Thursday, December 17, 2009

Yorkshire Pudding

Today - Recipe for Yorkshire Pudding to accompany the Standing Rib Roast below.   

All I can suggest is dont be afraid.  Its really quite easy and just dont open the oven door, or you'll have a flat pudding!!   None of these holiday recipes are fat-free, low-fat, and they never would make the cover of Healthy Eating, but that's what the Holidays are for!  Eat healthy all year long and enjoy a few weeks of some good home cooking!

Yorkshire Pudding

I cup of flour
1 Cup of whole milk
Pinch of salt
3 eggs
----------------------
Hot fat from standing rib roast

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F. Mix the batter ingredients (everything but the hot fat). Let rest for 10 minutes.

You can make these in the same roasting pan that you cooked the rib roast in. Make sure there is at least 1/2 inch of hot fat in the pan. Add extra oil if necessary and make sure the pan is hot. You can place it back in the oven to heat it up. Instead of the roasting pan and one large pudding, you can use medium muffin tins. Make sure again, that the pan is hot and there is about 1/2 inch of oil in each muffin tin. Pour the mix into the pan. Place the pan into the oven and cook about 15-20 minutes. DO NOT OPEN THE OVEN DOOR! You want the pudding to rise as high as possible. Make sure your oven light is on, so you can check on doneness. They will be risen above the pan and golden brown. When done, remove from the oven and serve immediately!


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Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Christmas Dinner 2009



This year for Christmas dinner, we are having a traditional English Christmas fare, standing rib roast, Yorkshire pudding, crispy oven roasted potatoes, gravy, roasted brussel sprouts, asparagus, figgy pudding with vanilla sauce and some banana cream pie just because. It took me forever to find a figgy pudding recipe that actually sounded delicious, so I do not know how "authentic" it is, but what the heck.


For years I have done something different on Christmas. I am so beyond turkey by Christmas day and I love lamb and ham in the spring. This year we have had guests during the month of December, but I am really beyond ham at this point. I have made a goose, a duck, and Cornish hens in previous years and all were good.

The Standing Rib roast tradition actually comes from my mother (again, I know..) and it was done on Christmas eve, when my family really celebrated Christmas. My dad made his career as a professional musician and getting up early was never something that was going to happen, so we always went to visit grandma, came home to a wonderful beef dinner and open presents that Santa had left while we were traversing the Wisconsin country side.

I honored the Christmas eve beef tradition for a few years, but this year decided that our Christmas eve was going to be just family and simple. Save the meal for Christmas day when I was not going to go anywhere or do anything, anyway!

It will be a quiet Christmas day, just the family and some good friends visiting. A good day for some games, puzzles, movies, and friends.

Here is the menu. I wont put up the Figgy Pudding recipe yet, cause, well, I haven’t tried it, made my changes and tasted it.

Standing Rib Roast

The key to cooking a standing rib roast is the cut of meat you purchase. I like mine bone-in, for obvious reasons. Typically the number of ribs in the roast x2 is the number of people it will feed, for example:

Six people - 3 rib roast
Eight people - 4 rib roast
Ten people - 5 rib roast

More flavor comes off the bone. You pay for the bones, but it is really worth it.

Make sure that the roast becomes room temperature before you begin cooking. I break down a head of garlic, then make slits in and throughout the roast, stuffing a clove of garlic into each slit. Do not overdo it! Use is wisely and sparingly. There are just as many thoughts about how to season the roast as well. I prefer a coat the roast with a little olive oil, then sprinkle fresh herbs (rosemary, thyme, basil) and salt and pepper. Sometimes I will just do salt and a layer of freshly cracked pepper. Its all personal.

Preheat your oven to 450 degrees F. I recommend that for a standing rib roast, you get yourself a good digital meat thermometer. Place in the center most portion of the roast. Place the roast, fat side up, ribs down, in a heavy roasting pain (prefer stainless steel). Sear the roast at this temperature for 15 minutes. Then turn the oven down to 325 degrees F.

Begin to check for doneness about 1/2 hour before estimated cooking time. Remember, the roast will continue to cook once you take it out of the oven, about 5 degrees more. So gauge your time accordingly.

Rare 120-125 degrees
Medium rare 130-135
Medium 140-145
Medium well 150-155
Well 160

2 ribs (4-5 pounds) 60 to 70 minutes
3 ribs (7-8.5 pounds) 1.5 to 1.75 hours
4 ribs (9-10.5 pounds) 1.75 to 2.25 hours
5 ribs (11-13.5 pounds) 2.25 to 2.75 hours
6 ribs (14-16 pounds) 3 to 3.25 hours
7 ribs (16-18.5 pounds) 3.25 to 4 hours

Remove the roast from the oven on desired doneness. (KEEP THE FAT AND JUICES FOR YORKSHIRE PUDDING AND GRAVY). Cover with aluminum foil and allow to rest for 15-20 minutes (Remember, the temperature of the meat will rise, while it is resting).

When carving a standing rib roast, bone in, as a suggestion, make sure your knife is very sharp! Also, use the bones and a guide for your cut. You will be able to get two pieces of meat for every bone.


ENJOY!   Tomorrow : Yorkshire Pudding and Crispy Oven Roasted Potatoes!

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