Showing posts with label grill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grill. Show all posts

Thursday, November 17, 2011

TANGERINE BEEF









1 1/2  pounds London Broil
2     tangerines
8     scallions, sliced, plus more for garnish 1/4 cup soy sauce
4     tablespoons toasted sesame oil
4     teaspoons sugar
4     tablespoons chopped peeled ginger
6    cloves garlic, minced
Pinch of red pepper flakes
2 – 3 additional tangerines for sauce

Pierce the steak with a fork several times on each side. Remove a 2-inch strip of zest from the tangerines, halve the fruit and squeeze the juice into a resealable plastic bag. Add the zest, scallions, soy sauce, sesame oil, sugar, ginger, garlic, pepper flakes and a cup of water to the bag and mix well. Add the meat, seal the bag and turn to coat. Refrigerate overnight.

Preheat the broiler or grill. Remove the steak from the bag and reserve the marinade. Pat the meat dry and place on the preheated broiler pan or on the grill. Cook until the meat is golden brown and a thermometer inserted in the thickest part registers 130° for medium-rare, about 10 minutes. Let rest 5 to 10 minutes before slicing; reserve the drippings.

Meanwhile, boil the marinade in a small pot over medium-high heat. Stir in the juice of 2-3 tangerines and the drippings from the meat. Reduce by half or until thickened. Slice the meat against the grain and top with scallions. Serve with the sauce.



Friday, September 2, 2011

RANDOM THOUGHTS




I haven't really made anything new and/or exciting lately. Since I have a three day weekend, I guess I should figure out what I want to make. Any suggestions?

I am trying to get pics on all my old posts and recipes. I made Asian Flank steak last weekend. It turned out quite well and now I have a pic of that. I also made the pasta with the balsamic reduction sauce with roasted cauliflower instead of the asparagus. That was pretty tasty too, but alas . . . the pic was not pretty.










Saturday, July 30, 2011

PORK LOIN WITH PEANUT SLATHER



This is a wonderful tasting recipe, but I have yet to take a decent pic of it. I had some pics of it being served with roasted green beans and jasmine rice, but somehow or another I deleted the pics before I could post them. {sigh} You can use your oven or your grill. I've tried it both ways.

If you like peanut sauces, you'll like this. I usually make a double batch of the slather.

You'll need . . .

2 pork tenderloins, each about 12 ounces

Flavorless cooking oil to brush on the cooking rack

Trim off and discard any excess fat from the pork. Set aside the cooking oil, if grilling.



Ingredients for Slather

1/2 cup chunky peanut butter, salted

1/4 cup Chinese rice wine or dry sherry 

2 tablespoons dark soy sauce 

2 tablespoons white wine vinegar 

2 tablespoons honey

2 tablespoons flavorless cooking oil 

1 tablespoon dark sesame oil

1 tablespoon Sambal Badjak Fresh Ripe Chili Paste with Onion or other Asian chile sauce

4 cloves garlic, finely minced

2 tablespoons finely minced ginger 

1/4 cup minced green onion








To Make the Slather

In a small bowl, combine all the ingredi­ents for the peanut slather and mix to combine evenly. Reserve, cover, and refrigerate 1/2 cup of the slather. Evenly coat the pork with the remaining slather and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes or up to 8 hours. All advance preparation may be completed up to 8 hours be­fore you begin the final steps.


Final Steps

Thirty minutes prior to cooking, remove the pork and 1/2 cup reserved peanut slather from the refrigerator and bring to room temperature.

To Grill: If using a gas or electric grill, preheat to medium (350°). If using char­coal or wood, prepare a fire. When the gas or electric grill is preheated or the coals or wood are ash covered, brush the cooking rack with the oil, then lay the pork in the center of the rack. Make sure the pork is lying open on the grill. Cover the grill and regulate the heat so that it remains at a medium tempera­ture. Grill the pork until an instant-read thermometer registers 150° when in­serted deeply into the meat, about 20 minutes.


