The Minimalist Cooks Dinner (26 page)

 

Grilled Flank Steak with
Kimchee-Style Coleslaw

TIME:
1 hour or more, largely unattended

MAKES:
4 servings

Most kimchee, Korea’s famous cabbage pickle, takes a while to make. But it’s easy enough to take the basic ingredients and flavors of kimchee and create a fast cabbage salad that puts ordinary coleslaw to shame. Use this as a flavorful bed for simply grilled beef, or anything else that has the flavor to stand up to the spicy slaw, and you have a great summer dish. Cook the meat in a skillet or under the broiler if the weather is cold.

  • 1 small head Napa or Savoy cabbage (about 1½ pounds)

  • Coarse salt

  • 3 spring onions or 6 large scallions, trimmed and chopped

  • 3 garlic cloves or to taste, minced

  • 1 tablespoon
    co chu karo
    chile powder (see Keys to Success) or crushed red pepper flakes, or to taste

  • 1 tablespoon minced ginger

  • 3 tablespoons fish sauce or soy sauce

  • 2 tablespoons rice wine or other vinegar

  • About 1½ pounds flank steak

  • Freshly ground black pepper

  1. Remove the tough exterior leaves of the cabbage and core it by cutting a cone-shaped wedge out of the stem end. Shred it by cutting thin slices and separating them with your hands. Put in a colander and toss with about 1 tablespoon salt and the onions. Let sit for at least 1 hour, preferably 2, tossing occasionally, until the cabbage wilts.

  2. Meanwhile, start a medium-hot charcoal or wood fire or preheat a gas grill to the maximum. Set the rack 2-4 inches from the heat source. For the dressing, combine the garlic, chile powder, ginger, fish sauce, and vinegar in a bowl. Grill the steak for about 4 minutes per side for medium-rare, turning once, longer or shorter according to the degree of doneness you prefer. Sprinkle the steak with salt and pepper as it cooks.

  3. Remove the steak from the grill and let it rest while you squeeze as much liquid as you can out of the cabbage and toss it with the dressing. To serve, carve the steak. Place a portion of cabbage on a plate and top with a few slices of steak. Spoon a little of the dressing over the steak and serve.

WINE
Beer
SERVE WITH
Easy Rice
, or
Rice Salad with Peas and Soy
Keys To SUCCESS

QUICK KIMCHEE
takes very little work, but the cabbage itself is best if salted and allowed to sit for an hour or even longer. This process draws out excess water and makes the cabbage ultra-crisp. You can skip the step if you’re pressed for time; the salad will taste just as good.

KIMCHEE OF
any type packs a potent punch, thanks to prodigious amounts of garlic and chile peppers. I’ve included “appropriate” quantities of those here, and you can even increase the amounts if you like—though many people will find these proportions quite strong enough.

IF YOU CAN
get to a Korean market, buy some of the ground chile powder labeled
co chu karo
, which is hot but also quite flavorful. Otherwise substitute any good ground chiles or the standard crushed red pepper flakes. Fish sauce is traditional (dried oysters or dried shrimp are even more traditional, but fish sauce has the same character); you can use soy sauce if you prefer.

With MINIMAL Effort

|
   Add some shredded vegetables to the cabbage
: red bell peppers, carrots, daikon radish, and/or jicama, for example.

|
   Substitute grilled pork, shrimp, tuna, or chicken (legs, for best flavor) for the beef.

 

Beef Wrapped in
Lettuce Leaves,
Korean Style

TIME:
45 minutes, longer if you have the time

MAKES:
4 servings

For
bulgogi
, a Korean beef dish sometimes made with short ribs, the meat is stripped off the bone, marinated in a soy-based sauce, and then grilled at the table; the hot meat is then wrapped in cool lettuce and eaten with the hands. I had thought the dish was impossible to attempt without an in-table-grill. I finally realized, however, that the time the meat spends over the coals—certainly less than 5 minutes—might be long enough to add the mental image of wood flavor, but certainly not the reality. So, with what might be described as typical American arrogance, I set about reinventing this traditional Korean dish, and I’m happy about the results.

  • 3 to 4 pounds short ribs

  • ½ cup roughly chopped trimmed scallions, shallots, or onion

  • 1 tablespoon roughly chopped ginger

  • 6 garlic cloves, roughly chopped

  • 1 tablespoon sugar

  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

  • ½ cup soy sauce

  • 16 to 24 romaine or other lettuce leaves, washed and dried

  • Soy sauce or ground bean paste (available at Asian markets), optional

  1. If time allows, freeze the meat for 30 minutes or so to facilitate slicing. Use a sharp knife to strip the meat from the ribs—it will come off easily and in one piece (reserve the bones and any meat that adheres to them for stock).

