Summer has finally arrived here in Portland and the arrival of the good weather means beer festivals, camping, and of course, more cooking on the BBQ. Shawn and I took advantage of the 80 degree weather and tried our hand at smoking ribs on the grill. The idea for ribs all came from my desire to enter the "Dish It Your Way" challenge from the America's Test Kitchen folks. As soon as I heard about this challenge, I knew I had to enter. Who loves the Test Kitchen more than I do? I even have a label for Test Kitchen posts, for goodness sakes. The week 3 challenge calls for potato salad posts, so ribs seemed like a fitting main dish.
At first the process seemed a bit daunting: making my own rub, two hours on the grill and then another hour sitting, AND making my own barbecue sauce...are you kidding me? But after we broke it down, it wasn't so bad. The instructions and illustrations from Cook's Illustrated always make things just a wee bit easier. The ribs require a little patience--much easier to have when your refrigerator is stocked with good Oregon beers. This is Oregon Craft Beer month after all!
Secret to perfectly cooked ribs...great rub and lots of patience. |
I improvised a bit on the barbeque sauce and made the basic sauce and jazzed it up with a few of the ingredients for the tangy and sweet sauce. |
Served in the funky fish bowl Kara gave us. |
Use your thyme wisely--it takes a lot to stand up to the strong flavor of the cheese |
Have to take advantage of the limited asparagus season! |
Blue cheese and thyme potato salad
1 1/2 lbs. red potatoes (new potatoes would be ideal, but regular red potatoes work as well)
4-5 oz crumbled blue cheese
1 small shallot, minced
1 small garlic clove, minced
1 small garlic clove, minced
1/4 cup sour cream (lowfat works)
1-2 T mayonnaise
White wine vinegar
Green onions, sliced (green part only)
Fresh thyme leaves, minced
Cut potatoes into equivalent, bite-sized pieces and boil gently until cooked through, but not falling apart. While potatoes are cooking, combine half the blue cheese crumbles, sour cream, mayonnaise, shallots, garlic, and a splash of white wine vinegar, making sure to mash the blue cheese into the sauce. If it seems a little too thick, adjust with sour cream and vinegar. Add about 3/4 green onions and mix until just combined.
After the the potatoes are cooked through, drain, place in a large bowl, and toss with enough white wine vinegar to lightly coat the potatoes. Let the potatoes cool in the bowl at room temperature for about 20 minutes.
After the potatoes have cooled, combine gently with already made blue cheese sauce. Toss in the rest of the blue cheese crumbles and top with green onions.
At this point, if you wanted to add bacon, you could throw some fried up bacon bits on top.
After the the potatoes are cooked through, drain, place in a large bowl, and toss with enough white wine vinegar to lightly coat the potatoes. Let the potatoes cool in the bowl at room temperature for about 20 minutes.
After the potatoes have cooled, combine gently with already made blue cheese sauce. Toss in the rest of the blue cheese crumbles and top with green onions.
At this point, if you wanted to add bacon, you could throw some fried up bacon bits on top.
Looks awesome! We were talking of BBQ ribs yesterday but didn't...maybe we'll try this next weekend!
ReplyDeleteTook me time to read all the comments, but I really enjoyed the article. It proved to be Very helpful to me and I am sure to all the commenters here! It’s always nice when you can not only be informed, but also entertained! best propane grill under 300 dollars
ReplyDelete