 

Preparation

*Chop the mushrooms, capsicum, shallots and chorizo and place into a bowl

*Chop the coriander

*Beat the eggs and mix in some salt and pepper

*Preheat the oven to 250

*Heat the oil to a high temperature in a frypan

 

Method

*Fry the mushrooms, capsicum, shallots and chorizo in the pan until the juices from the chorizo run.  Set aside.

*Throw in the rosemary until it sizzles and starts to curl.

*Lower the heat, then put in the eggs.  Immediately add all the other ingredients. Briefly mix.

*Remove from the stovetop just as the eggs thicken and pour the mixture into a shallow baking dish.  Place in the oven for 10 minutes or until it starts to brown.

*Remove from oven. Serve.

 

 

And that’s it!  An unlikely combination of ingredients which nonetheless adds up to a delicious meal that all your family will enjoy!

 

Related Articles:

Meat Recipe #6 – Chimichangas

Meat Recipe #7 – Tunnbrödsrulle

Meat Recipe #3 – the perfect Pork Crackling!

Pork Crackling.  I’m an atheist by trade but dear Primus if there is a foodstuff that indicates that there may be a higher power at work then it is that!  Bacon, Ham, Pork – bless the humble pig for growing such tasty flesh upon its bones!  Of course it’s not the pigs flesh we are talking about here but the fat.

I’m not a big fat fan as a rule.  I always leave it on when cooking so it helps hold in all those lovely meat juices, but I tend to cut it off more often than not when it comes to eating the meat in question.  But pork crackling is different – it should be its own food group!  Was it not the great Winston Churchil that said  All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope, crackling’ (Historians tend to leave that last word out but many of them are vegetarians – too much time in damp book depositories and not enough exercise so I wouldn’t put it past’em to have cut it on purpose).  And today I am going to share with you the simple yet effective way of getting yourself a good a tasty hunk of this salty pig elixir!

Oh the sordid beauty of it!
Oh the sordid beauty of it!

Step 1: Select a nice piece of pork for roasting, one with a decent carapace of fat on the top.  I usually go for lion roast myself – great for crackling!

Step 2: Score the fat.  Using a serrated knife cut thin gashes through the fat to just the edge of the meat beneath.  How many gashes you cut is up to you.

Step 3: Rub a mixture of sea salt and oil into the fat, making sure you get plenty in the cuts you have scored.

Step 4: Roast the pork for the appropriate time, depending on the cut of meat and size.  Half an hour before the pork is due to be fully cooked remove it from the oven.

Step 5: Use a knife to cut between the pork and the meat and remove the fat in one big piece.   Flip the fat over and on the underside sprinkle some table salt and throw on a small dash of lemon juice.  Return both the roast and the fat to the oven, making sure the fat is underside up.

Step 6: Remove the pork from oven at the appropriate time and check the fat.  It should be solidifying by now and a reddy-brown colour.  You should be able to bend the piece of crackling a little bit but not too much.  Too dry and it will shatter, too moist and you will be eating a piece of salty rubber.  If the crackling appears too moist pop it back in the oven for another 20 minutes, giving it a little spray of oil.

Step 7: Give the crackling a short amount of time to cool – then eat the lot!  If someone tries to take it from you – well you are at the dinner table with all those big knives handy – defend your pork!

 

And that’s it! – oil, salt and a bit of lemon juice is all you need!  Oh there are plenty of recipes out there that call for garlic or rosemary (much better on lamb than on pork in my opinion) but for crackling where you want to still taste that delicious pork, then keep it simple and don’t overpower it with competing flavors.  Happy eating!

 

Have a different Pork Crackling recipe?  Share it below for everyone to enjoy!