- 2 garlic cloves
- 1 piece fresh ginger (1 inch long) or the jar of dried, ground ginger is just fine too. Really.
- 1/2 cup smooth peanut butter
- 1/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon soy sauce
- 1/4 cup plus 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
- 1 tablespoon light-brown sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon red-pepper flakes
- 1 1/2 pounds flank steak or sirloin steak
- 2 pints broccoli (about 2 heads) or additional random veggies
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 4 scallions
- Coarse salt
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Steak with Peanut Sauce and Broccoli
I like Martha Stewart. I have good luck with her recipes (unlike that ridiculous Rachel Ray who I swear puts up mistake-riddled recipes just to see if you'll really add a full cup of red wine vinegar instead of 1 tbs). But sometimes I don't have time to follow her recipe to the letter.
This would be one of those recipes. I forgot to make the marinade ahead of time. I didn't want to dirty an extra pan in the broiler. I threw it all together in a big pan on the stove and still liked the results.
You'll notice that my recipe also looks a heck of a lot different than hers (I added extra veggies and served it over rice pasta) but the flavors were the same.
What it should look like:
What it looks like when you don't follow directions:
Follow the directions to the letter or improvise as I did, but I think you'll like the end result.
INGREDIENTS
1. In
the morning: Peel garlic; peel and slice ginger. Place both in a blender with
peanut butter, 1/4 cup soy sauce, 1/4 cup vinegar, sugar, red-pepper flakes,
and 2 tablespoons water. Blend until smooth.
Now lets get real. You totally forgot about this until you got home from work, like, ahem, I did. Forget the blender. Toss 2 TBS of minced garlic in a bowl with the rest of the ingredients and stir until relatively smooth.
Place steak in a resealable
plastic bag or shallow dish; add all but 1/2 cup sauce and refrigerate. Cover
and store reserved sauce at room temperature. Again, if you didn't marinate it all day long, no biggie. The reserved marinade can go right over the top at the end and keep all that delicious peanut flavor.
Cut florets from broccoli
(reserve stalks for another use); cover and refrigerate. Cut up whatever veggies you have in the fridge. Why limit yourself to broccoli?
At
dinnertime: Heat broiler, with rack set 4 inches from heat. Lift steak from
marinade; place on a broilerproof baking sheet. Broil until medium-rare, 8 to
10 minutes. Transfer to a large plate, and cover loosely with aluminum foil;
let rest, 5 to 10 minutes.
Edit: At "oh, crap, my husband will be home in 10 minutes time" throw the steak and some marinade in the skillet and cook it up. I chopped it up to make it cook faster and make it more flavorful on every side instead of cooking it as one solid piece as directed. Cook it just under how you want it done (it should still be pink in the middle!)
While
steak is broiling, thinly slice scallions, keeping whites and greens separate.
In a large skillet, heat oil over medium. Add broccoli, scallion whites, and
1/4 cup water; season with salt. Cover skillet, and cook, tossing occasionally,
until broccoli is just tender, 8 to 10 minutes. Uncover; add remaining
tablespoon soy sauce and tablespoon vinegar. Cook, tossing, until liquid is
evaporated, 1 to 2 minutes. Mix in scallion greens.
Edit: After the steak is cooked to your desired doneness, throw the veggies in the wok and cook them up as directed.
To
serve, thinly slice steak across the grain; serve with broccoli and reserved
peanut sauce. Or throw your chunks of cooked steak back into the wok with the rest of the marinade to mix it all up together. Serve over rice or pasta... unless you're on a crazy low-carb diet.
VERDICT
As you can see, I was REALLY bad at following directions on this recipe. But the taste was the same no matter how you made it up and it was delicious. I mean, as long as you like peanut butter. If you like Thai food, you'll like this. Or Thai Peanut Butter Noodles that we made on this blog last year. It's not a taste everyone enjoys. Personally, I love it. I just wanted to give you fair warning that it's a love it or hate it taste for most people.
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