  2. Combine the scallions, ginger, garlic, sugar, pepper, soy sauce, and ½ cup water in a blender and purée until very smooth. Slice the meat into pieces between
    J
    and ¼ inch in thickness. Toss with the marinade and let sit from 15 minutes to 2 hours. Preheat a grill, broiler with the grill rack set 2 to 4 inches from the heat source. Or preheat a stovetop grill, or preheat the oven to its maximum heat and put a heavy roasting pan in it (see Keys to Success).

  3. Remove the meat from the marinade and grill, pan-grill, broil, or roast it, just until done, no more than a couple of minutes per side; it’s nice if the meat is browned on the outside and rare on the inside, but it’s imperative
    that it not be overcooked. Serve with the lettuce leaves. To eat, wrap a piece or two of meat in a torn piece of lettuce; garnish with a drop or two of soy sauce or bean paste, if you like.

WINE
Beer or green tea
SERVE WITH
If you live near a Korean store, buy a variety of Korean kimchee and pickles and serve them along with Kimchee-Style Coleslaw. Nearly-Instant Miso Soup with Tofu, is a good starter.
Keys To SUCCESS

FREEZING THE
meat slightly before stripping it from the bones makes the process easier, but it’s not essential.

GRILLING REMAINS
the best cooking technique—a couple of minutes over a very hot fire is ideal—but a stove-top grill or very hot skillet works nearly as well, as long as you have a powerful exhaust fan to suck out the smoke. Alternatively, a good broiler will do the trick; just turn the slices once. Finally, if you set an iron skillet or heavy roasting pan in an oven heated to its maximum, then throw the meat onto that, it will sear the meat and cook it through in a couple of minutes.

NO MATTER
how you cook the meat, do not sacrifice internal juices for external browning; that is, it’s better to serve lightly browned but moist meat than tough, overcooked meat with a lovely crust.

With MINIMAL Effort

Pork, Mushrooms, or Chicken Wrapped in Lettuce Leaves, Korean Style:
For the beef, substitute grilled strips of pork, shiitake or portobello mushrooms, or boneless chicken.

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   This meat is also good served on rice.

 

Skirt Steak
with Compound
Butter

We have my friend Steve Johnson (chef at the Blue Room in Cambridge, Massachusetts) to thank for this particular combination of skirt steak and compound butter. But you can hardly go wrong with skirt steak, a long, thin band of wonderfully marbled muscle (actually the cow’s diaphragm), or with the flavored butter that complements it. Until butter became forbidden food it was a common treatment as a quick flavor booster, even plain. In classic cooking, compound butters were kept on hand and often used to enhance rich sauces. But more recently they’ve stood on their own, as quick, simple toppings, not only for steak, but for leaner meats, like veal, chicken, and even fish.

TIME:
30 to 40 minutes

MAKES:
4 servings

Skirt Steak with
Shallot-Thyme Butter
  • ½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened slightly

  • ¼ teaspoon fresh thyme leaves

  • 10 chives, minced

  • 1 shallot, minced

  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper

  • ½ teaspoon red wine vinegar or fresh lemon juice

  • About 24 ounces skirt steak, cut into 4 portions

  1. Prepare a gas or charcoal grill: The fire should be so hot, you can hold your hand over it for only a couple of seconds. (You can broil or pan-grill the steak, if you prefer.) Meanwhile, cream the butter with a fork, then add and integrate the thyme, chives, shallot, about ½ teaspoon each of salt and pepper, and the vinegar. Taste and add more of any ingredient you deem necessary.

  2. When the fire is ready grill the steak, 2 minutes per side for rare, 1 to 2 minutes longer for medium-rare to medium. Season the steak as it cooks with salt and pepper.

  3. Spread each steak with about a tablespoon of the flavored butter and serve. Wrap and refrigerate or freeze the remaining butter for future use.

WINE
Rhône varietals, Cabernet, inexpensive Bordeaux, or Zinfandel-any wine that is not too subtle
SERVE WITH
Easy Rice
, and/or
Steamed Broccoli (or Other Vegetable)
, topped with a little of the butter;
Sautéed Shiitake Mushrooms
,; Roasted Peppers;
Simple Green Salad
Keys To SUCCESS

GOOD BUTTER
is an essential starting place, but this need not mean the 8-dollar-a-pound kind from Normandy (although that certainly won’t hurt). Generally unsalted butter is of higher quality than the salted kind, and any good brand, as long as it is fresh, will do fine.

THE EASIEST
way to make compound butter is to mince all the flavorings and then cream them and the butter together with a fork, just as you would butter and sugar in making a cake. But if your butter is ice cold (or frozen), use a small food processor to combine all the ingredients quickly; there will be some waste, as you’ll never get all the butter out of the container and blade, but the process will take just seconds.

SKIRT STEAK
, which was not easy to get even a couple of years ago, is now almost ubiquitous. It costs as much as 10 dollars a pound, but can often be found for well under half that, especially in supermarkets. It’s a moist, juicy steak, but not exactly tender—a little chewier than good strip steak—and does not respond well to overcooking. If someone insists on having it cooked beyond medium-rare, take no responsibility.

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