smoking gun at work |
Getting down to it, I made this recipe special for the occasion, and it's best done with a couple days to prepare. I wanted something aggressive, so it's a bit spicy. Considering what usually fuels a knuckle sandwich, it's also got coffee, whiskey and smoke in it. I don't have a smoker, but I do have a "smoking gun", so I filled the sealed marinating bowl with smoke a bunch of times to replicate it. A quality liquid smoke can also be added to the broth if you like. I decided to do a traditional braise because I wanted to get a good amount of broth out of it and used my slow cooker (it can hold a nice sub 200F temperature) but I've included the methods if you choose to use the oven or sous-vide. The knuckle has a lot of cartilage in it - it's delicious. If you aren't used to cartilage, give it a try, you may want to eat it on it's own - I chopped it up and put it back in the mix with the meat once it was pulled.
You will need:
1 beef knuckle (2-2.5kg / 5lbs)
4 medium onions
2 carrots
2 stalks of celery
4 cloves of garlic
2L / 8qt beef stock
796ml / 28oz canned tomatoes (1 can)
45g / 1.6oz Oaxacan chocolate (it's spicier)
1 pack Starbucks "Via" instant coffee
60ml / 4Tbs whiskey
2 bay leaves
as needed olive oil
spice rub: (feel free to be generous, all measurements are "at least")
5ml / 1tsp cumin
5ml / 1tsp smoked paprika
2.5ml / 1/2tsp cayenne
5ml / 1tsp ground black pepper
5ml / 1tsp garlic power
10ml / 2tsp brown sugar
you will also need a smoker, smoking gun, or liquid smoke
Method:
- rub the meat with a bit of olive oil
- apply the spices evenly to all sides - massage them in
- if you have a smoker - smoke two hours
- julienne two of the onions
- place the meat in the bowl with the onions and toss around for coverage
- let the meat marinate overnight
- clean the onions off the meat (save them) and season well with salt
- sear the meat well in a hot pan and set aside
- unless the pan is excessively burnt, julienne the other two onions and caramelize along with the originals in the same pan
- when the onions are browned, set aside and caramelize the carrots and celery, adding the garlic at the end
- return the onions to the pan
- deglaze with whiskey
- puree the can tomatoes and strain the seeds out
- add the tomato puree to the pan
- add the chocolate and coffee and dissolve both
- add the bay leaves
- set the oven to 250F / 121C
- bring the broth to a simmer
- cover and place in the oven and cook for 5 -6 hours (slow cooker was about the same)
- check the meat - it shouldn't feel tight and the fibers should separate when squeezed
- remove from the oven and cool on a rack in the liquid
- rest in the liquid overnight in the fridge
- remove from fridge and remove fat cap from the broth
- gently warm up the broth - this helps pulling the meat apart
- remove the meat from the broth
- strain the vegetables out of the broth and set it to reduce to a sauce
- put the bone in some water and make a remouillage stock - there's still flavour in it
- pull the meat apart with your fingers
- chop the cartilage and add to the meat
- put the meat in a pan and keep warm
- moisten with the reduced sauce to taste and desired juiciness
- dish out some knuckle sandwiches!
the knockout punch |
note: the final sandwich was dressed with our pickled red onions, candied poblanos, cheddar cheese and some of the adobo from Abuela's chipotles - pure goodness!
I really appreciate you sharing that. Getting a sous vide immersion circulator has been my best purchase this year, which cooks meat incredibly juicy and tender.
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