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  #1   ^
Old Thu, Jan-26-12, 10:53
Buttoni's Avatar
Buttoni Buttoni is offline
Patience Personified
Posts: 3,234
 
Plan: LC/OMAD
Stats: 199/188/130 Female 5'3"
BF:5'5" tall
Progress: 16%
Location: Temple, Texas
Default Peggy's Chicken "Fried" Steak



I live in Texas and man, have I ever missed classic chicken-fried steak with cream gravy!! Well no more yearning for a long-lost love! I just created a CFS that’s pretty dang close to the real deal! I’ve had such good luck with my mayo-pork rind coating for various oven-baked “fries”, numerous "fried" veggies as well as on oven-fried fish filets, I thought to myself many a time, “Why not give it a whirl on beef”? Well, I finally got around to that!

My first thought on this topic was that the beef would exude too much moisture during baking, if coated raw, and the pork-rink coating would get “soggy” rather than crispy. So I decided to sear the meat first to seal in those juices before I began. That turned out to be a VERY good decision. My first attempt on a Chicken Fried Steak was really, REALLY good last night. And the gravy was SUPER, even without the traditional step of browning some flour in the pan drippings for tastier gravy. The natural caramelized meat juices deglazed from the skillet made a DELICIOUS cream gravy without a bit of flour! Who’da thunk? I served this alongside radishes and onion sauteed in bacon grease (to mimic cottage fries) and steamed broccoli. Mmmmmm was it ever GOOD! My only improvement will be to take it out of the oven sooner next time as I was stalling until my radish/onion saute was done and browned it a bit more than we like, as a rule.

You can use round steak for this dish if you prefer, but I I have always preferred chuck or sirloin for my CFS. Better taste in my opinion. I’m not very fond of round in anything. This recipe is OK for Induction!

INGREDIENTS:

1 lb. trimmed sirloin, chuck or round steak
1/3 c. homemade (http://buttoni.wordpress.com/2009/0...ade-mayonnaise/ Commercial mayo will require more, as it is thicker)
1 T. coconut oil for searing
2 oz. pork rinds, crushed fine
½ tsp. spice seasoning of your choice (I used my Seafood Spice Blend: http://buttoni.wordpress.com/2009/0...od-spice-blend/ )

FOR THE GRAVY:

1 c. water
½ c. heavy cream
Dash salt and black pepper

DIRECTIONS: Crush pork rinds fine and stir in spice seasonings. Place into shallow bowl with a spoon for applying and set aside while you prepare the meat. Trim meat of all visible fat and gristle. If using chuck or sirloin that is very thick, slice it laterally if need be to to create a pieces about ½ thick. Preheat oven to 425º. Cut into 4 portions and pound the pieces with a meat cleaver or mallet to tenderize it a bit. Heat coconut oil in non-stick skillet and sear meat on both sides until lightly browned, sprinkling lightly with black pepper as it sears. You don’t want to cook the meat DONE here, just seared a bit. Remove from heat.

Pour mayo into a saucer and using a brush, holding the HOT meat on one tip with tongs (I use tiny ice bucket tongs), coat both sides of each piece of meat well with mayo. Then move over to the bowl of crushed pork rinds and using a spoon, spoon the rinds over both sides of the meat. You’ll get decent coverage without any one piece getting excess. I have found that if you just dip the meat into the rinds, it “grabs” say more coating than is necessary, resulting in not having enough rinds to finish the job at hand and have to crush more (been there; done that) and increase calories. Place the coated meat onto a non-stick baking sheet and pop into preheated 425º oven. Bake about 20 minutes or until browned to your liking.

As the meat is cooking, make your cream gravy. Add 1 c. water to the skillet you seared the meat in and over low heat, completely deglaze all the tasty brown bits off the bottom by scraping the bottom of the pan with a spoon or spatula. Add the cream and simmer to reduce. This add both color and flavor to your gravy. Add a dash of black pepper and salt to taste. If you prefer a thicker gravy, you can slightly thicken with your preferred thickener.

Serve with gravy dipped over meat. This goes well with many of your favorite vegetable dishes. I hope you ENJOY! When you note the nutritional stats below, you’ll say the moral of this story is EAT MORE CHICKEN FRIED STEAK! Shhhh! Don’t say it too loud near one of those Chick-Fil-A signs.

NUTRITIONAL INFO: Makes four 4-oz servings, each contains:

471.3 calories
30.8 g fat
1.9 g carbs, .03 g fiber, 1.87 g NET CARBS
45 g protein
356 mg sodium
523 mg potassium
59% RDA Vitamin B6, 112% B12, 43% iron, 75% niacin, 65% phosphorous, 52% riboflavin, 128% selenium, 93% zinc
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  #2   ^
Old Sun, Jan-29-12, 14:33
CarolynC's Avatar
CarolynC CarolynC is offline
Getting Healthy!
Posts: 1,755
 
Plan: General LC
Stats: 213/169/166 Female 5' 8.5"
BF:
Progress: 94%
Location: Tuscaloosa, AL, USA
Default

I made this today and it was very good. Thanks for the recipe, Buttoni!

My gravy originally tasted too much like cream. I think this was because I used cube steak, which didn't end up with many carmelized meat bits. I added a few teaspoons of Worcestershire sauce to the heating gravy and that perked it up.

Why did you choose to bake the steaks rather than fry them?
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  #3   ^
Old Mon, Jan-30-12, 09:27
Buttoni's Avatar
Buttoni Buttoni is offline
Patience Personified
Posts: 3,234
 
Plan: LC/OMAD
Stats: 199/188/130 Female 5'3"
BF:5'5" tall
Progress: 16%
Location: Temple, Texas
Default

I've never had much luck with chicken frying steak in a skillet. Invariably the crusty coating sticks to the skillet and not the meat! Plus, I really hate standing over a hot pan of grease. Been burned with popping grease one time too many.

I'm glad you like this! I plan to do it again soon!
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  #4   ^
Old Tue, Jul-09-13, 20:23
missymagoo missymagoo is offline
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Posts: 658
 
Plan: atkins
Stats: 235/187/158 Female 5'5"
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Progress:
Default

looks good
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  #5   ^
Old Wed, Jul-10-13, 04:26
Buttoni's Avatar
Buttoni Buttoni is offline
Patience Personified
Posts: 3,234
 
Plan: LC/OMAD
Stats: 199/188/130 Female 5'3"
BF:5'5" tall
Progress: 16%
Location: Temple, Texas
Default

It really is, MissMagoo.
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