
Raw food seems somehow un-American. Maybe it wasn’t always this way. But today, a byproduct of industrialization in the food industry — which prizes efficiency, mass production and a homogenous product with little chance (in theory) of food-borne illness — is a broad uneasiness about undercooked or uncooked food. Growing up, a pink pork chop went back on the grill. Burgers got cooked all the way through. Raw fish was a hazard, not a delicacy. That’s changed a bit. Sushi is popular with yuppie liberals. But guess what? 7-Eleven carries sushi. The California roll, an American invention, has a twig of imitation crab at its heart rather than raw fish. You’ll sooner catch bird flu from a low-flying warbler than get sick from imitation crab.
We’re putting our hoof down. This is the Month of Beef. We’re making our own steak tartare. And you’re doing it with us.
Let French culture wash over you after the jump.

Steak Tartare

Take Note:
Tomato Jam Tartare
Don’t like your beef spicy? Follow the same instructions, but use these ingredients.
- 1 12 oz sirloin
- 1 shallot, chopped
- 1 tbsp capers
- 3-5 cornichons
- 1 tbsp aioli or mayonnaise (or to taste)
- 2 tbsp tomato jam (or to taste, recipe below)
- salt and pepper
- toasted baguette slices