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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Monday, March 2, 2015 at 9:20:14 AM UTC-8, James Silverton wrote:
> I have two bottles of "brown" sauce sitting in front of me, both of > which claim to be the "original". A1 says "established 1862" and HP > claims that it has "set the standard for quality since 1899". I suppose > various interpretations of the words are possible. Both sauces show the > usual creative packaging; A1's bottle is 10 oz and HP's 9 oz. A1 belongs > to Kraft and HP is a "product of Holland" but claims to be British (and > has a royal appointment to support that). > > The ingredient lists of both sauces are very similar but I prefer the > more acidic A1, even if I like either on steak. I wonder does anyone > have strong opinions? I never use either one of them alone as a pour out of the bottle steak sauce. When I do a steak in my cast iron skillet....sear - sear - oven method.....I then make a sauce in the pan while the steak is resting. Here is my methodology, and trust me, it's really good: Add another pat or two of butter to the pan, put in a good glug or two of red wine, a couple shakes of worschestershire, a couple shakes of tamari, a glug of A1 or HP and let reduce a bit, then taste and finish with about 1/2 teaspoon or so of brown sugar (takes away the harsh). Boil a minute more and then serve with the steak. Sometimes I brown some mushrooms and then add chopped bacon before the rest of the above ingredients. Try this once. You will never go back to just bottled sauce. |
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On 2015-03-02 17:27:59 +0000, ImStillMags said:
> I never use either one of them alone as a pour out of the bottle steak sauce. > When I do a steak in my cast iron skillet....sear - sear - oven > method.....I then make a sauce in the pan while the steak is resting. > > Here is my methodology, and trust me, it's really good: > Add another pat or two of butter to the pan, > put in a good glug or two of red wine, > a couple shakes of worschestershire, > a couple shakes of tamari, > a glug of A1 or HP and let reduce a bit, > then taste and finish with about 1/2 teaspoon or so of brown sugar > (takes away the harsh). > Boil a minute more and then serve with the steak. > > Sometimes I brown some mushrooms and then add chopped bacon before the > rest of the above ingredients. > > Try this once. You will never go back to just bottled sauce. It looks damned interesting. Thanks for input. -- Food good! Fire BAD!! - Frankenstein's Monster |
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