Sunday, September 27, 2009

Negimaki (Japanese Beef and Scallion Rolls)

Inspiration:
The first leg of The Amazing Race, in Tokyo
and
Mary Ellen's Cooking Creations (adapted from an Epicurious recipe)


Ingredients:
  • 12 small scallions, trimmed to 6-inch lengths
  • 1 (1-lb) piece flank steak (roughly 6 to 7 inches square)
  • 1/4 cup sake (Japanese rice wine)
  • 1/4 cup mirin* (Japanese sweet rice wine)
  • 3 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil

Instructions:

  1. Prepare scallions:
    Blanch scallions in a pot ofboiling salted water 45 seconds, then transfer with a slotted spoon to a bowl of ice and cold water to stop cooking. Transfer scallions to paper towels to drain and pat dry.

  2. Prepare beef:
    Cut flank steak with the grain holding a large knife at a 30-degree angle to cutting board into 12 (1/8-inch-thick) slices (1 1/2 to 2 inches wide). Arrange slices 1 inch apart on a very lightly oiled sheet of parchment paper or plastic wrap, then cover with another very lightly oiled sheet of parchment or plastic wrap (oiled side down) and pound slices with flat side of meat pounder until about 1/16 inch thick.

  3. Assemble rolls:
    Arrange 3 beef slices side by side on a fresh sheet of plastic wrap, overlapping slices slightly to form a 6-inch square with short ends of slices nearest you. Sprinkle square lightly with a pinch of salt, then lay 3 scallions (with some white parts at both ends) across slices at end closest to you and tightly roll up meat around scallions to form a log, using plastic wrap as an aid. Tie log with kitchen string at ends and where meat slices overlap. Make 3 more negimaki rolls in same manner.

  4. Marinate rolls:
    Stir together sake, mirin, soy sauce, and sugar in a small bowl until sugar is dissolved.
    Put rolls in a small baking dish and pour marinade over them, turning to coat. Marinate, loosely covered with plastic wrap, turning occasionally, 15 minutes.

  5. Cook rolls:
    Heat a 10-inch heavy skillet over moderately high heat until hot, 1 to 2 minutes. While skillet is heating, lift rolls out of marinade, letting excess drip off, and pat dry. (Save marinade.) Add oil to skillet, swirling to coat bottom, then cook rolls, turning with tongs, until well browned on all sides, 4 to 5 minutes total for medium-rare. Transfer rolls to cutting board. Add marinade to skillet and boil until slightly syrupy, 1 to 2 minutes, then remove from heat.
    Cut off and discard strings, then cut each roll crosswise into 6 slices. Pour sauce into a shallow serving dish and arrange negimaki in sauce.

My Notes:
I love negimaki. We always order it as an appetizer when out for sushi. I thought this was a nice version; the sauce was a little different than what we usually have.


Liz's Rating: 8/10
Tim's Rating: 8.5/10


Next week on The Amazing Race: Vietnam!

6 comments:

HaveShoesWillTravel said...

This looks good. I'd never heard of negimaki before.

Mary Ellen said...

So glad you liked them! Can't wait to see what you will do for Vietnam. My dad and sister went to Vietnam in January and he has been bugging me to make Pho ever since!!

Jen_from_NJ said...

Looks good! I am looking forward to your Vietnamese dish.

Jason said...

Please show this to Kyle. I need this!!!

Jason

Insomniac said...

Oh hell yeah! I'm all about this. A+ dude. lol

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