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asparagus beef food garlic rice steak

teriyaki ribeye steak with garlic fried rice

I’ve been a mild Japanophile since I was a teenager. The best games of the time came from Japan; you had to import them at extortionate prices. As such we pored over every detail and absorbed a lot of Japanese along the way. I took a Japanese module at university to bolster this further, reading James Clavell’s Asian Saga along the way. I’ve always dreamed of going to Japan some day.

It’s against this backdrop I gleefully accepted an invitation to Matsuri St James in the heart of London’s Mayfair. Established in 1993 as a joint venture between the Kikkoman soy sauce manufacturer and a Japanese rail company, Matsuri was among the first restaurant in the country offering tableside teppan-yaki, food freshly cooked on a hotplate.

With a glut of other food writers we were treated to an excellent four course meal. We sampled sushi first, as the sushi chef prepared identical nigiri at astonishing speed. He told me the first month of his training was entirely spent measuring out 15g portions of rice repeatedly, so he is now blindingly accurate. The sushi itself was just as you expect, subtle, refined and clean-tasting.   This was followed by crisp and light Tempura vegetables, with an umami-rich dipping sauce flavoured with daikon.

And then the teppan-yaki mains. And what mains they were. The ginger-scented black cod was delicate in texture but dynamite in flavour, packing an awful lot into the innocent looking portion. If you go, make sure you try this one.

An enormous steak arrived next, angry dark meat picked out by creamy yellow fat. After searing on one side the chef flipped it and CAKED it in sea salt. After a few minutes more he scraped the salt off having done it’s job, and sliced the now rare-cooked meat and served it immediately. This is where teppan-yaki works; if you’d simply been served some slices of meat you would’ve missed the spectacle of an enormous hunk of beef being served. The steak itself was excellent, served with a garlic fried rice.

The meal finished with a bafflingly underthought ice cream, crepes and pineapple, flambéed for no other reason than to make people go “ooooh” when the Grand Marnier flames licked the ceiling.

The meal was sensational. Really good ingredients treated with respect. I’d love to return but the pricing is so far out of my bracket a visit would have to be very special indeed.

As a tribute, I cooked a Japanese meal for some friends. We started with sushi…

Followed by tempura veg…

But the recipe I really wanted to share with you is my interpretation of the steak ‘n’ rice dish. A humble piece of ribeye steak (my favourite cut) cooked sous-vide (not essential but the way I like it; if you don’t have one of these contraptions you can cook your steak the way you prefer) in Kikkoman’s teriyaki sauce and egg fried rice cooked with plenty of garlic and vegetables. It’s not quite the same as a visit to Matsuri St James… but it’s a darn fine dinner.

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teriyaki ribeye steak with garlic fried rice

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 250 g ribeye steak
  • 100 ml Kikkoman's teriyaki sauce
  • 4 cloves garlic crushed
  • 1/2 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 onion diced
  • 1 bundle asparagus sliced
  • 2 carrots peeled and diced
  • 1 mugful cooked rice cooled
  • 2 eggs beaten
  • Sea salt

Instructions

  • Sous-vide the steak with 70ml teriyaki sauce at 60C for 1 hour. Put aside until ready to cook.
  • Get a wok and a frying pan over a very high heat. Put a splash of oil in the wok and add the garlic and sugar. After just a few seconds add the onion, carrot and asparagus and stir fry for 3 - 4 minutes until starting to go tender. Add the rice and continue to stir fry until warmed through.
  • In the other frying pan sear the steak for 60 seconds on each side, adding half the remaining teriyaki sauce to the pan at the end to glaze. Remove to a board then slice into thick fingers.
  • Add the egg and last of the teriyaki to the rice and stir for another 60 seconds. Spoon into bowls and serve with the steak slices on top. Sprinkle a little sea salt on the exposed flesh of the beef.
Categories
beef food mince pasta stock

spaghetti elvedenese

Some of the best meals come when your hands are tied; everyone’s hungry and you just have to work with what you’ve got. I had this recently whilst on holiday at Center Parcs Elveden Forest. Worn out from trekking, swimming and climbing, the troops needed fuel!

We’ve been to this village several times over the years and never failed to have an amazing time. We have kids separated in age by 9 years. This presents it’s own challenges which is well catered for by the variety of activities available. The big ‘un can go climbing trees and archery whilst the littl’un can go to fairy parties and learn to ride a bike. I’ve always loved the swimming complex, packed with inventive ways to be thrown about in the water.

And of course you can return to the home base of your self-catering villa. Being a cooking-loving kinda person I always cast a critical eye over the kitchen. You’re sorted for an oven, hob, microwave, dishwasher, fridge and letterbox-sized freezer. The range of utensils and pots can be challenging, with what seems like the Argos value pan set in the cupboard. There’s just three things I wish they’d include in the standard kitchen kit to keep me happy: some tongs (invaluable for turning things on a grill, and the best thing for serving spaghetti dishes), a decent knife to chop an onion with (blunted for safety no doubt), and a decent-size casserole dish. For this dinner (to feed 4) I had to juggle a couple of pans to cook my mince mixture.

