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Beef or Pork Cheeks

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28 July 2016, 18:14
Kensco
Beef or Pork Cheeks
Anyone done any grill work with these, or are they too delicate to smoke in the backyard?
28 July 2016, 22:07
Bill/Oregon
Beef cheeks are loaded with gristly connective tissue and need a long, slow braise to tenderize, in my limited experience.
Mark Bittman did an episode on "Beef cheeks in red wine with chickpea puree from Boccon di Vino" in Tuscany.
If you can Google up that episode it will be well worth your time, as the dish is simply incredible. I have a print of the recipe I'd be happy to send a scan of if you are interested, Kensco.


There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t.
– John Green, author
28 July 2016, 22:18
Bill/Oregon
Actually, here is a link to the recipe. The show was great.

https://www.randomhouse.com/cr...s/04/beef_cheeks.php


There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t.
– John Green, author
28 July 2016, 23:55
TCLouis
Which end are you using to get these cheeks?

Sorry, the temptation was too great.



Don't limit your challenges . . .
Challenge your limits


29 July 2016, 23:15
Kensco
I'm moving TCLouis over to the "Going to Hell" list for giving in to temptation.

Thanks for the recipe Bill.

I used to order the beef cheeks at Zafferano's in Perth. When you order beef at one of the best seafood restaurants in the city, that is saying something. I think "succulent" is the word that describes it best. It was always incredibly tender and sweet. Almost too rich.
30 July 2016, 00:44
Doubless
The only beef cheek I have ever cooked was for what is called barbacoa... I took the cheek meat and put it in the crock pot with garlic, salt and pepper, cilantro, and the juice of a lime, then cooked it all night on low.

The next morning, it was cooked and all the fat was liquid. I ate it on flour tortillas with salsa and cheese as a breakfast taco.
30 July 2016, 01:01
Ole Miss Guy
Doubless-
You did everything correctly.
30 July 2016, 13:56
mete
One of the problems I find is that when an Italian recipe with 'guanciale'[pork cheeks] is translated for an American cookbook the guanciale is usually translated to 'bacon' ! Sad because the two are different in flavor ! I should have some recipes for pasta with guanciale in the sauce if I can find them.

http://www.agraria.org/prodottitipici/guanciale.htm

Spaghetti all'amatriciana
1.5lbs spaghetti
1/2 pound of fresh tomatoes
6 oz guanciale
2 Tbs olive oil
1/4 onion, finely chopped
small piece of hot red pepper
salt
1/4lb pecorino cheese
This guanciale is unsmoked . Though the recipe is listed as bacon it does explain that originally it's guanciale
Cut guanciale into cubes ,cook slowly until crisp.Reserve the guanciale and cook in the pan the onion and tomatoes then add the guanciale.
"The complete bookof pasta" Jarret