“Since hunger is the most primitive and permanent of human wants, men always want to eat, but since their wish not to be a mere animal is also profound, they have always attended with special care to the manners which conceal the fact that at the table we are animals feeding.” - John Erskine
Showing posts with label sandwiches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sandwiches. Show all posts

03 October 2012

silly cheesesteaks



Yes, it’s a silly name (haha) for a recipe.  It’s supposed to be a pun on Philly cheesesteaks, only these aren’t really made the way they do them in Philly, so I had to come up with a different name for them.  And yes, I HAVE had a Philly cheesesteak.  In Philly.  Although I prefer the ones I had in South Jersey better.

See, when I was 19 I moved to a tiny hamlet in New Jersey called Haddonfield, not too far from Camden, which is right across the river from Philadelphia.  I loved the area, very beautiful, and I loved hopping the commuter train into Philly and just walking around.  Anyway, on my first day in Haddonfield, my bosss son (with whom I shared a third floor landing and bathroom) was totally aghast that I had never partaken of white pizza.  (Nevermind the fact that I had never heard of white pizza! ~ For those others of you who have also never heard of it, its a pizza crust covered in alfredo sauce, Montery jack, provolone... uh, white stuff.  And it’s heavenly.  If you haven’t tried one, you really should at least once.)  He also decided to make it his mission to make sure that I tasted a real, honest cheesesteak.  (No one I ever encountered in the year I was there called them Philly cheesesteaks.  That nomenclature is strictly for us idiots who can’t differentiate them from other... uh... cheesesteaks... ?)  Wonder if that’s because South Jersey was just as proud of (and for good reason in my opinion) their cheesesteaks as the ones made across the river.  Anyway, it’s a taste to die for when you get a good one.  And I came across a recipe that made me hungry for one that I thought I’d try out.  But since mine aren’t Philly (or Jersey) cheesesteaks, I had to come up with some other name for them.  They’re not quite the same as the ones I remember, but still yum.  And a big hit.  Here’s the recipe I came up with:

Silly Cheesesteak Subs
adapted from Cheesesteak Subs – Quick and Tasty! at Mel's Kitchen Cafe
(printable recipe below)
makes 4-6 (depending on how full you want them)
1 stick butter
1 onion, halved and sliced into thin half moons – or onion powder to taste
2 garlic cloves, finely minced
12 ounces thin sliced Hormel Di Lusso Rare Black Angus Seasoned Roast Beef (or other thin sliced roast beef, preferably from the deli)
12 slices provolone
1 can sliced mushrooms (or sliced fresh equivalent), optional
4-6 sub rolls, split partially open lengthwise
 (I used Wal-Mart bakery’s whole wheat 6” sub rolls)

Melt the butter in a large skillet.  (Yes, I’m aware that this is a LOT of butter.  I was not using a non-stick pan and I found my meat and cheese were sticking, so I followed my favorite “advise” from the movie Julie & Julia: “Think it over, any time you taste something that’s delicious beyond imagining and you say ‘what’s in this?’ the answer is always going to be butter. ... Here is my final word on the subject, you can never have too much butter.”  Feel free to use olive oil, or less butter and a non-stick pan.  But I am not going to vouch for the end result if you choose to go this route.  After all, if you’re making 6 servings, that’s only a little more than 1 tablespoon of butter per person.  So live a little, and use the butter.)  If using onion (we’ve established that I almost never use actual onions, so I’m not sure how it will turn out this way, but probably pretty good, especially if a) you actually like onions and b) you’ve decided to use the whole stinking stick of butter)  add it to the butter and cook until softened and golden, about 8 minutes.  Stir in the garlic and cook for a minute, until it smells fragrant.  If not using onions, add onion powder to taste (about 2 teaspoons will equal a small onion) to the butter on low heat and stir thoroughly or whisk.  (I have to admit, I was going to add real garlic to mine, but I just did the monthly grocery shopping and my freakishly tiny refrigerator ~ by American standards, Barn, if you’re reading ~ was so full I was too overwhelmed to actually find my garlic, so I used powder for that too.  Go ahead, judge me.  I can take it.)  If you’re using raw mushrooms, you probably want to add them before the garlic.  It won’t hurt the onions to cook a bit longer if they need to, but garlic can become bitter if you cook it too long.

