Presenting The Faux Gourmet!

The Faux Gourmet has been on hiatus for a while. I began this blog as a creative outlet during law school. After law school, I started other blogs on other topics and no longer needed this as a creative outlet, not to mention my diminishing free time.

But I kept cooking, kept taking food pictures and garden pictures, kept wanting to share the little tidbits of what I'd made. I occasionally did this on my personal blog (to which, I'm sure, people yawned and wondered when I'd post another cat picture). But I started to miss this space. Of all the blogs I have, this format, culled over several dedicated years and incorporating that adorable illustration by Sam Wedelich (see info the left) is by far my favorite.

So I'm back!

Expect short and sweet posts. Less food porn, more recipes and tips. If you want food porn you can look at any of the 5000 million existing food blogs. I don't have good lighting in my apartment and don't have time to style plates. I just want to make something yummy and eat it. If that sounds ok with you, stick around.

Looking forward to being back in touch!

xx

The Faux Gourmet

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    Tuesday, November 13, 2007

    Faux Gourmet: Seared Tuna Steak

    Two minutes, two bucks: the perfect ace-in-the-hole.

    Taste & See: It is as cheap as chicken & may actually be easier than heating up frozen vegetables, but definitely has a huge advantage in faux gourmet, the category that most concerns us: seared tuna steak hands down maximize both impressiveness & laziness. For those who read my little fridge challenge from last week, I am sorry to say the photos turned out horribly. I think I cook a little better than I photograph what I cook, or I'm just still getting used to the utter lack of natural lighting in my little NYC box of an apartment. Instead, I will reveal another of my Faux Gourmet secrets: 2 minute seared tuna steak. Seriously. Two minutes and you too can look like you know how to cook.

    All you need:
    Frozen tuna steak [Trader Joes always has Ahi steaks for about $4.50/lb]

    [If you have or want to invest in fresh tuna steak, you can obviously use that instead].

    All you need to do:
    Throw it in your fridge in the morning so it defrosts and when you're ready for dinner, get a frying pan real hot and toss on the tuna steak for a minute on each side, no oil. That easy.


    Well, ok, I like to sprinkle some spices/herbs on top. If I had potted herbs I'd chop up a bit of thyme & rosemary, add some black pepper, and roll the tuna steak over it. Given my lack of natural lighting, my herb garden is now no longer with us.


    I do however, have one of those spice roller caddies with about twenty spices hanging out of it- you know, the kind you get for $15 at Costco that has approximately four useful spices and otherwise consists of celery salt and "poultry spice," whatever that means. Well, tonight it meant that for perhaps the first time ever,
    "Seafood spice" got some play. Seafood spice consists of a mix of salt, paprika, sugar, lemon, black pepper, garlic, onion. You could also just try whatever you have: a little salt, a little pepper, a little something adventuresome.

    Whatever you do, let that tuna steak hit the pan and sizzle for a good minute. Flip it over and give it one minute more. That's all, cowboy. Well, use your judgment, of course, and if you don't like it rare cook it as long as you like. But a minute per side is about all you need to sear the outside and keep the inside tender and juicy. It may look more rare than you think you like it but I promise, the inside is going to keep cooking a bit and if you hold yourself back you'll be rewarded for your restraint. Voila: two minutes, two dollars. Even you can do that.


    If you really want to get fancy, you can ring your tuna steak [the one below was made with fresh chopped herbs when my kitchen knew better days] with sliced tomatoes, add some of the couscous referred to in Friday Night Food Club
    , previously, and top with small scoops of chevre [a soft goat cheese] & a dollop of hummus sprinkled with pine nuts. Nothing you can't get at TJs.


    If you really want to get technical, here are some more tips:
    • Don't cover the tuna or it will get hard
    • Let the pan get real real hot before you add the tuna for the perfect sear
    • Look at the flakes of the tuna to see how far in it has cooked- 1/4 inch all the way around is just about right
    • Slice the middle to see if it is done- the inside should be red and raw
    Fellow food blogs share recipes for Tuna 102 [Seared Tuna Steak with Daikon Dressing & with Roasted Red Pepper Sauce, respectively] if you want to take it to the next level & turn your new-found tuna searing skills into an entire dish.

    3 comments:

    Anonymous said...

    Hmmm, it smells so good in here. I am drooling. The pictures look great. I need to try it as I have all the equipment! Yay, for being roommates with an expert chef.

    -Grace

    Anonymous said...

    Ate at an over-the-top churascurria over the holiday break. The main course is supposed to be livestock, but my heart's been pining for the seared tuna ever since. Couldn't figure out how to make it till I saw your site. Thanks for the tip!

    costumegal said...

    or throw it on the George Foreman! my favorite quickie meal.