Bobby Flay's New Mexican Spiced Pork Tenderloin with two sauces

I was lucky enough to have dinner at Bobby Flay's Mesa Grill in Las Vegas a couple of weeks ago. I actually ate there twice in the week I was in Vegas and I had the same thing both nights. It was that good!

What did I have? New Mexican Spiced Pork Tenderloin with Bourbon-Ancho Sauce and Smoked Red Pepper Sauce. It was amazing, just the right amount of heat and smoke. So, of course I had to make it. As soon as I got home I ordered the Mesa Grill cookbook. It came. I made this dish!

One look at the ingredients and I knew I would have to visit my friends at El Burrito Mercado in West St. Paul. I stock ancho chili powder in my pantry but had never heard of chile de arbol or pasilla chili powder before. I needed to pick up some ancho chiles for the sauce too. I've used those before, just didn't have any in the house.

I knew El Burrito Mercado would have the dried ancho chiles and I was lucky enough to find chile de arbol there as well. What they didn't have was pasilla chili powder.  They did have dried pasilla chiles however. I decided to buy the chiles and grind them myself. 



It worked just fine. I cut the stems off, chopped them in pieces and put them in my spice grinder. Voila, pasilla chili powder.



Now that I had all the ingredients it was time to start making the sauces.

I started with the Smoked Red Pepper Sauce. The recipe calls for roasting the red peppers in the oven. I normally do this over the flame on my stove but I was doing a bunch of other things at the same time so I thought the oven would be easier. It definitely took longer than on the stove, and even after almost double the time the cookbook suggested, the peppers still weren't very charred. But the skin was peeling off so I considered them done and moved on to the next step!



To make peeling the peepers easy, place them in a covered bowl, or like I do, just put them in a plastic bag for about 15 minutes. After steaming the skin will come right off.




I needed some roasted garlic too so while the peppers were roasting I threw a little garlic in the oven as well. I love the smell of roasted garlic!



The final ingredient that needed a little prep was the chipotle pepper puree. This was easy, empty a can of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce into a food processor and process away!




To make the sauce, the peppers, garlic, some chopped purple onion, red wine vinegar, Dijon mustard, honey and a tablespoon of the chipotle pepper puree are all put in a blender. While the blender is going, canola oil is poured in and the mixture is blended until it emulsifies. The result is this absolutely beautiful orange sauce. You can smell the roasted peppers and the sauce has a smokey, sweet flavor and just a kick of heat. And the batch makes A LOT, I'll be finding uses for this sauce....




Sauce one done. Next Bourbon-Ancho Sauce!

I'm not a fan of bourbon at all. I don't even like the smell of it. But I really liked this sauce at the restaurant. And I wanted to make the whole recipe! So here's the mise en place, olive oil, bourbon, apple juice concentrate, chicken stock, onion, ancho chiles, peppercorns and brown sugar.



This sauce was easy to make, but it takes a long time. You have to re-hydrate the ancho chiles and there is a lot of reducing which is probably why the sauce has such amazing flavor.

Step one is to re-hydrate and puree the ancho chiles so start early! The chiles have to soak in hot water for 30 minutes. Once they are re-hydrated, the stems are removed and the chiles, along with a little of the water used to re-hydrate them are put in a food processor and pureed. The recipe said to seed the chile but I left the seeds in. The sauce is strained so I left the seed in for a little more flavor.

The recipe also calls for 8 peppercorns. Yes, not "a few", but exactly 8. So that's what I used.



The sauce starts with some sauteed red onion to which two cups of bourbon is added. This is reduced until there are just a couple of tablespoons of liquid left.




To the reduced mixture of onions and bourbon, the ancho chile puree, chicken stock, apple juice concentrate, exactly eight peppercorns, and the little brown sugar are added.

This mixture is then reduced by half. This took longer than the 10-15 minutes the recipe suggested. I'm glad I started the sauce early. The mixture is then strained and put back on the heat to reduce a little more, to "sauce" consistency. The color changes from a bright red to a delicious brown.  This sauce, in total took almost 2 hours to make start to finish. I highly recommend making it the day before you need it!

This is one of the most delicious sauces I have ever tasted. It doesn't taste like bourbon at all. It's savory but a little sweet from the apple juice concentrate and onions. It's rich and creamy and earthy an deep and I could have just eaten it with a spoon!  Now I couldn't wait for the pork!



Sauce two done. Now on to the star of the dish, the pork! After all that chopping and pureeing and reducing, the pork was pretty darn simple.

A pork tenderloin is seasoned with salt and then coated with Bobby Flay's New Mexican Spice rub.  The rub is a combination of ancho chili powder, brown sugar, the pasilla powder I made from dried chiles, the chile de arbol, cinnamon and allspice.



After searing the pork on all sides it is finished in a 400 degree oven.