Add the beef to the pan, stirring well to coat it with butter, onions and garlic.  While stirring, use the end of your spoon or a spatula to break up the beef a bit.  Add the (canned) mushrooms and cook until the mushrooms and meat are heated through.  Season with salt and pepper if you want.  Turn the heat down to low and turn on your broiler (high), with a rack in the upper-middle position.
buttery, onion-powdery meat and mushrooms
Place the sliced rolls opened on a rimmed baking sheet.  Divide the beef mixture among the rolls.  Top with the cheese and broil until the cheese is melted, about 2 minutes.  (If your broiler is like mine, you want to turn on the oven light and huddle in front of the window ~ hopefully you have one! ~ until you see that cheese start to bubble.  You really don’t want to burn these luscious babies.)  Serve warm with a side salad.
ready to go under the broiler
out from under the broiler, somewhat melty...
If you look at that picture you can see that I could only fit 4 rolls on my baking sheet.  After I pulled them out of the oven, I decided I didn’t like the way my cheese (wasn’t really) melted and maybe I should try it the way I watched those guys in Jersey cook cheesesteaks on their grill.  So for the last two sandwiches, I put the cheese right there in the pan with my meat and mushrooms and stirred like a whirling dervish (actually, I don’t know if I stirred like a whirling dervish or not ~ I’ve never actually seen a whirling dervish and didn’t even know what they were until I Googled it just now) until the cheese has melted into the meat.

No need to broil, just pop that gooey succulent-ish goodness onto your rolls and you’re good to go.  If you want to be even more authentic, you can use a little more butter (hey, what’s more butter at this point, right?) to butter the cut (in)sides of your rolls and toast them in another pan (about medium heat, sort of like the outsides of grilled cheese sandwiches) until they’re lightly golden before putting on the cheesy meat and ‘shrooms.  You can also add green peppers or other stuff that sounds good, although in South Jersey, even the onions and mushrooms were optional.  It was all about the meat and melty cheese baby.
grill-melted, cheesy meat and shrooms
 A delicious (if buttery) quick weeknight dinner.
 
Silly Cheesesteak Subs
(adapted from Cheesesteak Subs – Quick and Tasty! at Mel's Kitchen Cafe)
makes 4-6 (depending on how full you want them)
1 stick butter
1 onion, halved and sliced into thin half moons – or onion powder to taste
2 garlic cloves, finely minced
12 ounces thin sliced Hormel Di Lusso Rare Black Angus Seasoned Roast Beef (or other thin sliced roast beef, preferably from the deli)
12 slices provolone
1 can sliced mushrooms (or sliced fresh equivalent), optional
4-6 sub rolls, split partially open lengthwise

Melt the butter in a large skillet.  If using onion add it to the butter and cook until softened and golden, about 8 minutes.  Add raw mushrooms (if using) and cook until they reach desired done-ness.  Stir in the garlic and cook for a minute, until it smells fragrant.  If not using onions, add onion powder to taste (about 2 teaspoons will equal a small onion) to the butter on low heat and stir thoroughly or whisk.

Add the beef to the pan, stirring well to coat it with butter, onions and garlic.  While stirring, use the end of your spoon or a spatula to break up the beef a bit.  Add the canned mushrooms, if using, and cook until mushrooms and meat are heated through.  Season with salt and pepper if you want.  Turn the heat down to low and turn on your broiler (high), with a rack in the upper-middle position.

Place the sliced rolls opened on a rimmed baking sheet.  Divide the beef mixture among the rolls.  Top with the cheese and broil until the cheese is melted, about 2 minutes.  Serve warm with a side salad.

07 January 2012

ham and cheese sliders

I woke up this morning and what did I see...

Not popcorn popping ~ in fact, very far from it!  Kind of made me laugh to see my kids trying out the sled Santa brought them when today’s recipe is ... sliders.  Get it?  Sliders?  Well, I thought it was funny.

In preparation for the many recipes I have planned to try this month, I made my monthly journey to Sam’s with Littlest.  It was an interesting experience for the two of us, as I usually drag Grandma along to provide some much needed adult conversation ~ not to mention a second grown-up for crowd control.  But Grandma has been sick and I didn’t want to stress her system further with a monumental grocery trek.  And my grocery treks are monumental.  Hey, I’m feeding a slew (sounder? convocation? bevy? ~ who decides what groups of animals are called anyway?) of hungry animals here, and I try to only go once a month.  And have you seen the size of the foodstuffs they sell in club stores?  They’re huge.  Yes, yes I am defensive.  I had several people comment on how much Littlest and I were buying.  Another reason to bring Grandma along; apparently people think some of my stuff is hers when she is with me.  But despite the amazed comments, Littlest and I enjoyed our one on one time immensely.

