Kuya Titong’s Dinner
April 26th, 2008Visited 1112 times, 1 so far today
The other night I cooked for my Kuya Titong and his co- professors in AIM. It was a thanksgiving dinner for all his years with them. The whole faculty, I think were there and it was a joy to cook and bake for him. The menu was as follows:
Gavino Letttuce Greens, Baby Arugulas, and Pomelo Bits
Gorgonzola Cream Sauce, Poppy Seed Dressing
Sauteed Fresh Button, Shittake and Oysters Mushrooms, Crème Fraiche, Truffle Oil
Linguine Pasta
Panfried Dory Fillet, Lemon Capers Sauce
Grilled Prawns
Roast Black Angus Rib Eye, Mustard and Multi Herb Crust
Port Wine Demiglace
Baked New Potatoes and Broccoli
Desserts: Eliseo’s Tiramisu
Crème Caramel
It was a very simple dinner since I wanted the roast beef to be the star of the dining table.
I marinated it in a mixture of yellow mustard, dried basil, marjoram, rosemary and thyme.
Added several rounds of black pepper and a few tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil. Of course, as you should know, you only salt it just before you put it inside the oven.
Roasting or baking it in oven will take around two hours and a half, depends on the total weight of the beef. I got a 7 kilo rib eye and I have used this method, 20 minutes per kilo, this is after a pre roasting of 10 minutes at 425 F ( crusting or searing it ), after which it is cooked at 350 F. Then after the 2 ½ hours, you rest it for 30 minutes and you get a medium rare doneness of meat.
Now, this is not the usual case with other types of oven, that’s the reason I always have meat thermometer at hand to make sure that the beef’s internal temperature is just right. I usually stop at 130 – 135 F. Poke your thermometer at the thickest part of the beef.
I know this is quite rare for you but for beef as tasty and flavorful as this it will really matter.
I also had a portable burner equipped with a pan to further cook to our guest’s preference if the beef was too rare… Most of kuya’s guest wanted it medium rare which was wonderful since this was the best way to enjoy this type of food.
I also made two desserts very close to my heart since it was also mom and dad’s favorite…Tiramisu and Crème Caramel, its’ the right combination. Will talk about this next time…..
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April 27th, 2008 at 7:34 pm
It’s interesting that you call this “a very simple dinner”. We should see the “not-so-simple” one!!
April 28th, 2008 at 8:55 am
hi chef! your “simple dinner ” is most likely expensive huh!
nywayz, i love it… am waiting for your “eliseo’s tiramisu and
cre’me caramel” recipe…
April 29th, 2008 at 4:13 pm
Chef, was the Angus rib-eye that arrived when we were in class? Beautiful (and yes, very expensive!) meat…must’ve been a heavenly roast!