Grilling Steak? This Bold Summer Side Dish Is the Perfect Match
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Why It Works
- The sweet-sour cherry sauce is jammy and fruity, with enough of a deep vinegar tang to stand up to all that sweetness.
- Radicchio grows even more bitter on the grill as it chars and lightly wilts, resulting in an intense flavor that requires an equally intense sauce.
I’ve had a recipe turning around in my brain for several weeks. It all started when I was trying to think of a simple yet interesting recipe that used cherries. What I ended up with was a red cherry and jicama salad with crushed nuts and basil.
But what I couldn’t let go of was an alternate idea that couldn’t have been more different. Instead of concentrating on freshness and juiciness and crispness, the other plan went in the opposite direction: wilted, aged, and cooked. Wait, wait! Don’t leave just yet. I know those aren’t all qualities that sound particularly appetizing, but they really can be, at least when used with intention.
When Wilting Is a Good Thing
When you want vibrancy, wilting is a bad thing, especially when we’re talking about very delicate lettuces that go from snappy and crisp to limp, wet rags in a matter of minutes. But some leafy vegetables can handle being wilted. Sometimes, they even benefit from it. If you’re having a hard time imagining this, just think of the perennially popular kale Caesar salad, which is only good once the kale softens enough. Or consider this Brussels sprout salad I developed a while ago, in which I wilt half of the shredded tough leaves from the sprouts using salt. The wilting is what makes these salads great.
Radicchio’s Flavor Transformation When Grilled
Radicchio is another green (if I can call a red chicory a “green”) that can stand up to a little bit of going limp. Given the season, instead of using a dressing or salt to soften my radicchio, I quarter it and toss it over a grill’s highest heat, just long enough to brown and char it in spots. It’s important to keep the core intact to hold the leaves together. What you’ll notice is that the radicchio’s outer leaves quickly drain of color, almost like a rose going dry before your eyes. It’s kind of a sad sight, but like I said, it’s on purpose, and it will all make sense in a second. The radicchio ends up more tender in spots, still bright and steamy within, with an even deeper, more bitter flavor.
Building a Bold Cherry Gastrique
This is where the cherries enter into it. In a small saucepan, I cook them down with sugar and some sherry vinegar until they’re thickened and jammy, then spike that fruit compote with even more vinegar to fix the final taste. (Other vinegars, like white wine, red wine, Champagne, and cider, would work, each giving its own flavor to the sauce.) The vinegar is what adds that aged flavor I mentioned above. Maybe it didn’t sound so appealing without any context, but wine, and the vinegar that’s made from it, has precisely that—an aged flavor. Often, when you’re deciding between adding lemon juice and vinegar to a sauce or dressing, it’s this quality that is most important: Do you want a clean, fresh acidic flavor or a complex, aged one? It just depends on the dish and your preference. In this case, with the brooding, bitter grilled radicchio, I felt that that deeper, older, vinted flavor of vinegar was more appropriate.
This cherry sauce is more or less what the French call a gastrique. In its most classic form, a gastrique is a combination of caramelized sugar and vinegar, which can then be added to other sauces, such as fruit sauces, for sweet-sour effect. (One of the most famous examples is the sour orange sauce served as part of duck à l’orange.) But today, the term is used more flexibly to refer to a wider range of vinegar-based sweet-sour sauces, like mine here. In Italian, you’d call it an agrodolce. Or, you could just say it’s a sweet-and-sour cherry sauce, if the Continental terms come across as overly haughty.
No matter what you call it, what’s important is getting that balance of sweet and savory right, and it’s hard to give a definitive recipe for that, since so much depends on the fruit you start with. My cherries, for example, were very plump and taut, but not the sweetest I’d ever tasted. You may have ones that are sweeter. Adding the vinegar is a matter of balancing that out, so how much you add will change based on the flavor of your fruit. My advice is to add the final amount in stages, tasting along the way and stopping when you reach a bracing level of sourness that really stands up to the sugar. (You may even need to reduce the sauce further if the vinegar thins it out too much.) Keep in mind that this sauce is for intensely bitter radicchio, so you want to go strong here. A cloying cherry sauce with too little acidity will do nothing to bring that bitterness into check. This dish really is all about balancing intense flavors.
Bringing It All Together
With the radicchio grilled and the cherry sauce made, there’s nothing more to do than plate it up. I love this part the most, because it’s when each of the decisions leading up to it starts to make sense. The radicchio is charred and wilted, and drained of its original color. But then that cherry sauce goes on top, and those lifeless-looking leaves get spattered in a vivid blood-red color, bringing that life right back onto the plate. Then the flavors, like I said, come together. The radicchio, too bitter to enjoy on its own, makes sense with that sauce, which was itself skirting the edge of acceptable sweetness and sourness just moments before.
Serious Eats/ Vy Tran
A drizzle of fresh olive oil and a few scattered mint leaves are all it takes to give the dish another dimension of fresh flavor and color. The only thing left to decide is what to serve this with. It’s a bold side dish, so you’re not going to want to pair it with fish, or even chicken. No, this is calling out for something equally bold, like a fatty aged T-bone steak, sizzling-hot off the grill. Sometimes fruits and vegetables need to go toe to toe with a true heavyweight.
June 2017
Grilling Steak? This Bold Summer Side Dish Is the Perfect Match
Cook Mode
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1 pound (450 g) sweet red cherries, halved and pitted
1/4 cup sugar (1 3/4 ounces; 50 g)
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons (90 ml) sherry vinegar, plus more if needed, divided (see note)
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 (12-ounce; 340 g) heads radicchio, quartered, cores left intact
Extra-virgin olive oil, for drizzling
Fresh mint leaves, for garnish
Light 1 chimney full of charcoal. When all charcoal is lit and covered with gray ash, pour out and spread coals evenly over half of coal grate. Alternatively, set half the burners of a gas grill to high heat. Set cooking grate in place, cover grill, and allow to preheat for 5 minutes. Clean and oil grilling grate.
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Meanwhile, in medium saucepan, combine cherries with sugar and 1/4 cup (60 ml) vinegar. Cook over medium-high heat, stirring frequently, until sugar is dissolved and cherries have cooked down to a saucy, jammy consistency. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Add remaining 2 tablespoons (30 ml) vinegar in stages, tasting along the way and adding more if needed, until the flavor is brightly acidic with a strong sweet-sour balance, like tart lemonade. Simmer sauce further, if necessary, to reduce to a lightly syrupy consistency. Set aside to cool.
Serious Eats/ Vy Tran
Arrange radicchio directly over the hot coals or high heat on a gas grill. Cook on both cut sides until lightly wilted and charred in spots, about 2 minutes per side.
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Transfer radicchio to a serving platter, drizzle with olive oil, and season with salt and pepper to taste. Drizzle cherry sauce all over radicchio and scatter with mint leaves. Serve.
Serious Eats/ Vy Tran
Special Equipment
Charcoal or gas grill, grill tongs, medium saucepan
Notes
Other vinegars will work here as well, such as white wine, red wine, Champagne, and cider. Exactly how much you need will depend on the vinegar you use and the sweetness of your cherries.
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