To Roast: Preheat the oven to 450°. Roast the pork until the internal temperature reaches 150°, about 30 minutes.

To Serve: Let the pork rest for 5 minutes. Cut the pork into serving-sized pieces and transfer to a heated serving platter or 4 dinner plates. Spoon the reserved peanut sauce around the meat and serve at once. 













Monday, June 20, 2011

TILAPIA WITH JERK SEASONING AND MELON SALSA




(In regards to this pic . . . see  my confession below.)

Melon Salsa Ingredients

1/2 cup of cantaloupe, chopped
1/2 cup of honeydew melon, chopped
2 tsp. of honey
8-10 chopped fresh mint leaves

Combine, and let sit while you prepare and cook fish.




Tilapia

2 tilapia filets
jerk seasoning




Heat oven or grill to 400 degrees. Place fish in oiled pan. Sprinkle with jerk seasoning. Place in oven or on grill for 15 minutes.

When fish is finished, serve with melon salsa.

NOTE - I use Nantucket Off-Shore Rasta Rub. Check out their other offerings here. Nantucket Off Shore



CONFESSION - Usually I keep the salsa in a bowl, rather than on the plate with the fish. I put both on the same plate for the pic, but I won't do that again. Nope, I want my melon salsa in a bowl by my fish. You, however, may do as you please.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Soy and Garlic Pork Chops


Many many years ago . . . I was given a recipe for grilled pork chops. Amy, the recipe donor, tried to impress upon me just how great these chops were. I shrugged and smiled, thinking to myself, "Soy sauce, garlic, and brown sugar? I don't think so." Then I made them. I changed my mind.

I've lost the actual recipe that she gave me, but here is the way I do it. I've used fresh garlic rather than the powder she had listed and I switched the regular soy sauce for low sodium.

  • 4-6 center cut pork chops

Marinade

  • 1 cup of low sodium soy sauce
  • 1 head of bruised (before peeling and chopping, use the flat side of a knife to crush the cloves. This will also make it easier to peel the skin from the cloves.) and then coarsely chopped garlic
  • approx. 1/4 cup of brown sugar (I don't really measure mine. I want the soy to thicken a little.)
  • chopped ginger (optional, I add it when I have it.)

Stir all marinade ingredients together. Let sit for a few minutes so the sugar can dissolve. Then stir again before adding marinade to pork chops.

Place the pork chops in a 9x12 glass dish. Pour marinade over them. I usually marinate the chops for 24 hours in the refrigerator, turning them occasionally. The original recipe said to marinate for an hour at room temperature, but I think they have a much better flavor with the lengthened marinade time and leaving pork out on my counter for any length of time concerns me.

Then grill.




Saturday, February 9, 2008

Roasted Peppers


I'm on a roasted pepper kick. I've probably roasted a dozen red bell peppers this week. I did eight today because I want to try that pepper gratin recipe that I was talking about last week. I'll peel them and slice them tomorrow. I also made pickles.

Bike Week prep - we now have a cocktail shaker. We'll need it for "Cocktail of the Day". And I got the recipe for those pineapple upside down cake shots. Mmmmmmm.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Asian Flank Steak (Grill)




Easy grilling recipe.

¼ cup soy sauce
¼ cup Worcestershire sauce
2 TBS fresh lemon juice
1 TBS fresh ginger
1 ¼ lb. flank steak (I've made it with London Broil too)

Whisk together first 5 ingredients. Add steak. Marinate overnight.

Drain marinade into small saucepan and bring to boil.. Reduce until sauce thickens.

Grill steak. Thinly slice across grain. Use reduced marinade as sauce.

NOTE - I buy my London Broil when it's on sale. I make the marinade when I buy my steak. I place the marinade and meat in a freezer bag and freeze. When I want to eat it, I allow it to thaw while still in the marinade. Very flavorful when I do it that way.




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