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Niku’jaga from Fae’s Twist & Tango

15 Thursday Aug 2013

Posted by ohlidia.com in Mains, Recipes

≈ 21 Comments

Tags

beef, beef and potato stew, Japanese, Japanese stew, potatoes

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Fae’s Twist & Tango kindly nominated my blog for the Awesome Blog Content Award back in June, for which I am truly honoured.  Being given an award from someone whose blog I greatly admire is truly awesome!  If you have yet to check out her blog, I urge you to do so.  She is a wonderful storyteller, constantly enlightening me with the history, legends and her personal stories about the foods she presents to us.

Such as this beautiful and delicious Japanese dish which I made.  Niku’jaga.  A meat and potato-type stew.  Mine may not have looked as beautiful as Fae’s with her carrots cut into the shape of flowers, but I’m pretty sure it was just as yummy!

Niku’jaga / Meat Potato

½ lb.  (230 g) of thinly sliced beef, such as Rib Eye (I used Sirloin)
1½ lb. (750 g) of boiling potatoes 
1 large onion
1 medium-large carrot
12 snow peas, strings pulled off if needed (I used a little more)
1 package of yam noodles (shirataki), 7 oz/200 g
3 Tbsp of vegetable oil
1 ½ cups of hot water

Seasoning:
2 2/3 Tbsp of sugar
6 Tbsp of low-sodium soy sauce (I used regular tamari and it was perfect)
4 Tbsp of mirin

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Peel and cut the potatoes into bite size pieces.  Cut the onion in half and then into 1/2-inch slices.  Peel and cut the carrot into 1/4-inch thick slices.  You can also use a flower cutting mold with the carrot to make it look pretty, as seen in Fae’s photo here.

I was not able to find thinly sliced Rib Eye beef at the grocer’s, therefore I got some Sirloin and sliced it as thinly as I could.  Proceed to cut the beef slices into 3-inch length pieces.

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In a small saucepan, bring water to a boil.  Add a pinch of salt and add snow peas, cooking for one minute.  Drain, rinse with cold water and set aside.  In the same saucepan, repeat the exact same process with the carrots.

Remove the yam noodles (shirataki) from its package and drain.  Give them a good rinse with cold water.  In same sauce pan as above, add fresh water and boil the noodles for 5 minutes.  Drain and rinse, allowing to drain in the colander.  Use kitchen scissors to cut into the shirataki, making noodles shorter and thus easier to eat.

In a small bowl, combine soy sauce and mirin.

In a medium non-stick pan, add 1 Tbsp of oil and sauté the onions over medium heat until lightly browned.  Remove them and transfer to a plate. Always using the same pan, add 1 Tbsp of oil and sauté the potatoes on medium heat for 1 or 2 minutes.  Transfer to plate.

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Add the last 1 Tbsp of oil to the same pan and on medium heat, sauté the meat until it starts turning brown.  Add sugar and stir well.

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To the meat, add half of the sautéed onion, all of the sautéed potatoes, the shirataki noodles and hot water, a 1/2 cup at a time, just enough to cover the ingredients half way (you may not need to use all 1 1/2 cups of water).  Bring to a boil and lower the heat to medium-low.  Let simmer for 5 minutes.

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Add soy-sauce and mirin mixture and continue to simmer until the potatoes are cooked (when poked with a fork, it should go through smoothly).

While still simmering, add the snow peas, carrots and the remaining sautéed onions.  Stir gently, simmer for one more minute and turn off the heat.  Keep a lid on the pan until ready to serve.

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Ultimate Stovetop Potatoes

11 Monday Feb 2013

Posted by ohlidia.com in Recipes, Sides

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

fried potatoes, potatoes, side dish, stove-top potatoes

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Potatoes, the world’s favourite root vegetable. Whether or not it is loved as much in your household as it is in mine, you have got to give these a try. So simple, yet amazingly scrumptious! What makes them so good? They’re fried in butter and extra virgin olive oil until they’ve absorbed all of that yumminess, making them crispy on the outside and tender on the inside.

As I was cutting up the potatoes, Peter walked into the kitchen and asked if those were just for the girls. When I replied in the negative, he asked if I was kidding. Those wouldn’t be enough for the four of us, he went on. He had a point. Of course, we could always eat more potatoes. But did we really need to?

I peeled and cubed 4 large Yukon Gold potatoes.  I rinsed them in cold water and then dried them on a dish towel.

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In a frying pan over medium heat, I added 2 tablespoons of butter and 2 or 3 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil. I added the potatoes, pepper and about 1 teaspoon of salt. I let them sit in the pan for about 6 or 7 minutes without stirring, allowing for a crust to form.

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Once I did stir them, I allowed them to cook for a good 5 minutes at a time before stirring again. After a total of about 25 or 30 minutes, having absorbed all of that golden butter and fruity olive oil, they were done.
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Peter was right after all. Charlotte took her first bite and was in Potato Heaven. As for Emma, they were the best potatoes she’d ever had. An argument broke out over who would get the left-overs. Needless to say, there were no left-overs and all three were glaring at me, demanding to know why I had made so little potatoes. Give them a try and see for yourself. Make sure you have plenty more than I did, or you might have to quell an argument over this simple spud!

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