Pot Roast. Pot Roast. Check your buds, they’re tingling aren’t they? You know damn well they are. There is some time in your past when you layed yourself into a gargantuan portion of Pot Roast and you can’t shake it. And you know? If you spend any time on the internet reading about home chef’s attempts at Pot Roast you’ll find that rarely can anyone make it, or make it well. At least make it well enough to want to eat it again.
Author Archives: Biggles
Rib Eatin Taste Test in Mobile Alabama
MeatHenge’s crack reporter Cindy heads off to Mobile for a late in the year meat treat. This time though, there’s been a change in the menu! There’s a new rib place in town. She and her friends pile into the Winnie and head out to find out whose ribs are best.
Please look to your left and under “FEATURED ARTICLES” you’ll notice the two entries for the Rib Off v1 and v2.
HAPPY HALLOWEEN
Baked Apples
Ultimate Pan Sauce
How many times have you made a gravy or pan sauce that ended up in the trash, a soup or made excuses for? More than once I’ll bet. Well, if you start with a beef sirloin roast wrapped in bacon you’ll almost be assured of victory.
Get yourself a nice sirloin beef roast, and see if you can find one with some fat on one side. Wash lightly and pat dry (oil and water don’t mix and your browning will be spotty at best). Poke some fresh garlic into it, rub it with extra virgin olive oil, and rub with your favorite spicy rub. At this point you want to get some fresh herbs, rosemary is a nice hearty one, but thyme works nicely as well. Then find some applewood smoked bacon, nitrate free if you can find it. Lay a few strips over the top. Pick up the pieces of bacon and turn them over, leaving some of the oily rub on the bacon itself exposed to the oven heat. Which, by the way, is about 350 on the bottom rack. Please get yourself a trivet and roast it sitting on said beast. I have been doing most of my roasts of pork, beef and chicken in old cast iron skillets or dutch ovens. You can use what you want, just get the meat out of the swimmy goodness that will become your pan sauce. While your roast is roasting pull out a nice little shallot and dice it as finely as you can. Maybe a little fresh herbies as well. Set aside. Oh and find your corn starch along with a steel sieve.
Roast it until it looks like this, or until about 135 to 140 internal temperature. Pull it out, set it aside and let it rest for maybe 15 minutes or so. Do it.
Pull out the trivet and let the juicy goodness drip off, knock off any roasted goodness back into the skillet.
At this point any self respecting chef or book will tell you that you need two tablespoons of liquid in there. Well, I say that’s crap. I’m going for max sauce/gravy and max flavor. If I have three tablespoons of drippings I’m damn well going to use them. If it turns out that you come up short of liquid, add some lard or butter. And here we go …
Heat up the skillet under medium heat or so and get the fat & fond going. Toss in your shallots. Actually you could dice up mushrooms and/or sun dried tomatoes as well. But let’s get the basics down first.
Now that you have the shallots rolling nicely, keep them moving. You don’t want them to burn. Just let them go for a minute or two. They’re small and the fat is hot. Grab a tablespoon of corn starch and sprinkling that in. You’re looking for the corn starch to be absorbed and ‘some’ liquid left. Not a complete paste. For this roast I added some lard to the pan and got it hot before I tossed in the shallots. Then I ended up with two tablespoons of corn starch to make the sauce.
Slurry the starch and goodies around until you feel you have it right. Then grab some of your home made or organic/natural beef stock. Start with a cups worth and get the hot and cold to emulsify. Then add another cup or so. What you’re looking for is a somewhat clear, dark brown, rich pan sauce that will barely yet smoothly coat the back of a spoon. Add a sprinkle of good salt and a grind or two of good pepper. Simmer a bit and pour through a steel sieve to remove bits. What you’re left with is a SMOOTH, RICH, dark brown pan sauce that will cause you to smile. I’m smiling even now, just thinking of it.
Get to it !!!
Baby Back Ribs – MeatHenge Style
Well, it’s been just over a week since MeatFest and I have a mid-week luncheon planned. Maybe once a year or so I have some friends come over for a nice lungeon consisting mostly of … well … meat. It’s good meat and this coming Thursday I plan on having several chickens roasting in a mesquite grill oven.
I knew it was coming, and wasn’t sure if I was up to the task. So the first thing I did was buy a few racks of baby back ribs to hone my skills. They did just fine. I didn’t get an after shot because they were so good I just stood over the cutting board and ate what I wanted. Which was mostly all of them. Oh well, what you gonna do?
Garlic Festival – California Mop Sauce
Easy Taco
Egads man, it’s been a long time since I last entered. Sorry about that, nothing personal. The last month has been chocked full of chores around the house getting ready for winter. I’ve also been stricken with a nasty case of a head cold, not to mention my boys and my wife. This means I have no time for goodies or for entering it into the site. So with this in mind, here we go.
One of our favorite meals, either for lunch or dinner is the Easy Taco. What you need is one of those dumb rotisserie chickens or leftover meat. Pretty much anything will do. Dice it up small and moosh it a bit.
Sautee maybe 1/4 of an onion along with a few cloves of garlic. Something simple. Maybe 3/4’s the way through toss in the meat. At that point add your dry spice mix. What you’re looking for is mostly cumin, then chili powder, onion powder, salt and pepper. Of course this is variable and only meant as a guide.
Once you’ve done this, about fifteen minutes, go ahead and start dicing up tomatoes, raw white onions, cilantro and anything else you can find to toss into the mix. Here it is.
MeatHenge’s New Mexican Chili Beef Stew
Welcome to MeatHenge’s New Mexican Chili Beef Stew. Within the following article you will find a stewed chili beef recipe sure to make your mouth water and your tortillas swell. Clearly it can be used for a handful of different applications, but our favorite IS the tortilla platter.
I will do my best to lay out what I did. Mostly because this is a combination of maybe two or three different recipes (I made it up). I can’t stress enough, if you have any questions please email the lab staff of MeatHenge.
Red Beans and Rice
I found myself over at Robert’s food blog early Tuesday morning, around 9am. His last entry was for Red Beans and Rice. Since he’s in New Orleans and likes food I figured he’d have a decent recipe. I was inspired enough to spend my day going to three different grocery stores to find what I needed. You’d think Red Beans and Rice, how tough could that be? Well, decent sausage isn’t all that readily available in this part of The Bay Area. By 3pm I had everything I needed, including being at home.
Robert’s recipe will be posted at the end of this article so you can have it for your very own, or go to his blog and kahsnatch it directly.
Meat Fest 2003

