1 shallot, large and peeled
4 tablespoons quality red wine vinegar
Coarse sea salt, to taste
Freshly ground pepper, to taste
8 ounces lean beef tenderloin
3-4 anchovy fillets
2 teaspoons capers
3 teaspoons chives, chopped
For Serving
Quality extra-virgin olive oil
1 ½ ounce Parmesan cheese, shaved
Lemon wedges.
Arugula
Directions
Take the shallot, and cut it into large chunks. Place it in a small bowl and add the wine vinegar and a sprinkling of salt. Toss well, and set it aside for about 12-15 minutes to allow the flavors to marry. Cut the beef into six sections and wrap each section in plastic wrap, and pound with a mallet until the pieces are very thin, approximately 1/16 inch thick. Keep the pounded pieces wrapped, and refrigerate for at least a half-hour. Remove the beef from the refrigerator and unwrap the plastic. Plate the steak with the anchovies, shallots, capers, chives, and arugula. Add salt, pepper and a generous drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Garnish with Parmesan shavings and fresh lemon wedges. Delicious!
Yes Please!
In Japan, raw horse meat, bazushi, is pretty high on the list, too.
Excellent and yummy. Steak tartare is also excellent.
Good stuff. Recipe is missing garlic though.
It’s delicious.
We had it at The Treste in Roma.
5.56mm
We used to,eat hamburger near raw right out-of the fry pan before it was fully cooked- we are probably,lucky we didn’t get Ecoli. But,when you grind your own hamburger from steak, your chance of,ecoli is,much slimmer, almost non existentthe stuff we ate though was store bought hamburger. Imdontmevermremember being too,concerned with salmonella either, but maybe we kept,coming down with cases of feeling like “crud” thst really were salmonella, who knows?. Hard to remember now, but back,then if it happened, we didn’t make the connection
I don’t really do recipes. My Mom can’t do without one......
I really never thought about pounding the steak.
I usually just cut it paper thin with a really sharp knife.
Drizzle of extra virgin olive oil and salt and pepper.
Good for venison too!
BTW. Helps slicing if the meat of choice is only partially thawed.
Looks great, especially with the capers. Love capers.
Harry. You know Harry, don't you? Harry Fraderci!
Good eats all around
fish bait
Grew up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Been eating ‘Cannibal Sandwiches’ for decades. Every Wedding, Wake and Funeral. ;)
Freshly Ground Sirloin Steak
Chopped White Onions
Rye Bread Rounds
Salt & Pepper
YUM! :)
At Harry’s in Venice they don’t use sea salt or any salt at all on the dish. Having been there the chef uses water from the Venetian lagoon to spray the dish with seawater thus adding salt and more importantly moisture to the dish it’s epic win. I’m sure they boil the lagoon water before use...since Venice has open plumbing that dumps directly into the canals and with the tides is flushed into the lagoon.