Miami Herald

A great steak starts with a sangria marinade

- BY KATE KRADER

In the wide world of cooking, steak is, ostensibly, one of the least complicate­d foods to prepare. Fanatics can and will go deep on the subject, but what’s basically required is a hot surface and the aptitude to take it to the doneness of choice with minimal interventi­on.

And then there’s skirt steak, the simplest of cuts to cook. It’s so thin, it doesn’t require a meat thermomete­r to check for done

ness; even if you wanted to use one, skirt steak isn’t thick enough to accommodat­e it. Instead, you just count the few minutes until it’s charred, then slice and serve.

Joey Campanaro is a die-hard skirt steak fan. The chef-owner of the Little Owl on a scenic West Village corner in New York favors it for its intense, meaty flavor. The cut is from the diaphragm muscle in the chest area, near the liver, which adds a powerful hint of iron.

He also appreciate­s it from a practical standpoint. Because his restaurant and kitchen are tiny, Campanaro likes the ease with which skirt steak is prepared; the meat cooks speedily over fire and then is sliced and ready to go. This makes it a great, unfussy dish to prepare at home. It’s good for dinner, says Campanaro, while working well for lunch or brunch, too. “Its not the heaviest of steaks, but it satisfies that crave,” he says.

What makes this skirt steak recipe compelling is the sangria-styled marinade Camparano prepares. Studded with orange slices, the red wine mixture includes garlic and shallots that flavor the meat; the acidic wine and citrus also tenderize the beef, making the cut cook even faster.

Another ingredient with benefits is honey: Besides infusing the steak, it enhances the cooking. “It’s the honey that accelerate­s the carameliza­tion of the meat and gives it that excellent char,” says Campanaro. The result is a tender but chewy steak that has the perfume of red wine with an underlying sweetness.

The marinated skirt steak is featured in Campanaro’s new “Big Love

Cooking: 75 Recipes for Satisfying, Shareable Comfort Food,” with Theresa Gambacorta (Chronicle Books: $30). While the book includes recipes for such destinatio­n dishes as the Little Owl pork chop, it is fundamenta­lly a love letter to his heritage.

Campanaro devotes a chapter to the crafting of a major Italian American Sunday supper like the ones he grew up among in South Philadelph­ia. Included in that feast are Sunday gravy stocked with meatballs, braciole (steak-wrapped, cured meat), as well as country-style ribs, Italian sausage, and pigs foot for special occasions. The recipe goes on for four pages and includes a sidebar on the importance of “stirring the gravy.”

There are also “homemades,” as in pasta, madefrom-scratch slider buns for meatballs, “old school salit” (as in, salad with iceberg lettuce), and rum cake. “I built the book around that meal,” says Campanaro. But the chef, who also trained with the illustriou­s Jonathan Waxman, doesn’t think the amount of time spent cooking defines the importance of a dish. “It can be Sunday gravy, it can be a skirt steak. Just make food that you want to share.”

 ?? Chonicle Books/TNS ?? Sangria-Marinated Skirt Steak is featured in Joey Campanaro’s ‘Big Love Cooking,’ with Theresa Gambacorta.
Chonicle Books/TNS Sangria-Marinated Skirt Steak is featured in Joey Campanaro’s ‘Big Love Cooking,’ with Theresa Gambacorta.
 ?? JENNIFER CAUSEY ?? Skirt steak
JENNIFER CAUSEY Skirt steak

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