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Indonesian

Shelley-Belly's Wok Beef Rendang (Updated)

July 10, 2013 By Eleanor Hoh 1 Comment

Shelley-Belly is a foodie chef and a Wok Star!  She made an amazing Indonesian Beef Rendang in her cast iron wok and agreed to share it with us, yay! 

ingredients

I love this chalkboard where Shelley laid out her ingredients & marked them!

Shelley-Belly presents extraordinary “underground supper clubs” in Miami and I’ve been lucky enough to attend two!  Her claim to fame among many other things is her outstanding pork belly with the crispiest skin I’ve EVER had, still dreaming and drooling, I posted about my underground dinner experience here. I couldn’t resist mentioning the piggy, oops.

Follow her on twitter for upcoming dates and check out her blog to get on her list for future dinner dates and tell her Wok Star sent you!  You’ll enjoy it tremendously, it’s how my hubby and I like to dine.

Someone saw her Beef Rendang on Facebook and wanted her recipe, I hope this will be a first in a series of Wok Star guest posts.  If you have my Wok Star Kit, I would love for you to share your creation with us, it doesn’t have to be complicated, just your personal spin!

Take it away, Shelley-Belly…

I do a lot of Asian cooking but don’t generally blog about it because… well I’m not Asian and I’m far from an expert but this one of those dishes that, with a bit of patience, I think most people can get right, or pretty close to right. Rendang is, arguably, the most well known dish to come out of Indonesia… I don’t know that I do it justice, but I do it. If you’ve got all day, do it with beef, if you’ve got a few hours do it with chicken. Ideally though, do it a day or two before you plan on eating it, it improves with age.
There are hundreds of variations and combinations of ingredients for this dish. I’ve seen recipes that include fish sauce, star anise, fennel seeds, coriander seeds, cumin, tamarind (usually found in chicken rendang), nutmeg and a host of other ingredients and it’s probably okay to include any and all of these in your rendang if you choose. I think rendang is about depth of flavour – preparing each ingredient with care and layering the flavors to make a really deep, punchy dish. And, much like a Bourguignon, a Bolognese or a good Irish stew, every household probably has a similar variation on a theme, a “secret” recipe handed down through generations that they will tell you is the best ever. Whatever ingredients you choose to use in your rendang, just make sure they’re good quality and that they’re flavors that you love.
This is my version of a beef rendang or rendang daging. It’s a pretty basic recipe, feel free to change it up but make sure to always include – coconut milk, dried coconut, ginger, turmeric, lemon grass, garlic, shallots, birds’ eye chillies.
Serves four
Time – a little over four hours including prep and cooking.
Best prepared a day or two ahead
Ingredients:
2 lbs beef shin (This weight included four marrow bones. I like shin and neck for this dish but any good stewing cut will do.) Cut into 1 inch cubes. Reserve the bones.
400 ml coconut milk
500 ml to 600 ml water
1 cup dried coconut (toasted in a dry pan or wok until golden)
1 cinnamon stick
4-6 cardamom pods
4-6 kaffir lime leaves (some recipes say to shred these, I prefer to leave them whole and remove them just before serving)
1 tbl spoon (more or less) palm sugar (use brown sugar if you don’t have palm sugar)
1 tea spoon salt (more or less)
4 tbl spoons cooking oil (veg, peanut, whatever you happen to have. I used 2 tbl spoons of canola oil and 2 tbl spoons of coconut oil – don’t use coconut oil on its own as it doesn’t have a high enough smoking point to cook out the spice paste).
For the curry paste
8-10 shallots, skins removed
5 cloves garlic, skins removed
2 thumb sized pieces of ginger, roughly chopped
OR
1 thumb sized piece of ginger and 1 of galangal (I could not find galangal when I prepared this)
8-10 dried chillies, soaked and seeds removed (more or less according to your spice threshold although this is typically a very spicy dish)
8-10 fresh birds’ eye chillies (if you can’t get fresh use a few extra dried chillies)
1 thumb sized piece of turmeric, peeled and roughly chopped
4 stalks lemon grass, roughly 4 inches long, outer skin removed
3 candlenuts (if you can’t get candle nuts use macadamia. I have heard of people using cashews too but I find cashew flavor is too distinctive)
If you’re feeling energetic, now’s the time to break out your pestle and mortar and get bashing. If you’re not, just pop all the ingredients for the curry paste into a blender and blend into a fine paste. Using a pestle and mortar and taking the time to bash each ingredient on its own will give you a finer result but it is a labor of love.
For the curry
Heat your wok, add the cooking oil and bring it up to a high temp. Add the curry paste and reduce to a medium heat. Cook, stirring frequently, for about 10 minutes. Be careful not to let it burn or stick. When the curry paste has cooked through, turn up the heat and add the beef to the wok. Stir to thoroughly coat in the paste, cook for a minute or two, and add the reserved marrow bones if you have them. Add the cinnamon, cardamom, kaffir lime, salt and sugar. Add the water, enough to cover the meat but don’t drown it. Reduce the heat and simmer, stirring gently and frequently, until the liquid has reduced by half. This should take more than an hour. Add the coconut milk and continue stirring and simmering for another two hours. The key with this dish is to allow the flavors to be absorbed slowly into the meat and for the meat to cook to where it is meltingly tender – if you feel the liquid is evaporating too quickly pop an angled lid onto the wok. During this two hour cooking period be sure to taste and make sure the seasoning is balanced – now is the time to add more sugar or salt if you think it needs it.
After a total cooking time of just over three hours the liquid should be all but reduced and the meat just about falling apart. Add the toasted coconut, stir gently to coat (the meat should be almost falling apart by now) and cook for another 15 to 20 minutes. I have seen recipes in which the toasted coconut is added at the same time as the coconut milk – I’m sure it’s fine to do it that way, I don’t because I love the texture of the coconut and don’t want it cooked out.
We garnished the rendang with fresh cilantro and a wedge of lime and served it with steamed rice and stir fried Chinese chives.”