The 4th Annual Meat Fest for 2003 on October 11th – If you like food and some of it is meat you must go have a look. It’s free you know …
take me now to Meat Fest!
New Pot Meal

I wanted to take a moment and say Thank you to Jim over at Mercuri Litho for gifting me his unused 5 quart cast iron dutch oven with a nice glass lid. I gleefully accepted and ran to my butcher for a fresh chicken. Later that afternoon I had time to scrub it clean (semi cured oil of unknown age was in it), dry it, cure it and roast a chicken in it!! An upside down chicken roasting method was used.
Viking Salt

Danish Viking-Smoked Sea Salt – Take your time to read over that a few times. Some of you may have heard about Smoked Salt, especially if you’re in the Southern part of the United States. Viking Salt is not standard smoked salt. The process for rendering is unique. This is, hands down, one of the greatest food finds for me this year.
Happy Cheesey

A slighly modified recipe for “Macaroni & Cheese” from “Louisiana’s
Fabulous Foods, and how to cook them” 1960’s maybe?
16oz package of macaroni
3 quarts boiling water
1/4 cup of butter (recipe called for 1/2!!!)
1/2 cup flour
1/2 teaspoon dry mustard
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1 teaspoon salt
2 1/4 cups milk
2 tblsp minced onion
16oz grated sharp cheddar
Cook macaroni in boiling water until done. Drain. Melt butter in double
boiler, add flour and cook until butter and flour bubble, then add
milk. Cook slowly until it thickens. Then add rest of ingredients–Mix
with with cooked macaroni and put in baking dish. Bake at 350 for 30
minutes.
Knife Alert !
If you’ve been looking for a decent sized chef’s knife, 10.25" blade, then
look no longer. I was perusing ebay and found this rig for sale. It has a buy it now at about 50 bux. This knife was made pre-1987 and does NOT used recycled steel as with today’s knives. Go see now!