Fast Food—For Pesach!

While some cooks like to have every meal cooked
in advance others prefer to cook on Yom Tov. If you prefer fresh food
your best friend in the kitchen can be the grill pan. While you may
not equate grilling with Pesach cooking, it’s actually a great way
to come up with innovative dishes using limited ingredients. You can
grill your entire meal from chicken breasts and steaks to vegetables
and potatoes on the side to fruit for dessert. Grilling is a quick
and efficient cooking method that allows you to prepare fresh food on
Yom Tov without a fuss. Nothing beats a grill pan for getting supper
on the table in the shortest time when you get home late from your
Chol Hamoed trips.

Traditionally grill pans have been made with
non-stick coatings to allow you to use less oil and fat and to
facilitate easy cleanup. Many cooks are unhappy with these coatings.
The new stainless steel grill pans have no coating and do require a
bit of oil to keep things from sticking. Better pans are constructed
from multiple layers of metal, giving them superior heat conduct. As
long as the pan is extremely hot and you don’t move the food until
it’s had a chance to develop a sear, you will be able to move it
easily.

You can serve these plain or add some
homemade tomato sauce or duck sauce. Stop by our store or visit our
website for our recipes.

4 skinless chicken breasts

2 tablespoon oil

½ teaspoon freshly ground pepper

½ teaspoon coarse salt

½ teaspoon ground cinnamon

½ teaspoon paprika (optional)


Rinse chicken breasts and pat dry. Place them
on your work surface. Holding your knife parallel to the countertop,
slice through the thickness of each cutlet, yielding two thin
cutlets. 

In a small bowl, mix oil salt and spices. Rub
each piece of chicken with oil mixture and set aside. You can
prepare this in advance and refrigerate until needed.

Heat your grill pan over medium-high heat until
a drop of water sprinkled on it sizzles and disappears. Lower flame
to medium and place the cutlets in the pan. Grill 4-5 minutes.
Carefully flip cutlets over and cook 4 minutes longer. Serve
immediately.

Serves 4

1 pound pepper steak, sliced into thin strips

1 cup pineapple juice

½ teaspoon cinnamon

½ teaspoon freshly ground pepper

1 red pepper, sliced into strips


Rinse pepper steak and pat dry. Place the
pepper steak in a non-reactive dish or a Ziploc bag. Do not marinate
in a foil pan. Pour pineapple juice over the steak strips and allow
them to marinate for 1-2 hours. 

Remove the meat from the juice and pat dry.
Discard the juice. Season the meat with cinnamon and pepper.

Heat your grill pan over medium-high heat until
a drop of water sprinkled on it sizzles and disappears. Lower flame
to medium and place the steaks in the pan. Cook 8-10 minutes or
until “grill marks” appear on the meat. Flip steaks and continue
cooking a few minutes longer. Steaks may still be slightly pink in
the center—that’s fine. They will continue cooking after you
have removed them from the grill due to residual heat. Don’t
overcook pepper steak or it will be tough.

Serve with grilled pineapple and peppers,
pouring pan juices over the meat and vegetables.

If your minhag is not to use spices simply
leave them out. These potatoes are delicious with just salt and
pepper.

2 pounds Yukon Gold potatoes

3 tablespoons oil

1 tablespoon coarse salt

1 teaspoon freshly ground pepper

2 teaspoons paprika

2 teaspoons onion powder

2 teaspoons garlic powder

2 tablespoons fresh parsley, checked and
chopped (optional)

Peel or scrub potatoes according to your
minhag. Slice into rounds, ¼” thick. In a pot of salted water,
boil potatoes for 10 minutes. Do not cook them longer. Drain and
allow them to dry a bit.

Add oil, salt and spices to the potatoes and
toss to coat. Add parsley and toss once more.

Heat your grill pan over medium-high heat until
a drop of water sprinkled on it sizzles and disappears. Lower flame
to medium and spread the potatoes in the pan. Cook 5 minutes or
until black “grill marks” appear on the potatoes. Using a large
turner, flip potatoes and continue cooking until well browned.


Your grill pan has probably seen the likes of
zucchini and eggplant but how about other tasty vegetables. Now that
serrated peelers give us the option of conveniently using more
vegetables than ever you can add to your recipe repertoire. Try
peeling peppers with a serrated peeler then grilling them for a few
minutes. The high heat accentuates pepper’s natural sweetness.
Brush them with a bit of oil and sprinkle them with salt and pepper
for a low-fat side dish. Grill eggplant slices, thick-cut rings of
onion and yellow squash along with the peppers for a colorful,
non-potato side dish. Grill peppers and pineapple chunks to serve
with the marinated steak above.


Grilled Vegetable Medley 

2 small zucchini

2 yellow squash

1 medium eggplant

1 large sweet or red onion

1 red pepper

1 yellow pepper

3 tablespoons olive oil

1 teaspoon coarse salt

½ teaspoon freshly ground pepper, or to taste

Peel or scrub vegetables according to your
minhag. Slice zucchini and yellow squash diagonally into ¼”
slices. Slice eggplant lengthwise into ½” slices. Stack the
slices and cut into sticks ½” wide. Core peppers and cut them
into strips approximately 1 inch wide. Slice the onion into rings ¼”
thick. 

Toss vegetables with oil, salt, and pepper in a
large bowl.

Heat your grill pan over medium-high heat until
a drop of water sprinkled on it sizzles and disappears. Lower flame
to medium and spread the vegetables in the pan. Cook 7-8 minutes or
until black “grill marks” appear on the vegetables tossing once
during cooking.

More tasty Pesach recipes next week!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

Email me when available We will inform you when the product arrives in stock. Please leave your valid email address below.