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Japanese Beef Rolls with Mizkan Ponzu

1 November, 2010 (18:54) | Chinese food recipes | By: admin

November 1st, 2010 | Japanese Recipes, Sponsorship | 1 Comment

This is the second installment of Mizkan, Bringing Flavor to Life campaign on Rasa Malaysia. (Please check out the Salmon Teriyaki recipe and the Mizkan landing page.) The featured Recipe today is Japanese beef rolls and enoki mushroom with Ponzu sauce.

One of the defining characteristics of Japanese cuisine is its emphasis on visual presentation, and this recipe delivers just that. This is often my go-to recipe whenever I have a party, or whenever I wish to impress my guests. These beef rolls are best served as an appetizer as your guests take in sips of wine and mingle around. They certainly have that WOW factor and absolutely delicious…

This beef roll recipe is inspired by the popular beef tataki, or sliced seared beef prepared using the tataki cooking technique. Traditionally, tataki-style beef are prepared using a Japanese mesh grill tray over charcoal fire, with only the surface of the beef cooked. Then, the meat is plunged into a bowl of cold water to stop the beef from cooking. For my beef roll recipe, I adapted and simplified the cooking method so everyone can attempt it easily at home. I prefer my beef cooked so I used a non-stick pan and seared the beef until slightly charred on the surface.

Two of the most important components of this recipe is the marinade and the serving sauce. For the marinade, I used Mizkan (Bonito Flavored) Soup Base and Mizkan HONTERI Mirin Seasoning, and for the serving, I drizzled the beef rolls with Mizkan AJIPON® Ponzu Citrus Seasoned Soy Sauce. I especially love the Ponzu sauce as it adds a citrusy flavor to the beef rolls and complements the taste beautifully.

Ponzu has become more common due to the increased popularity of Japanese cuisine. Nowadays, you can easily find Ponzu at regular grocery stores here in the United States. There are many brands of Ponzu available, but Mizkan AJIPON® Ponzu is the best, in all honesty. I am saying this not because I am working with Mizkan, but because I have another bottle of Ponzu by another Japanese manufacturer in my pantry. After a side-by-side taste test, Mizkan AJIPON® Ponzu is a clear winner.

Do try out this Japanese beef rolls recipe. It’s really quite a treat.

Japanese Beef Rolls with Ponzu
Makes about 12 rolls

Ingredients:

12 oz beef flap meat or flank steak
6 oz enoki mushrooms, ends trimmed
1 teaspoon butter
Oil, for pan-searing
1/2 tablespoon white and black sesame seeds, optional

Marinade

1 tablespoon Mizkan (Bonito Flavored) Soup Base
1 tablespoon Mizkan HONTERI Mirin Seasoning
1 tablespoon sake

Serving Sauce

1/2 cup Mizkan AJIPON® Ponzu Citrus Seasoned Soy Sauce

Method:

  1. Slice the beef (across the grain) thinly to 3-inch by 5-inch pieces.
  2. Marinate the beef slices with Mizkan (Bonito Flavored) Soup Base, Mizkan HONTERI Mirin Seasoning and sake for an hour.
  3. Heat up the butter in a non-stick pan over medium heat. Add the enoki mushrooms to the pan and cook for about 1 minute or until they are just done. (Do not overcook the enoki mushrooms, they should remain somewhat crunchy.)
  4. Heat up the pan over medium heat. Grease the pan with some oil. Pan-sear the beef slices until both surfaces are slightly charred. Remove the beef from the heat.
  5. In a serving dish, roll the beef with some enoki mushrooms and secure it with a toothpick. Drizzle some Mizkan AJIPON® Ponzu Citrus Seasoned Soy Sauce over the beef roll and topped with some sesame seeds. Serve immediately.

Steamed Scallops with Fermented Black Beans Recipe

13 August, 2010 (13:43) | Chinese food recipes | By: admin

Steamed Scallops
Black Beans
The pain from my recent dental surgery is slowing easing away; I am starting to be able to chew, well, on foods again. Soon after a week of porridge, porridge, and more porridge of different toppings and ingredients, I am sooooo ready to dive back into some thing I totally miss, which is, seafood…

My dentist has warned me not to go overboard yet as my gum tissues are still raw so steaming is the finest cooking style for now. For today’s cooking, I picked scallops as I identified some succulent ones inside marketplace currently. I paired the scallops with fresh enoki mushrooms and heaped in some fermented black beans. After a couple of minutes of steaming, the scallops and enoki mushrooms were bathed in a lightly flavored broth bursting with natural sweetness with the scallops and enoki mushrooms. The fermented black beans have been basically icing on the cake. Yum…

Chewing has in no way been this enjoyable and fun. I am glad to have it back.

Grilled Enoki Mushrooms Wrapped with Smoked Chicken Breast

15 July, 2010 (03:26) | How to cook Chinese Food | By: admin


Right now, my quest for smell-friendly food continues with grilled Enoki mushrooms wrapped with smoked chicken breast. Inspired by Japanese yakitori, these grilled Enoki mushrooms are light, juicy, and appetizing–thanks to store-bought smoked chicken breast deli slices along with the nice presentation. Lightly charred on the surface but still moist in the core, popping these little bites into my mouth was indeed satisfying.

Although I applied chicken breast, any deli meats would work–turkey, sliced ham, bologna, or even bacon. Aside from the easy ingredients, these little hors d’oeuvres have the additional bonus of grilling in just minutes. Now this is what I call no-hassle food.

Make them at house or for your next party; I can assure you that this recipe will likely be a crowd-pleaser!