Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Beef and Broccoli



Ingredients:
1/2lb-1lb Top Sirloin steak – cut across the grain into strips
1-2 crowns of Broccoli – parboil/blanch/steam to cook half way
1/2 onion
Garlic and Ginger, minced
5-6 dried chilis optional
Marinade
2 Tbs shaoxing cooking wine
2 Tbsp Shao Xing wine
1 Tbsp dark soy
1 Tbsp light soy
1 Tbsp water
1 Tsp cornstarch
Pinch of Baking Soda (this tenderizes the meat)
Basic Chinese brown sauce:
1-2 Tbs light soy sauce
1-2 Tbs shaoxing cooking wine
2 Tbs water
1 Tbs sambal ooleck
1 Tbs hoison
1 Tbs oyster sauce
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp sesame oil
1 tsp rice vinegar
1 Tsp cornstarch, heaping, stirred in until dissolved
Here are most the ingredients laid out:

First, slice that sirloin into strips. For easier slicing, freeze the meat for 15 min to make it hard- it will slice easier. In the above pic, you start at the broad “square” end on the right side and slice in strips until your left with a tiny triangle of meat at the upper left end.
Pour marinade ingredients into a shallow bowl, stir so cornstarch is dissolved and add steak slices to marinade. I sprinkle pepper and white pepper on, and also add some garlic slices from one clove. Let marinate for 10-15 minutes.
Cut the broccoli into florets- I steam these in the steamer basket that is part of my rice cooker. Also easy to boil water, drop in for 2-3 minutes and strain.
Cut onion into slices or large dice. Cut garlic into slices or minced. Same w ginger if available (not shown).
Make the Chinese brown sauce by adding all ingredients into a 1 cup pyrex, in any order. Stir.
Heat Wok on medium high- add 2 Tbsp of oil- peanut, canola, whatever can take high heat. Either strain excess fluid from marinade bowl or take meat out of bowl so excess liquid is removed and start stir frying the beef. Try to get individual pieces to sit flat against the wok pan, then let meat sit for 1+ minutes, then flip to get uncooked sides of meat slices cooked for another minute. Then perhaps 2 more minutes, stirring each 30 sec to get it cooked. Remove meat to bowl so that oil stays in pan.
In bowl with meat, add 1tsp black vinegar and 1 tsp light soy sauce
Let wok return to heat and add garlic/ginger mince. Fry 20 seconds then add onion slices. Stir for 2 minutes and then add broccoli florets. Add a squirt of fish sauce, 30 seconds of stir, add 1 tsp shao xing, stir for 30 seconds then empty veggies into bowl with meat slices.
Stir the chinese sauce to incorporate all ingredients again, then add to hot wok, 10 seconds to let it reduce while stirring then add bowl of all ingredients to the sauce, stir all ingredients for 30-45 seconds until the sauce clearly thickens and then pour back into the serving bowl.
Serve over Rice or noodles.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Office view

Just testing how to blog from my new iPhone

Hmmm. How do 2 pics fit?



Thursday, August 23, 2012

Churrasco

Churrasco
I've been making this a lot lately, and it is getting REALLY good now.


To start, it's best to go to a Mexican grocer, since this cut of meat is much cheaper there ($6-7/lb). However, a big key is to get the butcher to take off the silver skin and to tenderize the meat in advance. So, be sure ask them to do that no matter where you pick up the meat.

I've come to realize, the real key ingredient is the brown sugar. It seems the more you put in the better it turns out, especially if you balance it with plenty of spice from the red pepper flakes

Ingredients:
1.5-2lbs skirt steak, trimmed and tenderized by the butcher
5 cloves garlic, minced or slivered
1-2 limes
4 green onions, slivers
1/4-1/3 cup brown sugar
5-6 Tbsp Olive Oil
3-4 Tbsp Soy sauce- I use half dark and half light
Red Pepper flakes or diced thai bird chiles

optionals- 1/2tsp cumin, 1 jalepeno, diced, 1/2 teaspoon baking soda (as tenderizer)

garlic not shown, zoom in for the base recipe (from Alton Brown)
So, it's really easy to be honest. Maybe 10min prep time if you dice fast.

I get a freezer bag, pour the olive oil in, add the soy sauces (I think using dark soy makes this WAY better), squeeze in the lime juice (I throw the peel of half of one lime in there too), dice the onion and throw that in, add the sugar and pepper flakes and shake the bag to incorporate. (add 1/2 tsp baking soda as tenderizer and diced jalepeno if using)

Then I open the meat package, season both sides of meat strips with salt, pepper and fresh ground cumin, and throw that in the bag.
you can see the butcher's tenderizer marks
everything shaken and incorporated- just add seasoned meat!

Skirt steak comes in really long strips. I always cut these down to 8-10 inch long pieces.

Marinate overnight, then grill over really hot charcoal for 3-4 minutes a side. After taking off the grill, let the meat sit! One also very important part (you can Google this if you don't know)- always cut across the grain! I slice the resulting meat into strips and we use this in tacos or whatever else we are making.

