Sunday, September 8, 2013

London Broil with smashed potatoes and gravy

I cannot get enough of a good london broil. Fun fact: apparently, that is not an actual cut of meat, but a cooking technique for a certain kind of top round roast. And I have been slicing it wrong forever. I love the "Ask the Meat Man" site.

Damn, beef has been expensive lately. Whatever, I needed it today and the boyfriend was craving mashed potatoes and gravy. I usually marinate this overnight.

2 1/2 lb london broil marinade:
Lee & Perrin's worcestershire... so that's how you spell that
A few splashes of whiskey
A splash of liquid smoke
2 garlic cloves, pressed
Turmeric
Thyme
Black Pepper

I take a pyrex pan that is just bigger than the roast and throw the liquids in and squish the meat around in it. Then, rub around the pressed garlic, throw on the spices and rub everything in. Flip, repeat. Let sit for a day, flipping once part way through.

Heat the oven to 325F and pull the meat out of the fridge so it's not frigid when you throw it in. When you put it in the roasting pan, throw down a smidge of canola oil first. Salt the roast well with kosher salt on the top side, then drip dry, flip it over into the pan and salt the other side. I don't like doing the whole "dry first with a paper towel" thing on this since it pulls off some of the spices and garlic. While this is cooking (maybe 50 minutes?), boil some yukon gold potatoes to smash. I used three, added a few tbs butter and lots of salt and pepper while smashing. I skip the other dairy products, butter is good enough for me.

I felt like simple tonight, so I had this with some corn. I drained a can of corn and fried it with some garlic and butter, with a sprinkle of s/p.

Gravy. Fucking gravy. Beef gravy is my nemesis just like rice. I'll attempt it again tonight, hopefully it won't inspire they boyfriend to open (shudder) a can of store bought gravy, as he likes a nice thick gravy and I generally don't deliver.

Here's my latest effort. It will work eventually.

Combine:
1/2 cup beef broth
1/2 cup leftover marinade
1/2 cup red wine
Pan drippings

Throw the wine in the pan to loosen up the bits in the bottom. Use a wooden spoon if necessary, then throw it in a small pot with the rest. Boil this for at least five minutes, until it starts to reduce a bit. See earlier posts on evil marinade.

Combine 1 tbs of cornstarch with a small amount of liquid, either more broth, wine or water. Stir very well to combine and add to the liquid. Whisk, whisk, whisk! Season with lots of s/p and pray.

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