this post was submitted on 25 Sep 2023
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[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yes, I made this. It's braciola (an Italian steak, cheese, and breadcrumb roll) with a layer of shrimp added.

After rolling, I hold everything together with string and sear it in black peppercorn oil before moving it and the oil into the marinara sauce to cook through. I use a thermometer to pull it at 135°F.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The presentation is very nice. Could you perhaps sous vide the assembly until tender and finish in the black pepper corn oil?

Are you a chef by chance? I'm assuming the very thin cut on the outside was purposely done, is there a reason your not making it thicker? Is it a flavor or texture thing?

Thank you for answering my half a dozen questions by the way.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

I'm not a chef, just a (polarizing) home cook who likes to play with his food. I imagine you could go sous vide, though I haven't stepped that far away from the traditional recipe to try it myself.

The original braciola recipe I follow uses thin strips of fatty beef that are essentially braised in marinara until edible. Since it is getting heated all the way to the point of gelatinizing, using a thin cut avoids the chalky texture that comes from "overcooking" beef. I swap that fatty cut for a more tender ribeye so I don't need to go that high in temp but much prefer the flavor and texture of seared meat to boiled/braised.

It's like a shrimp sausage held together by a beef casing or a stuffed squid more than a traditional steak texture.

This is the most engagement I've gotten on a post since the vegans showed up. Happy to answer whatever questions you've got, theyre more fun than the insults, haha.