A weekly dispatch from Bon Appétit's editor in chief.
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Right now is a good time to draw outside the lines
If the past six weeks have taught us anything as home cooks, itâs that recipes are malleable. Substitutions should not only be allowed, they should be encouraged. They help you become a better, more confident cook.
Weâve all had to do with fewer trips to the market, and we canât always access those hard-to-find ingredients that brands like this one sometimes call for. So what did we all do? We adapted and we kept cooking.
The other day, I defrosted a pack of Denver steaks I had bought at Dicksonâs Farmstand Market in New York City. Imagine a boneless ribeye, and thatâs essentially a Denver steakâa six-inch long cylinder, striated with ribbons of marbled fat. Rich, beefy, and delicious.
My wife and I seared off two in a cast-iron skillet for dinner, but we had two remaining. A couple days later I got in my head that I would make Basicallyâs [Beef and Bacon Stew](, a simplified version of Beef Bourguignon. Nevermind that it called for a couple of pounds of boneless chuckâI figured a hearty cut like Denver steak would bring the same collagen-rich quality to the braise. And because I had only about 10 ounces of steak, Iâd just reduce the rest of the recipe accordingly. The fact that I had a leftover, barely half-full bottle of red wine on the counter made the decision that much easier.
So in went the bacon until crispy, the chunks of steak seared in the bacon fat, followed by a quartered onion, some smashed garlic and a few carrots. I didnât have fresh oregano, but I did have some just-picked marjoram that a gardener friend dropped offâclose enough. A tablespoon of flour served as a thickening agent, while the wine and a cup of water provided the braising liquid. Into the oven it all went for about 90 minutes.
Now, if this were a baking project, I wouldnât advocate the same this-for-that approach. Baking, as everyone likes to say, is a science. Recipes include all sorts of precise measurements for a reason. But braising, stir-frying, roastingâtheyâre techniques. Stick with what you know and sub in ingredients as necessary.
Ninety minutes later, when my iPhone timer chirped, I was feeling pretty good about my steak-and-bacon stew. And then my wife walked into the house after going for a hike, âOh my godâwhat smells so good?!â
Recipe (kinda, sorta) followed; mission accomplished.
Cheers,
Adam Rapoport
Editor in chief
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