HUMMUS

Hummus

I actually don’t have a clue how to make this authentically, but this turns out pretty good




Ingredients:

1 14oz can garbonzo beans
½-1 lemon
2-3 cloves garlic
1 Tbsp Tahini
Olive Oil, Salt, dash of cayenne

Cilantro or parsley as garnish if on hand


Directions:

Either smash the garlic cloves in advance or dice them or just zap them in the blender first before adding the beans. In my batch, we still had 2 whole cloves that didn’t get pureed correctly.

Otherwise, just add all the ingredients to the blender and zap. It’s a taste game, where adding salt really starts to bring the flavor out. We used about ¾ the garbonzo bean can for the amount we made here, using only half the lemon, and not all the garlic cloves that are shown. I even added a dash of vinegar as well as a bit of cayenne. Maybe a dash of hot sauce would be good too, or some other spice, like white pepper or coriander?


don't add the garlic whole! Use a press or smash or blitz them alone first



Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Salsa - Pico de Gallo

Here is the standard salsa/pico de gallo recipe that I've created for years. Ideally, using produce from your own garden. I typed this up for a buddy of mine, so it's a casual prose...


Here are all the ingredients you will need:


6-8 roma tomatoes (about 1-1.5lbs)
1-2 beefsteak/round/regular ass tomatoes (or just 4 more romas)
2-3 jalepenos (fire roasted is best)
handful of cilantro- perhaps a half cup?

2 limes
4-6 cloves garlic
1/2 very large red onion
salt, pepper, olive oil, pinch of cumin optional

I forgot to add the lime in this pic. That is an entire bunch of cliantro- use just part of that


6-8 roma tomatoes (about 1-1.5lbs)
2 beefsteak/round/regular ass tomatoes (or just 4 more romas)

The 6-8 romas are to be finely diced. The other tomatoes are cut in half, placed face down on aluminum foil on a baking sheet, put under the broiler and burn the shit out of the skins, aka roasting them. Let it cool a few, the skins should peel off very easy, throw those away, add flesh to a blender. Add a tsp of olive oil, a tsp or less sugar and blend- add a pinch of cumin if you'd like, but very minimal. I also throw 3-4 garlic cloves on the baking sheet w the tomatoes, and add them to the blend for a roasted garlic flavor (which I do recommend, but the garlic will burn and or needs to be flipped as they char much faster than the tomato skins, so pull em out early). This blended mix gets added in last.

I roast my tomato and garlic in the toaster oven while I get started dicing the Romas

Also need to roast 1-2 jalepenos, or more if you want really spicy- I usually roast 1, and fine dice one unroasted- taking seeds out of all of them. You can put jalepenos on the baking sheet w tomatoes, but again, have to flip em and its half assed. Put them directly on the burner, on high, and use tongs to char the entire surface area to black. Put them directly into a plastic bag to let them steam while you dice up other stuff. Its always the last thing I dice up, where you take out of the bag, rinse under cold water and brush w your hand, and the char flakes come right off (use garbage disposal side of sink)- remove stem top and seeds and fine dice to add to bowl that also has the diced roma tomatoes in it.

Just cook that sucker right on the stove top

Also to the bowl of diced stuff- usually just a half of a large red onion, again finely diced- or a whole very small red onion- maybe a 3/4-1 cups worth? A half bunch of cilantro, chopped up and added. I do 1-2 raw garlic cloves fine diced and added to the bowl (this is in addition to the 3-4 roasted pieces that got blended), so that's why mine always turn out pretty garlicky, but you can always add more tomatoes or less garlic than that I guess.

While other tomatoes are roasting, dice onion, raw garlic, cilantro and the 6-8-10 Roma tomatoes

So, you've got the diced romas, then dice in the onion, then the cilantro, some raw garlic, the diced roasted jalepenos, salt and pepper this pile pretty good then squeeze in 2 limes, rarely 3, sometimes 1.5- depends how much you like that flavor to come to the front, stir this a few times, pour the blended roasted tomato/garlic/tsp olive oil mix into all the diced stuff and stir it all up so the onion pieces are mixed well- those usually stick the most. Salting it correctly really ups the flavor, as does letting it sit for one day in the fridge for all the flavor to mesh together. If too spicy, add a bit more sugar, or better yet some fine diced mango or kiwi. Or add more diced roma to dilute the salsa w more tomato. I like a heavy peppering, a light lime flavor, heavy garlic, and fairly spicy.

On the right, the roasted tomatoes and garlic from the broiler. I add a bit of sugar, lime juice, olive oil and cumin seed to this and blend it into a liquid, then pour over all the diced ingredients on the left, and voila, time for chips

That should be pretty complete, but the short list is tomato, red onion, garlic, cilantro, lime, S&P, touch of olive oil (or not). If you don't like chunky, roast all that shit but the cilantro and lime, put Everyting in the blender and whip it up for a liquid salsa. Add an adobo/chipotle pepper or different types of hot peppers to make different flavors, add more sugar or honey, serve on anything, like fish, not just chips.

Well, that's pure gold there- watch out though- you'll be pissed next time someone tries to pass a serving of Pace brand salsa out of a jar under your nose at the next family gathering or football party shindig- that shit tastes like ass once you start making your own, especially when you're using those tomatoes out of your garden later this summer. If you aren't growing romas, you should have - they have a meatier flesh that dices into better chunks, but you can get away with using any type of tomato if you have to. 2 total lbs tomato matches the other quantities I've listed.

So, that's that. Good luck dood!