
The bacon wrapped steaks are individually wrapped so it is
easy to take out what you need for the meal while the rest remain frozen. It seems one pouch of sauce is intended for
two steaks. I thawed the steaks overnight in the refrigerator. An hour or so
before cooking I opened the package to set them out to come to room temperature
before cooking. I thought I could smell the aroma and feel the texture of papain
and/or bromelain, meat tenderizers, in the marinade sauce although I could not
find them listed on the packaging label. I warmed the sauce pouch in a bowl of
hot water.
It is a thick piece of meat so a hot grill will burn the
outside before the middle heats to the desired temperature. I preheated the
grill so the grill would leave the marks but I tuned the gas down to between
medium and low before grilling the steaks. There is apparently some sugar or
other sweetener in the marinade because the grill marks were dark and
distinctive. About four minutes per side gave an inside temperature of 145
degrees (and we all know the mantra, “Cooking times will vary depending on your
grill!”) The result was a nicely browned steak with distinctive grill marks and
a warm pink interior.
The sauce: I am not usually a sauce fan. After all, all a good
steak needs is some smoke from the grill and a sprinkle of salt. It has always seemed
to me that if it needs a lot of sauce it wasn’t a good steak to start with.
Since this is where the Jim Beam gets into the act, I was eager to at least
sample the sauce. I tasted some on my finger and some on a part of the steak. Although
it has been many, many years since I have tasted it, the Jim Bean Peppercorn
Sauce evoked strong memories of A-1 Steak Sauce. I’m not sure I could tell the difference
between the two in a blind taste test at this moment. I did, however, set some
aside for the next time I grill hamburgers. I am anxious to see how it will be
as a seasoning condiment for burger patties. I have a hunch it might be pretty
good.
To sum up, a fairly tasty piece of meat, adequate for a
meal, albeit it is a bit on the tough side. Perhaps all it really needs is a
pinch of salt rather than the steak sauce (unless you are into the steak sauces
which then brings it into the realm of personal preference). The bacon adds a bit of glamor in the name but
does little to really enhance the steak. The real strength of this product is
the convenience. It is an “okay” steak,
frozen, waiting in your freezer. In
short order you can grill on the gas or charcoal grill or one of the electric
parallel plate grills and have a nice looking, tasty meal on short order. Pair
it, as we do, with a baked potato, some shrimp for a surf and turf and you have
an easy to prepare, full satisfying meal to satisfy your carnivore instincts all in the comfort of your home.Labels: filet, grill, Jim Beam, peppercorn, sauce, steak, Steakhouse
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