Thai Beef Salad or Waterfall Beef

August 27, 2010 by Puna  
Filed under Food & Cooking, Thai Food

Update: This post is updated for iHeartfaces beef challenge but it still remains a timeless favorite;)

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One of my all time favorite dishes – ever – is Thai beef salad. I make it at home often and I order it in Thai restaurants whenever I have the opportunity to go. My mother makes the best beef salad but I do the best I can.

Disclaimer – if you are a vegetarian, this is definitely not the dish for you.

To make it truly authentic, you will need to make the ground rice. This can be done in one big batch and stored for later use. That being said, I make this dish many times without it. It can be time consuming and I’ll skip if I’m desperate and in a hurry. That being said, please know that it does add quite a bit of authenticity to the salad if you take the time and make it.

Ground rice:

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Brown some rice on the stove top. This is only about a half a cup but you can do as much as you want and put it aside.

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Increase the heat until the rice begins to look brown. You must stir constantly. This is important. Do not walk away to finish a load of laundry. Trust me.

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Once the rice is a nice brown color, take it off the stove and let cool. Once it’s cool, you can put it in a grinder/mixer and ground the rice to a fine but not too powdery mix. There should be small pieces of rice for texture.

You can put the rice in a container and put it aside to store or you can go ahead and make the rest of the dish.

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I use a London Broil cut because it’s affordable and what my mother used:) If however, you are feeling frisky and rich, go for a nicer cut.

This is a three pound piece of meat. I know it’s a lot but I put the rest aside for leftovers.

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Now we chop.

1. Chop a bundle of well washed cilantro, more if you like.
2. Chop red onion into slivers.
3. Chop the mint.
4. Cut cherry tomatoes in half.
5. Chop the hot peppers into small pieces.

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Speaking of peppers…this is definitely one ingredient that you can moderate according to you own taste. Our household (everyone but the boy) can eat very spicy food. If you are not as experienced with it, put in only what you are comfortable with. I am not going to post a quantity for how much pepper to put in. It’s up to you.

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If you don’t have small Thai peppers as shown in the photo, you can use whatever pepper you like. Last week, I used McCormick ground pepper. Works just fine! Mint as shown here is also something that you can choose to put in if you can find it. My yard was overgrown with it for a period of time.

Ingredients:

1. 2 1/2 pounds of beef (London Broil)
2. 1/2 cup Thai fish sauce
3. 1/4 cup water
4. Juice of one lime (here’s how you cut that lime.)
5. 2 – 3 tablespoons of chopped Thai hot peppers (or any other pepper to taste.)
6. 2 cups chopped cilantro
7. 2 cups thinly sliced red onion
8. 1 cup chopped fresh mint
9. 1 cup halved cherry tomatoes
10. 1/4 cup ground rice

Directions:

Grill or broil the beef. Be careful to not over-cook it. Leave some pink in the middle.

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Slice the beef into small slivers being careful to discard any fat.

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Put in the fish sauce, water and juice of one lime. Toss well (sometimes I’ll use my hands.) Put in ground rice. Toss well. Put in the peppers. Toss well. Put in all chopped and prepared vegetables. Toss well.

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I make it for guests quite often and they love it! Even some of the boys at the lake ate it. You gotta try it.

Sopapilla Cheesecake Recipe

July 22, 2010 by Puna  
Filed under Food & Cooking

I made this dessert twice last weekend. I did it once to practice before I felt I was ready for primetime. We got to eat it twice! This is the most yummy-licious and easy desserts – ever.

I got the recipe from Miss Tracy who made it for an office party. She’s a mother of twin one-year-old boys, works full-time and is training for a half-marathon. Can you say super woman? I don’t know she found the time to cook but here it is. And it’s wonderful.

I had to ask her permission before I posted it in case it was an ancient Chinese secret. Enjoy!

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Ingredients

* 1 (8 ounce) package cream cheese, softened
* 1 cup white sugar
* 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
* 2 (8 ounce) packages refrigerated crescent rolls
* 1/2 cup melted butter
* 1/2 cup white sugar
* 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Directions

1. Preheat an oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Prepare a
9×13 inch baking dish with cooking spray.
2. Beat the cream cheese with 1 cup of sugar and the vanilla extract in a bowl until smooth; set aside.
3. Unroll the cans of crescent roll dough, and use a rolling pin to shape each sheet into 9×13 inch rectangles. Press one sheet into the bottom of a 9×13 inch baking dish. Evenly spread the cream cheese mixture into the baking dish, then cover with the remaining piece of crescent dough, and brush with melted butter. Stir together 1/2 cup of sugar with the cinnamon in a small bowl, and sprinkle evenly over the top of the cheesecake.
4. Bake in the preheated oven until the crescent dough has puffed and turned golden brown, about 30 minutes. Allow to cool 10 minutes before serving.

