T-Bone Steaks with Hotel Butter
T-Bone Steaks with Hotel Butter is a gluten free, primal, and fodmap friendly main course. One portion of this dish contains around 46g of protein, 82g of fat, and a total of 914 calories. This recipe serves 4. It is perfect for valentin day. A mixture of butter, lemon zest, butter, and a handful of other ingredients are all it takes to make this recipe so yummy. To use up the lemon zest you could follow this main course with the Orange Marmalade Cookies with Orange Zest Icing as a dessert.
Instructions
Place the softened butter in the bowl of a mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Whip the butter until it's fluffy.
Add parsley, the lemon zest, and the juice of half the lemon.
Mix it until it's totally combined, scraping the sides as needed.
Add more parsley, more lemon juice, or salt and pepper if you'd like.
Lay a long piece of plastic wrap on top of a long piece of aluminum foil. Scoop the butter mixture in a long strip down the middle of the plastic wrap. Carefully pull one side of the aluminum foil/plastic wrap over the butter, squeezing the foil gently to form it into a long. Continue to roll the log of butter into a roll. When it's all rolled up, twist the ends (like a piece of candy) until they become very taught (this means the butter is pressing together inside the plastic to form a cohesive roll.
Place the roll of butter into the fridge so it will harden, or into the freezer if you need to speed along the process. To cook the steaks, salt and pepper both sides of the steak. Melt 2 tablespoons of butter in a heavy skillet over medium-high heat. When it's melted and golden brown, fry the steaks until medium rare, about 2 minutes per side (or more or less, depending on thickness.)
Remove the steaks from the skillet and lay a thick slice of hotel butter on top of each steak so it will begin to melt.
Serve within five minutes with mashed potatoes!Other uses for hotel butter:Stir into cooked pasta
Lay a pat on grilled chicken or fish
Spread on crusty French bread
Recommended wine: Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir
Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Pinot Noir are great choices for Steak. After all, beef and red wine are a classic combination. Generally, leaner steaks go well with light or medium-bodied reds, such as pinot noir or merlot, while fattier steaks can handle a bold red, such as cabernet sauvingnon. You could try Francis Ford Coppola Diamond Collection Merlot. Reviewers quite like it with a 4 out of 5 star rating and a price of about 20 dollars per bottle.
![Francis Ford Coppola Diamond Collection Merlot]()
Francis Ford Coppola Diamond Collection Merlot
Merlot has traditionally been used to blend softness and richness into Cabernet blends, but now has become one of the most popular red wines from California. The 1999 Francis Coppola Diamond Series Blue Label Merlot is generous and opulent. It is made with small amounts of Syrah and Cabernet Sauvignon to add personality and lifting aromatics. The Merlot is aged in new to three-year-old French oak barrels for eight months. Aromas of berries and blackberry pie from the fruit stand out in the nose that integrate with the stylish toasty quality from the oak. On the palate, the identifiable raspberry and dense blue, jammy fruit flavors combine with the wines elegant structure to support the stylish and lengthy finish. The 1999 Diamond Series Merlot is extremely inviting with great richness and appeal; it is drinkable now or can be laid down for two to five years.