I tried to plate it as nicely as they did in the restaurant, sliced in medallions, coated with the bourbon sauce and a little of the roasted red pepper sauce then a garnish of chives. I served it with some roasted butternut squash.


I told my husband to taste the brown sauce first. He was speechless. He just looked at me with that "OH.MY.GOD that is good!" look on his face. I don't think we said more than a few words during dinner we were enjoying it that much!  Yes, I over cooked the pork a little, but it was still really good.  The brown sugar in the rub caramelized beautifully giving a nice crunch on the outside of the pork. The bourbon sauce brought down the heat a touch with its heavenly dark, rich, flavors and then there was a little pop with the roasted red pepper sauce.  

This was as good as at the restaurant. Sometimes the recipes aren't quite up to the restaurant but these were.  Of course at home we have to clean all the dishes. And it took me a LONG time to make this when you factor in all the time to make the sauces but it was well worth it!

This one is going on our "good enough for company" list!





The Best Lemon Cookies

I was lucky enough to have dinner at Giada in Las Vegas last week. Not lucky to be in Vegas, Vegas is not even remotely somewhere I desire to go. But as long as I had to be there I decided I would eat well.  And I did. Including a delicious dinner at Giada DeLaurentis' restaurant.

For dinner I had an amazing vegetable bolognese. For dessert, Giada's Favorite Cookies. I got two each of her three favorite cookies. There were chocolate chip, peanut butter with some sort of jam in them and lemon ricotta cookies. The first two were just OK, nothing special. But the lemon ricotta cookies were amazing. They were quite possibly the best cookie I have ever eaten. I knew I had to make them!



The night I got home I went to my closet full of cookbooks and pulled out my Giada books and started searching for the recipe. I found it in Giada's Kitchen.

Here's a link to an online version:
Lemon Ricotta Cookies



I was excited to see that the recipe made 44 cookies. I could share some and still have enough to get my fill!

They are a snap to make, cream butter and sugar, add eggs, ricotta cheese, lemon juice and lemon zest then add the dry ingredients. The batter is a light, fluffy, and lemony.



Giada says to line two baking sheets with parchment and to drop the batter by 2-tablespoonfuls onto the baking sheets. Her baking sheets must be significantly larger than mine because 22 cookies would never fit on one of my sheets. I also think that the recipe doesn't really mean 2-tablespoons of batter per cookie. For the first two trays I used a 2-tablespoon scoop. There was no way I was getting 44 cookies out of the batch. For the last tray I used a 1 1/2 tablespoon scoop. In total I got 36 cookies.

I didn't know how much the batter would spread so I was conservative and only put 8 cookies on the first tray.



I filled the second tray a bit more full, with 11 cookies.


The cookies are baked for 15 minutes then left to cool on the trays for another 20 minutes. They did spread a little but my 11 cookie-tray baked up just fine.




While the cookies are cooling a glaze of powdered sugar, lemon juice and lemon zest. 



The glaze is painted on the cookies and then, get this, you have to wait TWO HOURS before you can eat them!  What? No way was I waiting 2 hours. I ate one right away. Delicious. The cookie was light, airy and lemony without being too sweet. These are now my new favorite cookie.  Next time I'll put the glaze all the way to the edges like they did at the restaurant and I'll use the 1 1/2 tablespoon scoop instead of 2 tablespoons, otherwise I wouldn't change a thing!




Vegetable Bolognese?

I had to go to Las Vegas for work last week. I'm not a Vegas fan. I don't gamble. I'm not into "shows", a good play, yes, showgirls, no. I am not independently wealthy so shopping in the ridiculously over-priced stores isn't for me either.  Vegas is loud, crowded, expensive and smoky so being there for 6 days and 5 nights was torture for me.

The only redeeming feature of Las Vegas is the restaurants. There are some good ones there and I did get to try a few.  One was Giada.  This is Giada DeLaurentis' only restaurant. It is beautiful if not noisy, right on the strip, windows open! Once the crowd settled in the street noises went away and there was a nice mix of conversational hum and background music. The music surprised me. It wasn't Sinatra, it was a mix of contemporary music.

Honestly there was a lot on the menu that sounded delicious. Lobster Arancini with calabrian chili pomodoro and basil aioli? Pecorino Tartufo with apricot preserves? Margarita Pizzette? I was having a hard time deciding so I asked the bartender if there was a "signature" dish on the menu.  Yep, Giada's Spaghetti was the signature dish. She also mentioned the Rigatoni with vegetable bolognese.  This was also marked as a "Giada Classic" on the menu. I loved the oxymoron of a vegetable bolognese so I went with that.



It was delicious! You would swear there was some sort of meat in it, it was so hearty and earthy tasting. Those of you who know me, or have read this blog, know I hate mushrooms.  Hate them. This dish was full of mushrooms and I loved it!  Go figure!

