Our latest endeavor was to find goat cheese. I swore to him that I found it at a certain grocery store while picking up some miscellaneous items once. We went there, and it wasn't there anymore. He suggested we try Wal Mart, and I scoffed, since I swear I looked there before too. Lo and behold, sitting in the front of the store was goat cheese. I guess one store stopped carrying it and Wal Mart picked it up. So hooray for another new ingredient to try.
Steak Panini with Goat Cheese and Caramelized Onions
slightly adapted from Serious Eats
Ingredients
3 ounces fresh goat cheese
1 tablespoon fresh basil, chopped
1 tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped
3/4 pounds flank steak (or any cut you'd like)
salt and pepper
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped
3/4 pounds flank steak (or any cut you'd like)
salt and pepper
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 sweet onion, cut into ½-inch slices
⅓ cup balsamic vinegar
⅓ cup balsamic vinegar
4 slices crusty bread, (we used focaccia)
Directions
1) Combine goat cheese, basil, and thyme in a medium-sized bowl. Stir together with a fork and set aside.
2) Season both sides of flank steak
with salt and pepper. Preheat a 10-inch cast iron pan over medium-high
heat. Add one tablespoon of canola oil. When oil starts to smoke, add
the flank steak. Cook until well browned on one side, three to four
minutes, and then flip. Cook until browned on that side, three to four
minutes, and then transfer to a cutting board and let it rest.
3) Reduce heat to medium and add the
rest of the oil and the onions. Stir well until onions are coated in
oil, about one minute. Then season with about ¼ teaspoon of salt and
pour in the balsamic vinegar. Cook over medium heat until onions are
soft and caramelized, about 20 minutes. Turn off heat, and transfer
onions to a bowl.
4) Thinly slice the flank steak against the grain.
5) Lay out the eight slices of bread.
Smear a little goat cheese on one side of each. Divide the meat between
four slices of bread, and season with salt and pepper. Spoon a
tablespoon or two of the caramelized onions on the steak. Top each with
the remaining four slices of bread, making sure the goat cheese spread
faces down.
6) Preheat a panini press to medium.
Place the sandwich in and cook until sandwiches are well browned, about
four minutes. Also, you could preheat a grill pan to medium. Places the
sandwiches on top, and weigh them down with a heavy iron skillet. Cook
them until well browned, about three minutes a side.
7) Slice the sandwiches in half and serve.
These sandwiches are very flavorful. The balsamic vinegar and the goat cheese work very well together to create flavor without drowning out the steak on the sandwich. This was a great weeknight meal that we both enjoyed. Jacob was surprised at how much flavor the goat cheese actually added to the sandwich. We both agree that without the goat cheese, this sandwich wouldn't have the same effect.
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