I can’t be the first person to make spag bol here surely? It’s a real challenge to try and make family portions in small pans.

This is a minor criticism. I’m certain I must be the only one grumbling about this issue but being a food person the kitchen situation is never going to be perfect.

So here’s my rescue dinner, a kind-of crowd pleasing spaghetti bolognese, with odds and ends from home and a few essentials from the village supermarket. If you can pick up Knorr Flavour Pots they’re a great way to shortcut flavour into your dinners.

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spaghetti elvedenese

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 500 g beef mince
  • 2 onions peeled and diced
  • 1 tin tomatoes
  • 1 Knorr Mixed Herbs flavour pot
  • 1 tablespoon tomato ketchup
  • 1 teaspoon Marmite rounded
  • 200 g spaghetti

Instructions

  • Brown the mince in a saucepan, in batches if required. Put to one side when done, removing with a slotted spoon. In the same pan, gently fry the onion. Once the onion has softened, pop the mince back in the pan.
  • Add the tomatoes, then fill the tin back up with water and add that to the pan too. Stir in the stock pot. Once it all comes up to the boil, add the ketchup and Marmite. Cover and simmer for 15 minutes while you cook the pasta according to the packet instructions.
  • As the pasta finishes, check the mince for seasoning. Drain the pasta and then combine in the pan with the mince. Give it a real good stir for a minute to let the spaghetti soak up the flavours. Serve with grated cheese and crisp salad leaves.
Categories
balsamic vinegar beef cumin food mustard ox cheek worcestershire sauce

sous vide ox cheek kebabs with houmous and red pepper salsa

Ox cheek can be an acquired taste. A great big slab of meat that can be quite irony and offally. Someone that doesn’t need convincing is our Kavey, who can wax on the subject for hundreds of words. If you haven’t joined the army of converts, maybe this sous vide ox cheek recipe will change your mind.

Categories
beef food noodles

kinda beef pho

Let’s get this out of the way: this is an inauthentic beef pho. It’s beef and noodles in a strong broth of Asian flavours. But pho tells you the general direction we’re heading in for this one.

So why this dish? Well not only is a great way to use up leftovers (in this instance, specifically roast beef) but it was inspired by a brilliant little cooking demo from Jun Tanaka. As a guest of Sainsbury’s myself along with a bunch of other foodie peeps watched Chef Tanaka prepare a selection of Asian / fusion dishes. He described his food backgrounds: with a Japanese – American heritage, combined with years in England, French classical training and many holidays in Thailand he has a lot of experiences to draw from. I was chuffed to see Kavey there so we could joint-coo over the excellently rare miso salmon, roll eyes at professional food writers assuming umami is a new invention, and debate the dislocated origins of rack of lamb with roasted peppers and chickpea pancakes. She also got a giggle when a bird’s eye chilli from a Tom Yum soup got stuck in my throat, causing me to cough uncontrollably and one of my eyes to stream. Luckily it moved on soon enough, but not before I’d turned bright pink.

Errant chillies aside, Jun’s food was fabulous, and I will definitely be giving the salmon a whirl.

The true meaning of the night was to draw attention to the speciality ingredients range. A kinda Vietnamese-style beef pho seemed a good way to get inspired by some of these. Here I’ve used some Sainsbury’s Mirin to add a dash of seasoning to this humble dish, along with dried mixed mushrooms to up the umami quotient. It’s warming and wholesome, and adaptable enough to take pretty much any meat or veg you care to throw at it.

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kinda beef pho

Author Gary @ BigSpud

Ingredients

  • 2 litres beef stock
  • 1 red onion sliced
  • 3 cm piece of ginger sliced
  • 2 cloves
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 2 cloves garlic peeled
  • 1 teaspoon black peppercorns
  • Pinch dried chillies
  • 25 g pack mixed dried mushrooms
  • 1 carrot peeled and thinly sliced
  • 1 tablespoon oyster sauce
  • 1 teaspoon mirin
  • 2 tablespoons fish sauce
  • 2 packs of dried noodles
  • 250 g sliced roast beef
  • 1 lime cut into wedges

Instructions

  • Add a dash of oil to a large saucepan. Over a high heat add the garlic, ginger, ginger, peppercorns, chillies and cinnamon and stir fry for a minute or two until they start to smell aromatic. Add the stock, cover and simmer for an hour.
  • Meanwhile cover the dried mushrooms in boiling water and steep for the same time.
  • Strain the stock and add the noodles, carrots and onions. When the noodles are tender add the oyster sauce, mirin, fish sauce and beef. Simmer for a couple of minutes until everything is piping hot and serve, with lime wedges on the side to each to add fresh zing.
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