Anyway.  One of the items purchased during this monthly sortie was a box of a dozen large fresh-baked croissants.  (Planning on making breakfast with them tomorrow.)  Everyone saw them, coveted them, drooled over them... demanded that I make ham and cheese croissants immediately.  (My mother-in-law has a simple, delicious recipe for ham and cheese croissants that she made for special occasions and our family loves.  I’ll have to share that some time.)  Much to my disgruntled husband’s dissatisfaction, I was NOT making ham and cheese croissants.  I was making ham and cheese sliders, and no amount of persuasion was going to change my mind.  Honestly!  Just who do these animals think the cook is around here anyway?  This is not a restaurant where whatever anyone wants is made to order!  If I’m doing the cooking, then they’re going to have to suck it up and eat what I make!  Whew.  I had no idea I felt so strongly about this subject.  Now that I think about it, that could really be one of the reasons I hate the dreaded question so much.  (“What’s for dinner?” Aaaarrrrgggg!)

Boy, I digress again.  I’m a serious digresser today.  (Yep, that’s a word.  Look it up.)  This post is full of digression.  So, to make a long story short (too late!) I made Ham and Cheese Sliders last night, and the animals around here were planning on being unhappy about it.  I told my husband that it was quite possible that he would actually like them better than ham and cheese croissants.  He said not likely.  Then he took a bite.  I watched him with rapt attention.  He took another bite.  “So...?” I finally prompted.

“They’re good,” was the frustrating reply, muffled by melty cheese and bread.  He took another bite.  “They’re really good.”  Well, that was better...

“Enough sauce?” I asked, knowing that my husband is a saucy kind of guy and despite being bathed in a delicious poppy seed sauce, these sandwiches really aren’t very wet.

“Perfect,” was his gratifying response.

“Better than ham and cheese croissants?”  Yes, I’m ashamed to admit, there was a part of me that wanted my husband to like my cooking better than his mother’s.  I may be going to hell for this.

“You have to understand, I really love ham and cheese croissants,” he demurred.  My ego very slightly but satisfyingly stroked, his mother given her proper due, I allowed myself to be mollified and went back to my own dinner.  I was very surprised when, licking butter from his fingers a few minutes later he said, completely unprompted, “Those are amazing.  Restaurant quality.”  (I think out of the 12 I made, he ate 5.)

Wow.  Just wow.  Nothing I have ever cooked has EVER been compared to something you can get in a restaurant.  Even when I try out recipes strait from a restaurant!  What more need I say about these sliders?  Simple?  Yep.  Not too many ingredients?  Yep.  Most if not all ingredients already in the house (except maybe the rolls)?  Yep.  Fun to make with Oldest?  Absolutely!

Here’s the recipe so you can shock and amaze your own family.

Ham and Cheese Sliders
24 good white dinner rolls
24 pieces good honey ham (I used black forest)
24 small slices Swiss cheese
1/3 cup mayonnaise
1/3 cup miracle whip
poppy seed sauce:
½ tablespoon poppyseeds
¾ tablespoon yellow mustard
¼ cup butter, melted
½ tablespoon minced onion
¼ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce

In a small bowl, mix together mayonnaise and miracle whip.  Spread onto both sides of the center of each roll.  Place a slice of ham and a slice of Swiss inside of each roll.  Close rolls and place them into a large baking dish or heavy cookie sheet.  Place very close together.

In a medium bowl, whisk together all of the poppy seed sauce ingredients.  Pour evenly over all of the sandwiches.  Just use enough to cover the tops.  Let sit 10 minutes or until butter sets slightly.  Cover with foil and bake at 350° for 12-15 minutes or until cheese is melted.  Uncover and cook for 2 additional minutes or until tops are slightly brown and crispy.  Serve warm.

Mayonnaise or Miracle Whip?  Why does it seem that everyone likes one or the other, but not both.  Unexpectedly, this recipe calls for both, but I gag at the thought of Miracle Whip, so I balked and used just the mayo.  We didn’t measure it, just slathered it into the rolls, top and bottom.  Oh, and I guess mine weren’t actually sliders, since I used full-sized fresh-baked kaiser rolls.  Mmm.  They looked so inviting I just had to bring them home with me.  And I’m so glad I did.  We put one slice of ham and one slice of cheese inside and packed 12 of them onto a foil-lined standard sized cookie sheet.
 And I was going to use minced onion, I really was, but I couldn’t find it.  So I used ½ tablespoon minced garlic and a generous sprinkling of onion powder.  (I doubled the sauce ~ which I had halved from the original recipe at the author's suggestion.  But after I melted the butter I knew it wasn’t going to be enough.)

Try these.  Bake these.  Eat these.  Amaze and delight your family with these.