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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
/nerd session activate

What a night. A great dinner. Great wife. Great whiskey and a dash of 1911's to finish it off.

I offer you the main course of grilled ribeye and onion, roasted asparagus with onion and garlic clove, tomato slices with balsamic reduction and fresh merlot parmesan. Dessert is a taste session of two rye whiskeys with a side of stainless 1911's.

Food Ingredient Tableware Cuisine Recipe


Purple Ingredient Vegetable Woolen Root vegetable


Tableware Table Wood Air gun Toy


/end nerd session
 

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/nerd session activate

What a night. A great dinner. Great wife. Great whiskey and a dash of 1911's to finish it off.

I offer you the main course of grilled ribeye and onion, roasted asparagus with onion and garlic clove, tomato slices with balsamic reduction and fresh merlot parmesan. Dessert is a taste session of two rye whiskeys with a side of stainless 1911's.

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/end nerd session
So did you have to shoot the steer to get the steak?
 

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Delicious-looking steak and nice 1911s, but aside from that I'm not sure what we are supposed to be talking about. :unsure:
 

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1911's, a bunch and counting...
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Discussion Starter · #6 ·
Delicious-looking steak and nice 1911s, but aside from that I'm not sure what we are supposed to be talking about. :unsure:

Everything and nothing. Just fooling around and engaging my inner nerd. It's been a good but busy day and I'm just unwinding. 🍸
 

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/nerd session activate

What a night. A great dinner. Great wife. Great whiskey and a dash of 1911's to finish it off.

I offer you the main course of grilled ribeye and onion, roasted asparagus with onion and garlic clove, tomato slices with balsamic reduction and fresh merlot parmesan. Dessert is a taste session of two rye whiskeys with a side of stainless 1911's.

View attachment 673253

View attachment 673254

View attachment 673255

/end nerd session

I have been eating a lot of steak lately. I was surprised how well a George Foreman Grill cooks a steak. I like the pretty rare so it only takes a couple of minutes on the grill. That looks like a very good evening. On a side note how do you like that Republic of Texas? Thinking about getting one if I can find one.
 

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Discussion Starter · #10 · (Edited)
I catch flak because ribeye steak is a ritual in Texas and takes more than 30 minutes LOL. You have to let it warm up a while before you grill it. You don't rush it to the grill while the middle is too cold. Season it with olive oil, fresh cracked pepper, salt and garlic, leave it warming for 45 minutes or so. Then you get your fire just right - prime, red hot coals, small whisps of flame licking at the grill. A piece of pecan in the coals just before you start cooking at 700f or so. Then the steak hits the grill and the magic smells of grilled beef come alive. The smell downwind makes neighbors jealous. Flip it ONE TIME when it gets nice and juicy red on the top. Test it with your finger by pressing lightly...you can tell when it's perfect medium rare. Wrap in foil for a few minutes to let it rest. It deserves the rest, it worked hard for this, you worked hard for this.

It's time to enjoy. Time to relax. Place a flat of butter so it will melt across the steak. Slice into the steak and the umami flavor and smell permeate the atmosphere. The taste of the smoke kissed beef, the ribeye fat dissolves like pudding, the au jus runs across the plate. Drag your steak in the juices. Incredible.

I get the same satisfaction when I work on a 1911 and improve it. It's an art. I want to learn to be as good at 1911's as I am at steak.
 

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Discussion Starter · #11 ·
I have been eating a lot of steak lately. I was surprised how well a George Foreman Grill cooks a steak. I like the pretty rare so it only takes a couple of minutes on the grill. That looks like a very good evening. On a side note how do you like that Republic of Texas? Thinking about getting one if I can find one.

The Texas Republic is a cool pistol. Checkering on front strap and msh. The engraving is done well. Trigger decent. Slide to frame fit is average.

I got a fitted EGW bushing and plug. Changed the safety to left side only with an EGW HD model. Grip screws changed to the stainless straight head along with a new stainless pin kit. Greider short trigger. Stock extractor tuned to SteveinAllentown's specs. Small radius EGW fps and 14lb recoil spring. Stock sear and hammer tuned up, and frankly one of my better attempts. Trigger pull set to 4lbs.

Yeah it's Texas and I am quite fond of this one.
 

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Well, ribeye is one of my two favorite cuts, but I thought everyone knew that bourbon goes best with a good steak. Rye is okay (if you're in to cocktails) but well...

Wife was at work. So I grilled two tenderloins (sauteed some baby spinach with a drizzle of EVOO and hickory smoked bacon pieces) for myself, sipped (well, maybe a little more'n a few fingers) some Buffalo Trace (after I tucked the DW CBOB in bed), watched a couple episodes of "Naked and Afraid" I'd recorded on the DVR, let the dogs out to do their business, and now, it's time for bed...

So, we've had "guns and knives" threads, "guns and watches" threads, "guns and condiments" threads, now "guns and whisky and steak" threads...

I like that we're branching out...
 

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Discussion Starter · #13 ·
Rye is close enough to bourbon hah. I do like Buffalo Trace as well as some Old Forester plus a bunch more. I also do nice peated scotch and scotch in general.

I like higher proof rye whiskey for its spice and forward flavor. It also makes a fantastic whiskey and coke! One of my fave rye is Saginaw.

I am learning some nice tequilas in the anejo and reposada styles.
 

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Considering I'm really only into USGI 1911s perhaps my dinner should comprise of C-rations and captured Japanese sake.
 

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Discussion Starter · #18 ·
I think Hi-Point may be the ugliest semi auto pistol. Ever. But my svc mgr had one someone gave him years ago. I lubed it up and shot it. At close range it delivers lead like any other. As long as it runs reliable.

That being said, there is nothing to me like a 1911 in .45.
 
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