(This post was last modified: 08-31-2016, 05:16 AM by olschoolsteel.)
As much as it galls me to admit this, I have mastered the art of the boiled steak.
I raise my own beef. When you do this, you pretty much get to live with the outcome. Last Aug I bought a pregnant cow. It was a Belted Galloway halfbreed. I've had a few Belties in the past and loved the outcomes. She calved out in Sept of last yr and let her take care of her calf until Feb or so and weaned him. Then in May it was time to get her loaded and to the butcher. Well, the butcher let me know in no delicate terms, she was an old grannie.
This old cow was so sketchy she never let me touch her. So I dont know how "broken mouth" she was, but she had some age on her. She finished out and gained a few pounds on grass and grain this spring. I have the local feedstore blend the feed I want. I call it C.O.B. Ground corn, steamed and rolled oats, and steamed and rolled barley. It does have some powdered sorghum molasses mixed in.
So even with fresh spring grass and grain, she was a little tough. I like to marinate my meat for flavor. I dont believe in it for softening the meat. I did try tenderizing it with the nail style pounding tenderizer. It still toughened up.
So, I pretty much have a whole cow in the freezer, and knowing its tough is heartbreaking. But I'm gonna eat it. I dont care how. I just have to make it chewable. So, thinking back to when I was deployed, the Army would boil their steaks. The biggest sacriledge in all of meat prep, and they do it like its no big thing.
So, I thaw out some ribeyes, put about a cup of water in the black skillet, season the steaks with garlic powder and set them in there, on low, for about 2 hours. Covered. I keep an eye on it so it never runs out of water. Then just to itch that scratch in my brain that says I am going to steak hell, I reseason with some more garlic powder and a little McKormicks. I set them on the grill just to lightly brown it, even though they are technically done. If I have any stock left I use that to pour on as it browns.
Never in my life did I think I would boil a steak, let alone admit to it in public, but it works. But I only do it because I have to.
Makes a nice steak that is almost fork tender that doesnt induce sore jaw muscles the next day. Most importantly, the leg shaver is happy, now I can sleep peacefully.
I raise my own beef. When you do this, you pretty much get to live with the outcome. Last Aug I bought a pregnant cow. It was a Belted Galloway halfbreed. I've had a few Belties in the past and loved the outcomes. She calved out in Sept of last yr and let her take care of her calf until Feb or so and weaned him. Then in May it was time to get her loaded and to the butcher. Well, the butcher let me know in no delicate terms, she was an old grannie.
This old cow was so sketchy she never let me touch her. So I dont know how "broken mouth" she was, but she had some age on her. She finished out and gained a few pounds on grass and grain this spring. I have the local feedstore blend the feed I want. I call it C.O.B. Ground corn, steamed and rolled oats, and steamed and rolled barley. It does have some powdered sorghum molasses mixed in.
So even with fresh spring grass and grain, she was a little tough. I like to marinate my meat for flavor. I dont believe in it for softening the meat. I did try tenderizing it with the nail style pounding tenderizer. It still toughened up.
So, I pretty much have a whole cow in the freezer, and knowing its tough is heartbreaking. But I'm gonna eat it. I dont care how. I just have to make it chewable. So, thinking back to when I was deployed, the Army would boil their steaks. The biggest sacriledge in all of meat prep, and they do it like its no big thing.
So, I thaw out some ribeyes, put about a cup of water in the black skillet, season the steaks with garlic powder and set them in there, on low, for about 2 hours. Covered. I keep an eye on it so it never runs out of water. Then just to itch that scratch in my brain that says I am going to steak hell, I reseason with some more garlic powder and a little McKormicks. I set them on the grill just to lightly brown it, even though they are technically done. If I have any stock left I use that to pour on as it browns.
Never in my life did I think I would boil a steak, let alone admit to it in public, but it works. But I only do it because I have to.
Makes a nice steak that is almost fork tender that doesnt induce sore jaw muscles the next day. Most importantly, the leg shaver is happy, now I can sleep peacefully.