So when I got home I grabbed my Giada cookbooks and started scouring them for this recipe. I found it in Giada's Kitchen.

Here is a link to an online version:

Rigatoni with Vegetable Bolognese


The recipe called for an ounce of dried porcini mushrooms. I don't know if I've ever purchased porcini mushrooms before. Remember I don't like mushrooms. I think if I had purchased them I would have remembered they were $6.99/ounce. That's not a typo, they were $6.99/ounce!  That's nearly $112/pound! For mushrooms! That I don't like! The recipe also called for 5 ounces of "assorted" mushrooms. I chose a mix of baby bellas and shiitakes.


To start you soak the dried porcini mushrooms in hot water. The, um, aroma of the mushrooms in the hot water was, well, gross. It smelled like the floor of a barn. And I was going to put this in something I was going to eat? Move it out of the way so I can't smell it and move on!


The "meat" of the sauce consists of an onion, red bell pepper and some garlic that are processed until they are slightly chunky. I had the advantage of having this at the restaurant so I know it was fairly small chunks.



This delightful mixture is sauteed in a little olive oil with some thyme, oregano and a little salt. I started out in my favorite Lodge Cast Iron pan.



Once the veggies have softened the stinky porcini mushrooms, fresh mushrooms and a little tomato paste are added and cooked a little. Then the stinky water used to re-hydrate the mushrooms is added, along with some yummy red wine. Now it was smelling amazing! I love the aroma of red wine cooking! We had opened a Seghesio Carignane earlier in the day so I used that. Never cook with wine you wouldn't drink!




Finally a little marscapone cheese is added to make the mixture nice and creamy.



Add some rigatone, some freshly grated Parmesan cheese and dinner is served!



How was it? Was it as good as at the restaurant? Well, nothing is as good as at the restaurant. At home you have to do the dishes! Was it good?  Yes! It has a great earthy flavor. It was creamy and coated the rigatoni perfectly. Some of the sauce made its way inside the noodles for a particularly amazing bite. I ate mushrooms and I liked them! I'll definitely make this again, it's good enough for company!

Surf and Turf at Home - Best Dinner Ever!

My husband and I love the Oceanaire restaurant in downtown Minneapolis.  We'll admit we thought it was better (food and atmosphere) in it's old location but I'm sure the current location is better for business.  People actually know it exists now.

We are on their mailing list. Last week we received an email that they were doing a three course special dinner that included a choice of Lobster Bisque or Caesar Salad, and entree of a 6 ounce Filet Mignon and a Jumbo Lump Crab Cake and then either cheesecake or key lime pie for dessert, all for $49.  Sign us up!  Then just a few days later we got another email from them offering us a free Baked Alaska dessert with purchase of two entrees.  Now we had to go right?  So I made the reservations.


Then I thought, wait, I can make that at home.  We won't have to drive to Minneapolis and pay to park.  We'll probably save $100 or more since we'll just pull a bottle of wine out of the cellar.  And, I recently cleaned out my recipe closet (yes I have enough cookbooks and recipes cut out of magazines to almost fill a closet!) and found a recipe for Oceanaire Crab Cakes.  I think it's time to try them at home!

Years ago, back when Oceanaire was in the old location, we went to a Kim Crawford wine pairing dinner there.  We talked the chef at the time into giving us the recipe for the crab cakes.  I kept the recipe, but never made the crab cakes.  I have no idea why. We love crab cakes and I've made many different ones over the years, just never these. So it was definitely time!

I've also never made baked Alaska.  Time for that too!  I found an Alton Brown recipe and adapted it for two. He makes baked Alaska for a party, in a 13x9 pan!  We just wanted two servings.  But that's dessert, let's start with dinner!

The steaks were easy, I've made them this way for years and just love them.  I give Ina Garten the credit. I crust the steaks in salt and pepper, sear them on all sides in an oven-proof pan (I love my Lodge cast iron) and then top each with a pat of butter and stick them in a 400 degree oven for about 12 minutes.  We like our steaks medium, 145-150 degrees in the middle.


I had mixed up the crab cakes earlier in the day so they could chill in the frig. I obviously never even read the recipe before. Why? Well there were ingredients in the ingredient list that were never used in the directions and ingredients in the ingredient list that were different in the instructions. No worries, I'll wing it!



I made a half batch. According to the recipe a full batch makes four 5-ounce crab cakes. I didn't think we needed four so I cut things in half.

The crab is placed in a bowl and set aside.


In a separate bowl you mix the wet ingredients and seasonings, egg, mayonnaise, mustard (I'll come back to that), Old Bay seasoning, onion and parsley.  The ingredient list called for "Dijon mustard." To me that's a prepared mustard, not a dry mustard.  In the directions you are told to add the "dry mustard."  I used dry. The aroma was amazing. Was it the Old Bay? Or the mustard? I don't know but this smelled good!



