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In article >, chet >
wrote: > Lately I have been getting to like cheese steak hoagies, so I am doing > some reading on making them at home, I have a few questions, I read > where the meat is simmered in a crock pot with onions and then some are > made on the stove top in a fry pan, I was looking around in local > supermarkets and wholssale food stores that are open to the public for > some frozen steaks for making cheese steak hoagies, or would it be > better to look for pcs of rib eye and slice it thin and fry it. any > suggestions would be appreciated on my road to making a good cheese > steak hoagie here's how I make mine.: Philly Cheesesteak 2 cup diced green bell peppers (or green yellow mix) 1 cup coase diced onion 2 cloves garlic, pressed or minced 2/3 tsp fresh ground pepper, coarse grind recommended 1 tsp dried thyme 1 tsp dried savory 2/3 cup chardonnay or other dry white wine of choice 1 1/4 lbs very lean beef of choice, sliced very thin (see note 1) 4 slices (1 ounce each) provolone cheese 4 slices (1 ounce each) swiss cheese 8 large buns of choice - hamburger, kaiser, hoagy, pretzel - whichever type of buns you prefer (see note 2) Heat non stick skillet until a drop of water just bubbles. Spray with non-stick oil spray and toss in green peppers. Stir to saute about three minutes, then add onions. Continue to saute until onions start to get tender, another two to three minutes. Add garlic and pepper. Continue stirring and sauteing until you can detect the garlic aroma, thirty seconds or so. Stir in thyme and savory, and immediately add wine. As wine starts to bubble, you may choose to flambe for the fun of it, particularly if you have an audience, but it is not neccesary. Quit stirring and allow the wine to reduce to nearly gone. Spread out vegetable blend to evenly cover skillet. Lay out meat to cover entire bed of vegetables. Allow meat to steam saute (white castle style) until meat edges show hints of doneness. Start stirring the meat until all signs of pink are gone. Take off heat and push mixture to one side of pan. Set pan on an angle off a cold burner and allow juices to drain to lower edge of pan. Use a baster to remove as much liquid as possible. Return pan to high heat and smooth out mixture evenly over entire pan surface. As mixture starts to bubble and/or sizzle, lay out cheese slices alternating and just overlapping. Tear slices as needed to fill in gaps. Remove from heat and allow residual heat to just melt the cheese. Give a sloppy stir to swirl melted cheese as you spoon up mixture onto buns so that each sandwich gets some of both cheeses. Note 1 - If your not comfortable with your knife skills to hand slice the raw meat to wafer thin, an admitted challenge I am not the best at, throw your beef in the freezer for 20 minutes to harden slightly, then slice it on a home deli slicer set to roughly 1/16 of an inch thick. Note 2 - Sandwiches like this deserve a bun with some real flavor, but some people prefer a simple white hamburger bun. There is no wrong answer to this option. |
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