spicepaste-wokrempeh-wok

beginning-wokbefore-coconut-milk

Rendang-wok Plated300

Rendang-presentation Rendang-Chives

I know there are foodies who will want to make this at home but if you’re like me and balked at the process (I’m just too lazy)  with making this Beef Rendang, head out to Indomania, a cozy Indonesian restaurant where they serve it (sorry Shelley).

Filed Under: blog, cast iron wok, curry, Indonesian, underground supper club Tagged With: "Shelley Belly", cast iron wok, curry, Indonesian

Shelley-Belly's Wok Beef Rendang (Updated)

July 10, 2013 By Eleanor Hoh 1 Comment

Shelley-Belly is a foodie chef and a Wok Star!  She made an amazing Indonesian Beef Rendang in her cast iron wok and agreed to share it with us, yay! 

ingredients

I love this chalkboard where Shelley laid out her ingredients & marked them!

Shelley-Belly presents extraordinary “underground supper clubs” in Miami and I’ve been lucky enough to attend two!  Her claim to fame among many other things is her outstanding pork belly with the crispiest skin I’ve EVER had, still dreaming and drooling, I posted about my underground dinner experience here. I couldn’t resist mentioning the piggy, oops.

Follow her on twitter for upcoming dates and check out her blog to get on her list for future dinner dates and tell her Wok Star sent you!  You’ll enjoy it tremendously, it’s how my hubby and I like to dine.

Someone saw her Beef Rendang on Facebook and wanted her recipe, I hope this will be a first in a series of Wok Star guest posts.  If you have my Wok Star Kit, I would love for you to share your creation with us, it doesn’t have to be complicated, just your personal spin!

Take it away, Shelley-Belly…

I do a lot of Asian cooking but don’t generally blog about it because… well I’m not Asian and I’m far from an expert but this one of those dishes that, with a bit of patience, I think most people can get right, or pretty close to right. Rendang is, arguably, the most well known dish to come out of Indonesia… I don’t know that I do it justice, but I do it. If you’ve got all day, do it with beef, if you’ve got a few hours do it with chicken. Ideally though, do it a day or two before you plan on eating it, it improves with age.
There are hundreds of variations and combinations of ingredients for this dish. I’ve seen recipes that include fish sauce, star anise, fennel seeds, coriander seeds, cumin, tamarind (usually found in chicken rendang), nutmeg and a host of other ingredients and it’s probably okay to include any and all of these in your rendang if you choose. I think rendang is about depth of flavour – preparing each ingredient with care and layering the flavors to make a really deep, punchy dish. And, much like a Bourguignon, a Bolognese or a good Irish stew, every household probably has a similar variation on a theme, a “secret” recipe handed down through generations that they will tell you is the best ever. Whatever ingredients you choose to use in your rendang, just make sure they’re good quality and that they’re flavors that you love.
This is my version of a beef rendang or rendang daging. It’s a pretty basic recipe, feel free to change it up but make sure to always include – coconut milk, dried coconut, ginger, turmeric, lemon grass, garlic, shallots, birds’ eye chillies.
Serves four
Time – a little over four hours including prep and cooking.
Best prepared a day or two ahead
Ingredients:
2 lbs beef shin (This weight included four marrow bones. I like shin and neck for this dish but any good stewing cut will do.) Cut into 1 inch cubes. Reserve the bones.
400 ml coconut milk
500 ml to 600 ml water
1 cup dried coconut (toasted in a dry pan or wok until golden)
1 cinnamon stick
4-6 cardamom pods
4-6 kaffir lime leaves (some recipes say to shred these, I prefer to leave them whole and remove them just before serving)
1 tbl spoon (more or less) palm sugar (use brown sugar if you don’t have palm sugar)
1 tea spoon salt (more or less)
4 tbl spoons cooking oil (veg, peanut, whatever you happen to have. I used 2 tbl spoons of canola oil and 2 tbl spoons of coconut oil – don’t use coconut oil on its own as it doesn’t have a high enough smoking point to cook out the spice paste).
For the curry paste
8-10 shallots, skins removed
5 cloves garlic, skins removed
2 thumb sized pieces of ginger, roughly chopped
OR
1 thumb sized piece of ginger and 1 of galangal (I could not find galangal when I prepared this)
8-10 dried chillies, soaked and seeds removed (more or less according to your spice threshold although this is typically a very spicy dish)
8-10 fresh birds’ eye chillies (if you can’t get fresh use a few extra dried chillies)
1 thumb sized piece of turmeric, peeled and roughly chopped
4 stalks lemon grass, roughly 4 inches long, outer skin removed
3 candlenuts (if you can’t get candle nuts use macadamia. I have heard of people using cashews too but I find cashew flavor is too distinctive)
If you’re feeling energetic, now’s the time to break out your pestle and mortar and get bashing. If you’re not, just pop all the ingredients for the curry paste into a blender and blend into a fine paste. Using a pestle and mortar and taking the time to bash each ingredient on its own will give you a finer result but it is a labor of love.
For the curry
Heat your wok, add the cooking oil and bring it up to a high temp. Add the curry paste and reduce to a medium heat. Cook, stirring frequently, for about 10 minutes. Be careful not to let it burn or stick. When the curry paste has cooked through, turn up the heat and add the beef to the wok. Stir to thoroughly coat in the paste, cook for a minute or two, and add the reserved marrow bones if you have them. Add the cinnamon, cardamom, kaffir lime, salt and sugar. Add the water, enough to cover the meat but don’t drown it. Reduce the heat and simmer, stirring gently and frequently, until the liquid has reduced by half. This should take more than an hour. Add the coconut milk and continue stirring and simmering for another two hours. The key with this dish is to allow the flavors to be absorbed slowly into the meat and for the meat to cook to where it is meltingly tender – if you feel the liquid is evaporating too quickly pop an angled lid onto the wok. During this two hour cooking period be sure to taste and make sure the seasoning is balanced – now is the time to add more sugar or salt if you think it needs it.
After a total cooking time of just over three hours the liquid should be all but reduced and the meat just about falling apart. Add the toasted coconut, stir gently to coat (the meat should be almost falling apart by now) and cook for another 15 to 20 minutes. I have seen recipes in which the toasted coconut is added at the same time as the coconut milk – I’m sure it’s fine to do it that way, I don’t because I love the texture of the coconut and don’t want it cooked out.
We garnished the rendang with fresh cilantro and a wedge of lime and served it with steamed rice and stir fried Chinese chives.”

