4
servings20
minutes3
hoursThe beauty of a long, slow braise is that it transforms - without much effort on your part - a watery and murky mass into glistening and voluptuous velvet, ready to be draped over all manner of carbs like wheat noodles, pasta or potatoes. Few things in life are as assured as marinading and stewing a (Cheap-ish) cut of meat until it succumbs to yielding tenderness. Much easier with meat than with the capricious human heart, eh? You just let time work its magic and you know that at the end of the day, you'll have a tender, maybe fall-apart (if you desire) end result. The margin of error is much smaller (almost nil) here than say, searing a steak medium-rare. Those are good odds for any home cook.
Here, chunks of beef are braised in a doubanjeang (*chilli bean paste that amps up the flavaaa like you would NOT believe! 😉 and soy-spiced mixture. After a couple hours of stewing, they're plopped on top of starchy and chewy La Mian and served with a light scatter of spring onions.
Sure, you could go Keto, but as a Carbie girl, it's as much a sin for me not to have a vehicle of carbohydrate to sop up that delicious saus, as it would equally freak a Keto (are they called Keto-nites?) dieter out to consume that much "sugar". I digress...
Recipe from: Around the Dining Table - An Asian Inspired Modern Feast.
800g beef shin (or use brisket, or cheek, ribs or pork shoulder.. any long-slow braising cut would work)
2.5 Tablespoons doubanjeang * (This is a key flavouring here and if you omit this, it'd be a different animal altogether..)
2 Tablespoons light soy
2 Tablespoons dark soy
1/2 teaspoon white sugar
15g ginger, smashed
4 garlic cloves, smashed
1/2 a red onion or a few shallots, sliced
4 spring onions, bottom white parts only (save the tops for garnish)
1 cinnamon stick
1 star anise
2 to 3 dried chillies
1.5 to 2 liters of water
2 to 3 tablespoons of canola oil
salt or light soy, to taste
noodles of your choice, to serve
spring onion tops, sliced, to garnish