Archive for the ‘Vietnamese’ Category
* Shaking Beef
Posted on September 30th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Beef, Cuisine, Entree, Fish sauce, Vietnamese.
Succulent morsels of sweet, savoury and lots of umami beef that literally melt in your mouth. Bo Luc Lac – Shaking Beef – gets its name from the noise you make when you sear the beef in a wok. This is an absolutely delicious dish that is so simple to prepare. Except for the long marinating period, you can easily outdo Rachel Ray’s 30 minutes.
Chef’s tip: If you don’t want to wait overnight to get the beef marinated and truly keep this dish under 30 minutes, use an instant marinator. The instant marinator works by removing all the air from the beef when you create a vacuum with the pump. When you release the valve, the marinate then oozes into these empty cavities in the beef, bathing the beef with the seasonings of the marinade.
Marinade:
6 cloves garlic, minced
2 tablespoons fish sauce
2 stalks lemon grass, finely 2 inches of the white portion
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons canola oil
1 1/2 lb beef tenderloin, cut into 1 1/2 inch cubes.
Dressing:
1 red onion, finely sliced
2 teaspoons rice wine vinegar
1 tablespoon light soy sauce
1 tablespoon fish sauce
1 tablespoon mirin
1 teaspoon brown sugar
2 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1 bunch of watercress
Preparing the Meat:
1. Whisk together marinade ingredients
2. Cut meat into 1 1/2 inch cube. Marinate meat for at least a half hour, preferably overnight.
Preparing the salad:
3. Slice onions thinly and place in a bowl of cold water for 10 minutes. Drain and pat dry.
4. Toss together remaining dressing ingredient.
5. Just before serving, toss watercress and onions with the dressing
Cooking the beef:
6. Heat a cast iron pan or a wok on high heat. Add oil and quickly sear the beef until it develops a brown crust. About 2 minutes or less if you prefer your beef rare.
7. Place hot beef on tossed watercress salad. Drizzle in any pan juice. Serve immediately.
Serves: 6
* Vietnamese Rice Noodle Salad
Posted on September 29th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Basil, Chicken, Chili Peppers, Cilantro, Cuisine, Entree, Fish sauce, Green onions, Kaffir lime leaves, Lemongrass, Lime, Mint, Noodles, Peppers, Rau Ram, Salads, Sides, Thai Chilis, Vietnamese.
Tossing in as many Vietnamese herbs I can find from the only organic Asian vegetables vendor at the farmers markets in San Francisco Bay Area – Phan Organics Farm of Elk Grove (Civic Center Farmers, SF – Wed and Sun, Berkeley- Tue, Alemany – Sat), this super light noodle salad gives lots of exploding flavors. It’s a great introduction to the world of Vietnamese herbs.
Chef’s tips: To chiffonade herbs, stack several leaves and roll them tightly. With a sharp knife, slice the roll finely. Fluff the sliced herbs to separate them.
Ingredients
Meat:
1 lb ground lean chicken or pork or turkey
2 stalk lemon grass, white part only, very finely sliced
2 Tablespoons fish sauce
Juice from 1 lime
1 Tablespoon rice flour, roasted
6 oz dried rice vermicelli
Herb:
5 Thai chilies, deseeded and chopped finely
1 cup cilantro, chiffonade
½ cup green onions, sliced thinly
½ cup rau ram, chiffonade
½ cup shiso perilla leaves, chiffonade
½ cup mint leaves, chiffonade
5 kaffir lime leaves, chiffonade
Lime zest from 2 limes
Dressing:
Juice from 1 limes
2 cloves garlic, minced
¼ cup fish sauce
½ teaspoon brown sugar
Cilantro or mint sprigs for garnish
Preparing the meat:
1. Heat a non stick pan under high heat, add the ground meat, chopped lemongrass, 2 Tablespoons each of fish sauce and lime juice. Cook 10 minutes until the meat is cooked through, while stirring constantly. Transfer the meat to a large bowl. Drain off excess liquids. Cool.
2. Dry-fry the rice flour (without any oil) under medium heat till golden brown. Add to the meat mixture.
Preparing the rice noodles:
3. Bring a pot of salted water to boil. Add rice noodles. Bring back to a boil, cover, remove from heat and let noodles sit for 15 minutes in hot water. Drain.