spicepaste-wokrempeh-wok

beginning-wokbefore-coconut-milk

Rendang-wok Plated300

Rendang-presentation Rendang-Chives

I know there are foodies who will want to make this at home but if you’re like me and balked at the process (I’m just too lazy)  with making this Beef Rendang, head out to Indomania, a cozy Indonesian restaurant where they serve it (sorry Shelley).

Filed Under: blog, cast iron wok, curry, Indonesian, underground supper club Tagged With: "Shelley Belly", cast iron wok, curry, Indonesian

Banana & Leaf: Grab & Go

October 19, 2011 By Eleanor Hoh 2 Comments

Banana & Leaf (Fusion & Fancy Sushi)

OPENS TODAY!  Wed, 19 October 2011, 11 am to midnight
$2 Grab and Go for just this week!
This gorgeous hip, modern and very cool Sushi Fusion Indonesian is in downtown Miami. From the same owners at Little Lotus Tapas.  Perfect lunchbox for busy lifestyles and the freshest sushi and sashimi at a great price!
There are a few bar seats and cozy couches with incredibly rich colors that immediately make you think of Indonesia! It’s inside a very posh building called The Loft.
Their concept is Grab and Go Lunch box for busy professionals, students and anyone who loves Asian food. All healthy and freshly made with everything priced around $5.  How can you beat that?  I didn’t have the menu at the time I was posting this but by the look of the photos Andi sent, they look like just what I’d enjoy eating for my lunch!
My husband and I were honored to be invited to their private party a couple of weeks prior to the opening. Wow, they made the BIGGEST sushi boat that was the length of the whole bar!  Their eel was very fresh, so tender and tasty and quickly disappeared.  There were mounds of seaweed salad, mayo seafood sticks that was very addictive, summer rolls, a very yummy seafood salad and mountains of salmon and tuna sushi. Funnily enough, I was the only Asian guest there apart from the seafood distributor, hmm.  All the guests were loyal regulars at Little Lotus Tapas.  I really enjoyed meeting these foodies.
I’ll leave you with a teeny secret, they’re expanding, can’t tell you where yet but Sari is a little empire builder.  I so admire her passion for bringing good Asian food, especially Indonesian food to Miami in a clean, modern environment that you want to hang out at.
Grab & Go and tell them Wok Star sent you!  And spread the word, share on Facebook, twitter, you know the drill. They deserve to be noticed.
Grab & Go, Dine In, Take Out & Delivery
234 NE 3rd Street Unit CU-1A, Miami, FL 33132
7 days a week from 11 am to midnight
photo credit: Tabgha Photography (Interior bar and food shots at top and bottom, all the good ones!)
 

Filed Under: Indonesian, Japanese food, Miami restaurant, restaurants Tagged With: "Banana & Leaf", Indonesian, Japanese food, lunch, lunchbox, Miami, restaurant, sashimi, sushi

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