| Escalating steaks: Beef sales sizzle as guests go crazy for bargains on premium cuts
By PAMELA
PARSEGHIAN
To further appeal to beef eaters, the Nashville-based, 244-unit O’Charley’s chain will expand the availability of its slow-roasted prime rib special that is currently available from Friday evening through Sunday. Starting next month it will be offered every day after 4 p.m. and all day on Sunday. The “Prime Time Prime Rib” promotion will debut with a “holiday” discount of at least $2 off, Keil-Culbertson says. Currently the 10-ounce prime rib sells for $14.99 and the 16-ounce portion is priced at $16.99. Helping to make use of leftover prime rib will be a new $7.50 prime rib cheese steak sandwich that is scheduled to roll out Oct. 26, says Stephen Bulgarelli, vice president of culinary development at O’Charley’s. It will feature 4 ounces of thinly sliced prime rib, sautéed with onions, red and green bell peppers and sliced mushrooms. It will be served in a 6-inch “hoagie” roll and topped with an ounce of melted Monterey Jack cheese.  | | O’Charley’s cheese steak sandwich contains 4 ounces of prime rib topped with an ounce of Monterey Jack cheese for $7.50. |
The chain’s rib roasts are slow-cooked on premise, Bulgarelli says. Each store is instructed to rub cap-off, 14-pound roasts with a salt and herb mixture about three hours before roasting. Then the meat is slow-roasted for four hours in a 300-degree oven, Bulgarelli adds. The latest steak selection at Aureole, the New York fine-dining destination restaurant, is also slow-cooked. There executive chef Christopher Lee vacuum-packs Prime strip steak with olive oil, garlic and rosemary for a sous-vide style cooking method. He gently simmers the bagged meat in a water bath for two hours, he says. At pickup he sears it. A portion of 6.5 ounces to 7.5 ounces is sliced and served with Brussels sprout leaves, baby beets, beef jus and potato fondant. The dish is one of the main course selections on a $84, three-course tasting menu.  | | Restaurant X and Bully Boy Bar in Congers, N.Y., is offering a three-course dinner for $75 that includes a grilled 40-ounce cowboy steak crusted in cayenne pepper and brown sugar. |
Further north, in Congers, N.Y., Restaurant X and Bully Boy Bar is offering a three-course dinner for $75 for two people that features a grilled 40-ounce cowboy rib-eye steak that’s crusted in cayenne pepper and brown sugar. “This is the steak that slayed Bobby Flay” on Food Network’s “Iron Chef” competition, says the restaurant’s chef-owner, Peter Kelly. “We ran it in the month of September, and it has been just crazy. We couldn’t take all the reservations that requested it.” On the last Saturday night of September, 244 of his 440 guests ordered it at the 250-seat restaurant, he says. So he extended the promotion through October. He also throws in two glasses of Mill-brook Vineyards’ Pinot Noir, creamed spinach, potato gratin, béarnaise sauce and crème brûlée. “People come in and they have a drink to start, and since the impression is they are getting a great value, we’ve also sold a great amount of first courses,” Kelly adds. In fact the promotion is “driving business so we are able to almost hold our check average,” which is currently $56.50 a person. In Phoenix, at the year-old Noca, executive chef Chris Curtiss serves nine ounces of sliced prime rib with a crispy poached organic egg, glazed chipotle onions, fingerling potato coins and red-wine demi glace. Curtiss shocks the egg right after poaching it, then breads and fries it briefly to form a crust, he says. Noca’s owner, Eliot Wexler, hand-selects his Prime beef for this dish, he says. The rib entrée fetches $34.  | | The sirloin dredged in Hawaiian Kona coffee is one of the best-selling steaks at 39-unit Capital Grille, based in Orlando, Fla. |
Kona-crusted sirloin sells for $43 and has become one of the best selling steaks at the 39 units of The Capital Grille, says Jim Nuetzi, corporate executive chef of the Orlando, Fla.-based chain. For the crust, he mixes a liberal amount of finely ground Hawaiian Kona coffee beans with a blend of spices and grated Grana Padano cheese. The 21-day, dry-aged, bone-in sirloin is dredged in the coffee mixture just before being placed in a broiler heated to between 1,100 and 1,400 degrees Fahrenheit, Nuetzi says. He tops the steak with a caramelized shallot compound butter whisked with a bit of veal stock. Nuetzi says he’s taking advantage of the reduced prices of middle meats, adding, “The market is pretty attractive right now.”—pparsegh@nrn.com |