Chef Chris Rogienski shares the best pot roast recipe, featuring tender oven-braised beef chuck in tomatoey gravy, topped with tangles of bright pickled onions.
At L.A.'s Chi Spacca, chef Chad Colby loves grass-fed, a.k.a. red, veal for its marbling and color, but regular milk-fed veal will work well. He often brines his meat, too: Here is his go-to basic brine recipe.
If you like, after carving this standing rib roast, separate the bones into individual ribs and pop them back in the oven to crisp up. Serve it with Aioli, then fight over them with your guests. Learn how to make this recipe and more in our online cooking class with Sur la Table.
Nothing says "special Holiday meal" like a labor intensive meat. This rib roast almost wouldn't qualify for "labor intensive" status, except it has an overly complicated gravy and it is so expensive that you must labor intensively in order to purchase it.
The traditional stuffed pork roast is so delicious but so laborious. This chicken has all the same garlicky, herby flavors—not to mention lots of crispy bacon bits—and it’s optimized for a weeknight meal.
This sauce is an ode to the classic French dish of leeks in vinaigrette, swapping out the leeks for tender charred scallions. It acts as a bright, addictive condiment for this quick-cooking cut of steak. If you can’t find hanger steak, skirt steak works for this recipe—adjust cook time accordingly. The sauce also pairs well with roast chicken, pork chops...we could do this all day.
Get the recipe: https://weightloss-tricks.today/recipe/hanger-steak-with-charred-scallion-sauce%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv class="StackedRatingsCardWrapper-ghvskg ffDePc SummaryCollectionGridSummaryItem-HgAzv kSXTun search_result_item-5ada07e8069b66739aee0a16">
This recipe takes all the right shortcuts and none of the wrong ones. We doctor up sweet Italian sausage for the meatballs, opt for adding canned beans instead of boiling pasta in a separate pot, and still manage to make an uber-flavorful soup without having to call for boxed chicken stock. It's one-pot, one-bowl magic.
Join Chef Harold Villarosa as he creates tender and flavorful pork ribs indoors using an oven. Harold's homemade barbecue sauce features banana ketchup, a sweet and tangy condiment popular in the Philippines.
Got nothing but time on your hands? Cook these really low and slow. Set the oven at 300° and start checking the ribs after 3 hours. But don’t sweat it; they’ll be super-tender either way.