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Category : Tenderize Meat

Salt and Pepper Breaded Pork Chop

Sometimes, nothing beats a good pork chop.  I was in the mood for a simple but balanced meal, and found a good deal on pork chops at my local supermarket.  I prepared this breaded pork chop with salt and pepper, and served it with sides of broccoli and fried rice to round out the meal.  I had a glass of red wine – a nice pinot – and it was a fantastic dinner!

When preparing pork chops, it’s very important to tenderize the meat.  This ensures that the pork chop is not too tough and tender off the bone.  While there are many ways to tenderize meat, including the method I shared here, I used the simplest way this time – lay the meat out between two sheets of saran wrap, or on top of a baking pan, and pound it!  You can use a mallet, a pan, or even your hands if you’re feeling particularly barbaric.

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Broccoli Beef

Broccoli Beef is the quintessential Chinese dish that you can order at every local Chinese restaurant.   It’s really a simple dish – it has broccoli and beef, just as the title suggests – but it’s also delicious and easy to make.  For anyone who’s ever tried it at home, the biggest question is how to get the texture of a restaurant-made dish without the heat of a wok and a ladle full of oil.  After all, we daily chefs wouldn’t be healthy if we drenched everything in oil!

I accomplish this feat by marinating the meat/ tenderizing the meat like I demonstrate here.  I also blanch my broccoli like I discuss here.

Using these two methods, you end up with slightly crispy broccoli paired with a tender, succulent beef.  Even better, the entire dish is coated in a tasty brown sauce.  The key here is not to end up with soggy broccoli – that really kills the familiar essence of broccoli beef.  I’ve also found that when I cook it at home, my version is less greasy than the restaurant version, making it a dish that I’m willing to serve often.

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Black pepper steak w/ green peppers

As promised from my previous entry on tenderizing meat, this recipe is for Chinese-style black pepper steak.   Black pepper steak is often served sizzling on a cast-iron plate directly onto your table.  The cast iron retains heat and keeps the food cooking while you eat.  Black pepper steak (or sizzling beef, as it’s often called in restaurants) is  one of my favorite dishes to order, just because I enjoy the show – the waiter brings over a smoking-hot plate, pours the steak and veggies onto the plate, and everyone oohs and aahs as the sizzling and delicious fragrance fills the room.  The rest of the restaurant usually looks over to see just who ordered the spectacle, which I love too :-P

I don’t own a teppan plate, so I can’t serve with the sizzle, but I still enjoy cooking this great dish.  I highly recommend it!

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How to tenderize beef (or other meats)

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Meat being tenderized for black pepper steak

When you eat at your local Chinese place and order beef and broccoli or black pepper steak, have you ever wondered how the meat is so amazingly tender?  For 7 bucks, they’re definitely not serving fillet.  How do they do it?  It’s a process called velveting.

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