Preparing the herb and dressing:
4. Slice and chiffonade the herbs. Toss all herb ingredients together. Set aside.
5. Mix dressing ingredients together.
Assembly:
6. Toss the meat, noodles, herb and dressing together to combine. Let sit for 10 minutes for the flavors to come together.
7. Garnish with mint sprigs and cilantro.
Serves: 6
* Cha Ca — Salmon in Tumeric and Dill Oil
Posted on September 10th, 2008 by Linda. Filed under Cilantro, Cuisine, Dill, Entree, Fish, Fish sauce, Galangal, Green onions, Herbs, Mint, Pork, Rau Ram, Salmon, Street Foods, Tumeric, Vietnamese.
This picture was taken eons ago on my first gen digital camera…before I got my VR lens and my D70. But the memory of that meal at Cha Ca La Vong in Hanoi is still as vivid as ever. You climb this steep stairs, or more aptly called, a ladder, to get to the second floor of this nondescript shop lot in the old town of Hanoi. As immediately as you sit down, a charcoal stove appears, together with a variety of Asian herbs and a simmering pan of bright orange tumeric oil. This was the most simple and memorable meal I had in Hanoi. I was heady with the smell of turmeric, dill, rau ram and all the wonderful Vietnamese herbs and the sweet smell of fried fresh fish. Or was it the carbon monoxide from the numerous charcoal stoves in the room that was making me giddy? I have tried to reproduce the recipe based on that memorable meal sans charcoal.
Chef’s tip: Make sure you have everything mise-en-place before you start cooking. The cooking itself literally takes minutes. Traditionally, the freshwater snakehead fish is used. Catfish or tilapia is a good substitute. I like it with the more fatty salmon.
And here’s an updated picture 10 years later.
Marinade:
3 inches of galangal – Thai ginger
2 Tablespoons water
2 Tablespoon fish sauce
3 Tablespoon tumeric powder
1 Tablespoon rice wine
1 Tablespoon sugar
½ teaspoon black pepper
1 Tablespoon grapeseed/ safflower oil
1 ½ lb fresh salmon (tilapia or catfish works well, too)
1 (4 oz) package of thin rice vermicelli, cooked and drained
8 approx. 2”X4” pieces of butter/green lettuce leaf, ribs removed
12 sprigs mint, chiffonade
1 bulb of fennel, thinly sliced
1 red onion, thinly sliced
½ bunch cilantro, tear into smaller sprigs
½ bunch of green onions, julienned, separate white from green
1 cup Rau Ram – polygonum (Vietnamese Mint), chiffonade
1 cup Fresh basil, chiffonade
1 lb dill, stemmed, cut into 3 inch strip
1 ½ cups of grapeseed/ safflower oil
Nuac Mam:
1 red chile, diced finely / 1 tablespoon Sri Racha sauce
2 cloves garlic, minced
5 Tablespoons sugar
Juice of 1 lime
2 Tablespoons rice wine vinegar
4 Tablespoons water
2 Tablespoons fish sauce
½ cup roasted peanuts
2 limes, cut into wedges
Preparing the Fish:
1. Grate galangal and mix with 2 tablespoons warm water, squeeze juice and discard solids.
2. Whisk together marinade ingredients with galangal juice
3. Cut salmon into 1 inch cubes and marinate fish for at least a half hour.
Preparing the vegetables and rice vermicelli:
4. Bring a pot of water to boil. Drop rice vermicelli in, bring to boil again. Cover for 15 minutes. Drain and fluff. Place in the middle of a large platter.
5. Wash and clean all vegetables, spin to dry.
6. Sliced fennel and onion finely. Place onions in a bowl of cold water for 10 minutes. Drain.
7. Chiffonade herbs except dill. Set herbs and vegetables around the rice noodles on the platter.
Cooking the fish:
8. Heat a cast iron pan or a wok on high heat
9. Add oil and cook salmon till golden brown.
10. Add the dill, cook for 1 minute.
11. Toss in white part green onions.
12. Ladle salmon over the rice noodles, sprinkle with ground peanuts.
Just before serving, toss together to mix in herbs and vegetables.
Preparing the nuoc mam dipping sauce:
13. Blend together all nuoc mam ingredients.
To serve:
14. Serve with nuoc mam, cut lime and freshly cracked black pepper on the side.
Serves: 6
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