Is Steak Modiga just a Saint Louis thing? I ask
because there are a lot of recipes for this dish online, most of which have a
St. Louis connection. We have a wonderful Italian community here in the St.
Louis metro, and a lot of good restaurants, many of which serve this delicious
dish. I shared a recipe for it some time ago from one of my favorite
restaurants, Favazza’s, that you can find that here.
That recipe, although delicious, is a bit involved. I was in desperate mood for
a filet mignon, and decided I was going to take all of the recipes for Steak
Modiga that I had, and compact them into something quick and simple. This is
it. Not only is it company worthy, but you can have it on the table in under 30
minutes. I served mine with a salad and a roll, if you want to serve yours with
rice, or a baked potato, you’ll have to start both of those things before you
start your steak. Easy Steak Modiga
2 T. olive
oil, divided
1 c. Italian breadcrumbs
Montreal
Steak Seasoning
4 6-oz. filet mignons
2 T. butter
11⁄2 t. Melissa’s
minced garlic
4 oz. sliced
mushrooms
2 T. flour
1 c. chicken stock
¼ c. dry white
wine
1 T. freshly
squeezed lemon juice
1⁄8 t. salt, to taste
1⁄8 t. freshly ground black pepper, to taste
¼ c. heavy cream
4-6 ounces provel
cheese*, room temperature
Preheat oven to 400°F. Rub steaks with 1 T. oil, dredge in breadcrumbs, and sprinkle with
steak seasoning; set aside for 5 minutes.
Heat remaining tablespoon of oil in a 12”
oven-safe non-stick skillet over medium/high heat until oil is shimmering. Place steaks in skillet and cook until well browned, about 3 minutes. Flip steaks and brown reverse side for about 3 more minutes.
Leave steaks in pan, place in oven and roast until meat registers 120° to 125° (for medium rare), 4-7 minutes.
While steaks are cooking place a sauté pan over medium-low heat,
add butter. When butter melts, add garlic; cook just until it becomes fragrant,
about 90 seconds. Add mushrooms; cook 1 minute. Sprinkle in flour; cook,
stirring, for 2 minutes.
Gradually stir in chicken stock, wine, and lemon juice; add salt
and pepper to taste. Bring to a low boil and cook until thickened, 2 to 3
minutes. Stir in heavy cream. Remove sauce from heat; set aside and keep warm.
Place each steak on a serving plate and cover with one-fourth of
the provel; cover with warm sauce and serve immediately.
*This is a St. Louis thing. IYKYN. You can substitute provolone.
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