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I had every intention of posting more photos but I find it hard to cook and photograph at the same time…I need a sous chef, and a photographer, and a maid…

It looks really good in my Polish Pottery dish doesn’t it? Try it! You’ll love it!

And Here’s The Ponzu Sauce…

September 3, 2009 by Puna  
Filed under Food & Cooking

Update: This is one of my favorite sauces and it’s so easy that I had to post it again. I am making some tomorrow as a matter of fact…with some gyoza. Enjoy.

This is just one of the sauces that I use for the eggrolls and for so much more. I watched my mother make this sauce before I knew what ponzu sauce was. Now I make it all the time.

That’s what I get for living in Japan.

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When you google ponzu sauce you see that you’ll need, mirin, sake, dashi, bonito, lemon juice, etc, etc, etc. I like to drink sake (and some of you can attest to how much I like to drink it) but I don’t like the taste in food. Mirin is hard to find, and dashi broth takes too much time to make.

Take it from me, you don’t need all that. You need just three things (can’t deviate from these three) and you will need a spice option, like peppers. And you need pretty bowls. You can’t make ponzu sauce unless you have pretty bowls.

Ok, ok, here’s the ponzu recipe…

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You will need:

Soy sauce
Rice vinegar
Sugar
Hot Peppers (optional)

I use reduced sodium soy sauce and now can really tell the difference between that and the full strength. The full strength soy sauce is not a bad thing. It’s just better for your blood pressure to use the reduce sodium. But I don’t want to preach. It’s up to you and up to your circulatory system.

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I don’t have quantities, it depends on how much you want to make. I do two part soy sauce to one part rice vinegar. I like a lot of sauce, so I make a lot. Most of the time, we tend to run out.

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Put in about 1 teaspoon to sugar to about one quarter cup of soy sauce. Those of you who are persnickity about details like measurement will find this a little frustrating. I’m sorry. Just keep tasting it. If it tastes good to you, stop putting in sugar.

That’s it…except.

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There’s this. Hot peppers. I normally use dry peppers to put in sauce. We’ll talk about different kinds of peppers another time…if you can’t take the heat, don’t put it in.

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Now that’s really it. You’re done.

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Tonight we are putting the ponzu sauce onto pan fried gyoza since the husband and I had a huge – I mean huge – hamburger with Roquefort and bacon for lunch. We shouldn’t even be eating dinner. I’ll show to I make gyoza another time. You won’t believe how easy it is…really you won’t believe it.

I have two other sauces to show you…but I won’t be able to until next week. I have a horsey project for the girl I have to finish by this weekend. And I may actually have to go into work…

Bon appetite.

Waterfall Beef, Fresh Ingredients

May 26, 2009 by Puna  
Filed under Thai Food

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These are the fresh ingredients you’ll need for the Waterfall Beef.

Red Onion
Cherry Tomatoes
Limes
Cilantro
Mint
Chili peppers

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I love this cilantro. It smells heavenly.

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The fresh mint, I love the smell. I breathe it in.

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Thai chili peppers. You can use dried peppers,  you can use McCormick’s peppers, or if you’re wimpy, don’t use any. But it won’t be the same.

Trust me. Go forth and shop.

How I Make Eggrolls 1

April 13, 2009 by Puna  
Filed under Thai Food

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I received some sage advice from someone I respected deeply last week. I was bemoaning the fact that haven’t been cooking a lot lately and I love to cook. He said, “Well, then cook. If no one is home, cook anyway. Someone else could always use a good meal.” He was nice enough not to have added, “Duh” at the end of that statement.

So this is food week! I have been cooking, but not taking pictures. It’s hard to cook and photograph at the same time. I’m not much one for staging.

So here’s the first of two post on making eggrolls. Or rather, how I make eggrolls. How my mother taught me how. These are really simple, the wrapping can be somewhat time consuming but it’s fun. If you can wrap a present, you can make eggrolls. I may have left out half the population with that stipulation…anyway, here goes.

You will need:

1lb ground beef
1lb ground pork
1 yellow onion
1 package of carrots (about 6 or 7 individual carrots)
1-2 eggs (it depends)
salt
pepper
eggroll skins

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Here’s the eggroll skins. Giant may have them. I found these in the commisary at Andrews AFB. I know not everyone can get there, I’m sorry. If you can’t find something similar at Giant, try Whole Foods.

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Put the pork and beef together in a big mixing bowl.

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Season it with salt and pepper and stick your hand in there and mix it up. Then put an egg in and mix up the goo some more.

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Chop up the onion into small diced pieces. (I cry every time.)

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Wash and peel the carrots. Cut off the top and bottom and grate it. This takes muscle…

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Put the veggies in a bowl and set aside for a moment.

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Throw the veggies into the bowl of meat…

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and mix together with your hand. It’s the best way. Just mix it all together. Don’t be afraid to get a little dirty. It’s all love I tell you.

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How easy was that?

Tomorrow, we’ll wrap the egg rolls. See you then!