Photo courtesy of Simply Recipes |
Marinade
2 In a medium bowl, whisk together the marinade ingredients; the soy sauce, vinegar, grated ginger, honey, red chile flakes, and cumin. Mix the beef in with the marinade to coat and let it sit for at least 30 minutes, and up to 4 hours, in the fridge.
3 In a small bowl, mix the corn starch with 2 tablespoons of cold water to make a slurry.
4 Heat the oil in a wok, or a large sauté pan, over high heat until it is nearly smoking. As the oil is heating up, pat the beef dry and separate it into small batches no larger than what can fit into the palm of your hand. Working in batches, sauté beef until just brown outside but rare inside, no more than 1 minute. Transfer beef to a bowl.
5 When all of the beef is cooked, put the chiles and garlic into the pan and stir-fry 30-45 seconds. Add the julienned ginger and cook for 30-45 seconds more. Add the beef back to the pan. Add the cornstarch slurry. Add the scallions (I think the author meant the green onions?) and mix everything together. Cook for 1 minute.
Turn the heat off and mix in the cilantro (yeah forgot that). Serve at once with steamed white rice.
- 2 Tbsp unseasoned rice vinegar (I used seasoned because that's what I had on hand)
- 5 Tbsp soy sauce
- 1 Tbsp honey
- 1 Tbsp peeled, grated fresh ginger
- 1 teaspoon chile pepper flakes
- 1 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 lb top sirloin steak
- 1 Tbsp corn starch
- 2 Tbsp vegetable oil (preferably peanut)
- 1 Tbsp sesame oil (optional)
- 3-4 green onions, cut on a diagonal, 1/2-inch apart, including the greens
- 2 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
- 2-3 hot chiles, preferably red serranos, seeded, sliced (I used fresh jalapenos because I couldn't find serranos)
- 1-inch nob of ginger, peeled, cut lengthwise into matchstick shapes (the slices were a little intense - I might grate it next time)
- 1/2 cup loosely packed, chopped cilantro (totally forgot about the cilantro - it's almost like I make it my goal to forget at least one ingredient per recipe)
2 In a medium bowl, whisk together the marinade ingredients; the soy sauce, vinegar, grated ginger, honey, red chile flakes, and cumin. Mix the beef in with the marinade to coat and let it sit for at least 30 minutes, and up to 4 hours, in the fridge.
3 In a small bowl, mix the corn starch with 2 tablespoons of cold water to make a slurry.
4 Heat the oil in a wok, or a large sauté pan, over high heat until it is nearly smoking. As the oil is heating up, pat the beef dry and separate it into small batches no larger than what can fit into the palm of your hand. Working in batches, sauté beef until just brown outside but rare inside, no more than 1 minute. Transfer beef to a bowl.
5 When all of the beef is cooked, put the chiles and garlic into the pan and stir-fry 30-45 seconds. Add the julienned ginger and cook for 30-45 seconds more. Add the beef back to the pan. Add the cornstarch slurry. Add the scallions (I think the author meant the green onions?) and mix everything together. Cook for 1 minute.
Turn the heat off and mix in the cilantro (yeah forgot that). Serve at once with steamed white rice.
Serves 4-6.
5 comments:
Heather, love the "forgetting one ingredient" comment-- mostly because I like to modify recipes on the first go-round too. I'm like, "Cilantro? No, I don't think so."
Haha at least you intentionally forget ingredients! Mark is very used to me following a recipe, then gasping, then mumbling "Well... it'll be fine."
I thought that one looked good too! I also want to try her curried ground turkey with potatoes. If you like this beef recipe, you should try this broccoli and beef recipe, we like it alot!
http://simplyrecipes.com/recipes/broccoli_beef/
wow, that photo looks delicious! nice shot :)
also, thank you for that post in the past that mentioned Poptart Sushi... because of you, I will be visiting that establishment with a friend in two weeks. hehe, I'll send a picture your way!
Photo courtesy of Simply Recipes, I can't take credit! :) Great Kara, I can't wait to hear about it, poptart sushi just sounds so interesting!
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