"One slice" of bread is diced and placed on top of the crab. How big of a slice? I have no idea. I cut what I would call a normal slice out of a loaf of sourdough bread I bought that morning at Farmer's Market and used that.

Pour the wet ingredients over the crab/bread mixture and gently mix to combine them.  But wait.  There were breadcrumbs in the ingredient list. There was nothing in the directions about how or when to use them.  Do you make the cakes then roll them in the breadcrumbs? Do you mix them in?



The mix seemed very wet so I knew the breadcrumbs were needed. I mixed them in!



After this had been in the frig for a couple hours, I used a scoop to make the crab cakes.  I got six 2+ ounce crab cakes out of the half batch.



The crab cakes go under the broiler for 7-8 minutes and come out beautiful!



I drizzled a little habanero aioli I got at San Pedro Cafe over them.

I added a little fresh green salad, dressed with the vinaigrette from San Pedro Cafe (love that place).



The steak, amazing as usual.  But the crab cakes. OH.MY.GOD are these good.  I'm throwing away all other crab cake recipes.These are the best crab cakes I have ever had and they tasted every bit as good as the ones at the restaurant.  And we didn't have to drive to Minneapolis and pay for parking to get them!  There is so little filler the crab flavor comes through.  There's a little crunch on the top then that creamy filling, and the kick of the aioli was perfect on top!  AND, because the recipe made 6 we had some left over for breakfast the next day!  I'm IN LOVE with these crab cakes!

The recipe for the crab cakes (how I did them!) is below.

Now on to dessert!  I've never made baked Alaska before.  It's not what I would call a go-to dessert when it's on the menu.  At Oceanaire it's the show we really like.  They douse the dessert in booze and light it on fire right at the table!  But hey, we decided we were going to have our Oceanaire dinner at home so baked Alaska was going to be made.

After a little Googling I found an Alton Brown recipe that seemed easy enough, and very few of his recipes fail.  Now Alton made baked Alaska for a CROWD!  He makes it in two 13x9 pans! So some scaling would be required.  Here is a link to a video of him making it.  Check out his torch!

Alton Brown's Baked Alaska

Well before dinner I had started the base of ice cream and cake.  It's really pretty easy, line a vessel the size you like with plastic wrap and fill it with softened ice cream.  I chose caramel ice cream, Dave wanted vanilla.




Alton Brown has you make a cake. I didn't want to make a cake for two little servings. I had some store purchased pound  cake in the freezer. I bought it for a project where I thought I was going to carve it into the shape of a shoe. I decided to make the shoe out of fondant and just threw the cake in the freezer.  This was a good way to use it up.




Once the vessel is full of ice cream, place a piece of cake on the top and stick the whole thing back in the freezer for an hour or so.

When you're ready, make the meringue. This is also pretty easy, whip up some egg whites with vanilla and a little salt.  Cook up some sugar, corn syrup and water to a temperature of 240 F then slowly add this to the egg whites while whipping.




Pull the ice cream out of the cups and place them cake side down on a heat proof plate.  I then piped the meringue around the ice cream.




Finally, the fun part, torch it!  I don't have (nor do I need) the size torch used by Alton Brown, but we do have a very nice torch that worked just fine!




Are these beautiful or what?!  I made baked Alaska!

I would make these differently next time. I didn't care for the cake AT ALL. I didn't eat it. Next time I may do a graham cracker or Oreo crust or gingersnaps! Gingersnaps would be awesome!  I also put WAY too much meringue on them.  Well, at least for me.  Dave cleaned his plate, I ate the nicely caramelized bits and left the rest.  So I'll use a smaller piping tip next time!  It was fun. It was yummy!  We'll definitely do this again. Maybe we'll have some friends over next time.
 
 "Oceanaire" Crab Cakes

Makes four 5-ounce cakes

1 pound crab meat, picked over for shells
2 eggs
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1/4 teaspoon dry mustard
1/2 teaspoon Old Bay Seasoning
2 teaspoons chopped fresh parsley
1/4 cup minced yellow onion
1 cup breadcrumbs
2 slices fresh bread, diced

Place crab meat in a mixing bowl and set aside.
In another small bowl, place the eggs mayonnaise, dry mustard, Old Bay, onion and parsley. Mix well.
Scatter the diced bread on top of the crab meat.  Pour the egg mixture over the top. Gently toss or fold ingredients together, taking care not to break p the lumps of crab meat. Fold in the breadcrumbs.
Form the mixture into mounded, round balls, about three inches in diameter and two inches thick. Do not pack the batter too firmly.  The cakes should be as loose as possible, yet still hold their shape.
Cover and refrigerate until needed.
Place the crab cakes on a pan and brush with a little melted butter.  Slip the cakes under the broiler and brown until nicely browned, about 5-7 minutes.

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