Saturday, August 15, 2009

Filet Mignon with a Red Wine and Balsamic Vinegar Reduction

Tonight Jeff, David (my college buddy from Wooster) and I put together another successful dinner. Tonight's menu was filet mignon with a red wine reduction. Then, since men cannot live on meat alone, we added a side dish of sauteed onion, asparagus, mushrooms and red bell pepper. Oh, and then we added a side of our leftover summer salad from earlier in the week. And corn-on-the-cob, too.

Oops, I forgot to mention the bruschetta... this is where we started the evening. This is really just a great, simple dish. I focused on cutting up half a loaf of Italian bread, applying a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil, then a leaf of basil, slice of tomato and of marinated mozzarella. Drizzle on a bit more olive oil and throw it in the oven at 375 for 20 minutes and you've got the perfect way to start your night. So much fun to eat your appetizer while you cook your main course.

Cost: Bruschetta

Mozarella: $2.50

Tomato: $0.40

Basil: $1.00

Baguette: $0.30

Subtotal: $4.20 or $1.40/person


We also like to drink as we cook. We tried out a new gin tonight, Bluecoat Gin from Philadelphia Distilling. If you're a gin lover, you should give this gin a try. It's drier than Tanqueray but more flavorful than anything you'll find across the pond. It paired perfectly with cucumber and lime. Plus, it's local (about 2/3 of the ingredients in this meal were locally-sourced).

Drinks: Bluecoat Gin and tonic with lime and cucumber: $1.00/oz x 9oz = $9.00 or $3.50 per person

For our main course we went with a steakhouse classic: the filet mignon. I know, I know, filet mignon and a blog called, "Broke and Hungry" shouldn't mix, right? But one of our arguments in this blog is that you can eat well and cheap. Credit Jeff with the cheap-ish find at Fresh Grocer.

We started the main course preparation by sauteing together a vegetable mix: onions, red peppers, asparagus and mushrooms. As you can see, it looked damn good.

Then David ably made up some corn-on-the-cob for us. Finally, we also used our leftover cold summer salad (previous post) to complete our vegetable side courses.

So what does it take to eat this as your vegetable side course?

Corn: $1.50

Asparagus: $2.00

Onion: $0.20

Red bell pepper: $0.50

Left over summer salad: $2.50

Subtotal: $6.20 or $2.07/person

I'd say that's within most budgets.


Finally, the main course. Jeff's special filet mignon with red wine and balsamic vinegar reduction. Jeff seared the meat, then added the wine/vinegar sauce and cooked another few minutes, leaving the interior of the meat rare, but then reducing the sauce down to a sweet little gravy, which was drizzled over the steaks and the sauteed vegetables.


So what's the review? The steak may honestly have been the best steak I've eaten in years, while the sauteed veggies were heavenly. Simply an amazing meal with amazing company. Another winner in the stomach. Let's get the final verdict on the pocketbook:

Meat Main Course

Filet mignon: $9.00

Red Wine & balsamic vinegar reduction: $2.40

Subtotal: $11.40 or $3.80/person

FINAL TOTAL: $21.80 or $7.27/person


More photos:







2 comments:

  1. That does it! I'm moving in with you guys... hope you don't mind : )

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  2. A note on ingredients since you guys like the fresh stuff, too: Basil, arguably one of the most useful kitchen herbs to have around, is extremely easy to grow and very hardy-- hot, dry, cold, wet, it'll live through it all! It's great chopped up for salads, salsas, bruschetta, caprese, and sandwiches. I've also just found that if you have access to a 5x5 growing space (window boxes count) that growing mesclun and collard greens is also extremely easy-- they sprout quickly and are prolific!

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