
One complaint I hear often when I recommend grassfed meats is how expensive they are. Now, it’s true that compared to CAFO-produced, GMO grain-fed, mass produced beef, $26 for two New York Strip Steaks might seem expensive. But, when those two steaks feed seven people with leftovers, the overall cost drops considerably. As part of a meal that costs only $3.75 per person, they become a bargain! And, in the meantime, we are supporting a local farmer, encouraging carbon sequestration, and eating some pretty fine meat.
Steak Salad for Eight
6 cups lettuce leaves, washed and torn
1 organic red bell pepper, washed and chopped
1 bunch organic asparagus, washed and tough ends trimmed
2 New York Strip Steaks (about 1-1/2 inches thick, just less than two pounds total)
sea salt and freshly ground pepper
bowl of ice water
1 organic lemon, juiced and rind grated
1/3 cup organic extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon flax oil
2 tablespoons honey
1/2 cup créme fraiche
Put an inch of water in a pan large enough to hold the asparagus in a single layer. Add a pinch of salt and bring the water to a boil. Put the oven rack on the lowest level and turn the oven on very high, 550° is the setting I used. Rub a tiny bit of lard on an oven-safe pan and put the pan in the oven while it preheats.
Add the asparagus to the boiling water and cook three minutes, then remove it from the boiling water and plunge into ice water to stop cooking immediately. Drain and pat the asparagus dry.
Add the steaks to the pan and sprinkle the tops with salt and pepper. Cook five minutes, then flip, reseason and return to the oven for another four minutes.
Let the steaks rest at room temperature for two to three minutes while you assemble the salad on the plates and make the salad dressing. Whisk together the juiced lemon with its grated peel, oils and honey. Stir in créme fraiche. Slice the steaks thinly against the grain and serve atop the salad.
Hey, while you’re here…Now that you’ve seen one beautiful dish made with local grassfed beef from a small-scale farm, won’t you drop by this post and read about how local beef is in danger of being regulated out of existence? It’s a very important post, and will only take a minute of your time. Thanks!
This post is part of Real Food Wednesday, hosted by Kelly the Kitchen Kop.

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5 comments
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April 28, 2010 at 8:57 am
Ellen
Looks delicious, Peggy. The creme fraiche must make it extra good. I’ve never tried your very high heat method, but I will!
April 28, 2010 at 9:28 am
localnourishment
I gotta confess: It’s a technique I got from Mark Bittman. I have a really, really lousy stove oven vent that can’t effectively vent the steam from a teapot, so stovetop searing is out of the question for us. But this worked pretty well!
April 28, 2010 at 7:02 pm
Michael
Looks great, but I could eat one of those steaks myself, even as part of the salad.
April 29, 2010 at 12:21 pm
localnourishment
Exercising self control is by FAR the hardest part of feeding a large family, for sure. It was so yummy, I could have eaten the whole steak myself, too!
May 5, 2010 at 7:46 pm
Jessica
This sounds so good! I just got some Himalayan pink salt from Sustainable Sourcing https://secure.sustainablesourcing.com and I think I’ll try it out in this recipe. Thanks for sharing!