I
 was looking at my March-April 2012 copy of "Cook's Illustrated" 
magazine and I ran across this recipe for Philly Cheesesteaks.  What a 
 quick and easy  Saturday night dinner, I thought:-)  You start with 
skirt steak, add salt, pepper, two cheeses, a sub roll, and you have a 
great sandwich.     The meat was seasoned to perfection and the cheese 
was oh so good melted and mixed in with the meat.  I like the use of 
white American cheese in this recipe - it melted perfectly and mixed in 
coating the meat evenly.   The recipe states you could top the 
sandwiches with chopped pickled hot pepper, sauteed onion or bell 
peppers, sweet relish, or hot sauce.  The sandwich was so delish by 
itself, I opted out of the toppings.
Philly Cheesesteaks
From "Cook's Illustrated" March-April 2012
2 pound skit steak, trimmed and sliced with  grain into 3-inch wide strips
4 (8-inch) Italian sub rolls, split lengthwise
2  tablespoons vegetable oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon pepper
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
8 slices white American cheese (8 ounces)
1. Place steak pieces on large plate or baking sheet and freeze until very firm, about 1 hour.
2.
 Meanwhile, adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 400 
degrees.  Spread split rolls on baking sheet and toast until lightly 
browned, 5 to 10 minutes.
3. Using sharp knife, shave steak pieces
 as thinly as possible against grain.  Mound meat on cutting board and 
chop coarsely with knife 10 to 20 times.
4. Heat 1 tablespoon oil 
in 12-inch nonstick skillet over high heat until smoking.  Add half of 
meat in even layer and cook without stirring until well browned on 1 
side, 4 to 5 minutes.  Stir and continue to cook until meat is no longer
 pink, 1 to 2 minutes.  Transfer meat to colander set in large bowl. 
 Wipe out skillet with paper towel.  Repeat with remaining 1 tablespoon 
oil and sliced meat.
5. Return now-empty skillet to medium heat. 
 Drain excess moisture from meat.  Return meat to skillet (discard any 
liquid in bowl) and add salt and pepper.  Heat, stirring constantly, 
until meat is warmed through, 1 to 2 minutes.  Reduce heat to low, 
sprinkle with Parmesan, and single slices of American cheese over meat. 
 Allow cheeses to melt, about 2 minutes.  Using heatproof spatula or 
wooden spoon, fold melted cheese into meat thoroughly.  Divide mixture 
evenly among toasted rolls.  Serve immediately.
 
The beef looks so very juicy and tender...must be really yum!
ReplyDeleteUmmmm, mmm! This is my kind of sandwich, it looks delicious! Cook's Illustrated is one of my faves!
ReplyDelete