Wow! I don’t know about you, but the holidays always seem to take my life by storm and when they’re over I’m left feeling a bit exhausted. I’m so grateful we were able to have a couple of days off before diving back into the bakery routine. We had time to rest and to reflect on how much we have to be thankful for. Much of that boils down to having family that cares about us and wonderful customers who have come through and supported our small business. Thank YOU!
Now, we’re looking forward to the coming year and all the good possibilities it holds. We have a couple of significant birthdays coming up in our family and that will be cause for celebration, whether we can celebrate in person or not. Our eldest daughter turns 25 in January and her daughter (our “perfect in every way!” granddaughter) turns 1 in the beginning of February. With that in mind, I sent our daughter a celebratory recipe for beef rib roast with onion sauce. Sounds pretty pedestrian until you realize that’s the English translation for an amazing French recipe.
The reason I sent that recipe, was because we had celebrated New Year’s Eve quietly at home by feasting on these fabulous roasts accompanied by twice baked potatoes, and great bread. (Where are the veggies? Well, that’s a different story. We did have a great roasted veg dish with our pork and kraut on New Year’s Day. But, back to the roast.) It was easy and soooooo good. You’ll never fix a roast differently again. More than that, you might never grill a steak the same either. This recipe is the bomb and was given to me by one of my great “foodie” customers. (Hello, Bill!)
So, that’s what we’ll be talking about this week. Another topic we need to cover is the menu for the next couple of weeks. As we all know, COVID has brought many changes for the bakery and part of that has been more than the usual guessing at production levels. Some weeks we got it spot on, others not so much. So, we’ll be having a great sale with some deep discounts in order to clear out the freezer for the coming new year. Boxes of 6 muffins from the freezer will be available for $10 (must purchase all of one variety), large tarts and pumpkin rolls will be available for $17. Pies, both large ($11) and small ($4.50) are available, too. Scan down past the recipe for this week's list of available items.
And, now for the recipe!
(Note: In place of the crushed pepper and coarse salt I used 2 T Montreal Steak Seasoning and it worked beautifully.)
Beef Rib with Onion Sauce
1 beef rib with bone, well trimmed
1 t lightly crushed black peppercorns
1 T coarse sea salt, crushed
4 T unsalted butter
For the onion sauce:
1 large red onion or 8-10 shallots sliced thin
½ c fruity red wine (I used a raspberry wine from Olivero’s)
½ c beef broth
1-2 T raspberry preserves (I used a tomato jam I had received as a gift from a customer and it worked beautifully. So I guess you can use just about any fruity jam.)
¼ t dried thyme
2-3 T EVOO
Directions
Wipe beef with damp paper towels. Mix the crushed peppercorns with crushed salt and press onto both sides of the meat, coating it completely. Let stand, loosely covered, for 30 minutes.
Preheat oven to 425 degrees. While oven is coming up to temp and meat is sitting, begin onion sauce.
Melt 3 T of butter in saucepan over medium heat. Add onion or shallots and cook for 3-5 minutes until softened, then add wine, broth, preserves, and thyme. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer for 30-35 minutes until liquid has evaporated and the sauce has thickened. Season with salt and pepper and keep warm.
Melt remaining butter and oil in ovenproof pan or large flameproof casserole over high heat. Add meat and cook for 1-2 minutes until browned. Turn and cook for 1-2 minutes on other side. Immediately place pan or casserole in oven and roast until internal temp reads 135 – 140 degrees for medium rare. (My roasts - that I picked up at the market - took close to 30 minutes. They were very thick, about 2 1/2 ish inches.) Remove beef to a board, cover loosely and let stand for 10 minutes. With a knife, loosen the meat from the rib bone, and then carve into thick slices. Serve with onion sauce.