Beef with black bean sauce- a quick and easy Chinese recipe
Stir-fry beef with black bean sauce is my favorite food ordered in Chinese restaurants.
Since my favorite restaurant is no longer serving this dish recently, I decided to dig deeper into how to prepare it at home.
I am delighted it is pretty easy to prepare if I use a store-bought black bean sauce. What’s more, it is such a delicious but quick and easy recipe that I can make it within 30 minutes.
After enjoying the delicious beef stir-fry with black bean sauce today, I've decided to jot down the steps and share this recipe with you
#beefstirfry #BeefWithBlackBeanSauce #blackbeansauce
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Recipe:
(Please download the recipe and read the full details at )
Ingredient A
350g beef
2 tsp soy sauce
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cornstarch
Ingredients B
2 tsp minced ginger
1 tbsp minced garlic
3 tbsp vegetable oil
1/2 green bell pepper
1/2 red bell pepper
1 medium-sized onion
1 tsp sesame oil
1 tbsp rice wine
1 tsp of cornstarch (plus 1 tbsp of water to make a slurry)
Ingredients C
1.5 tbsp black bean sauce
1 tbsp light soy sauce
1 tbsp oyster sauce
1/4 tsp ground black pepper
3 tbsp water
Method:
Preparation
- Cut the beef across the grain into thin slices.
- Marinate the beef with Ingredient A for 15 minutes.
- Cut the spring onion into short sections, about 1 inch in length.
- Cut the green bell pepper into one-inch pieces.
- Slice one medium size onion into wedges.
- Mix Ingredients C (except the black bean) to become the stir-fry sauce.
Cooking
- Heat the vegetable oil to medium-high heat, then add the marinated beef and spread it out into a single layer.
- Let the beef sear for half a minute, then flip over to sear the other side until slightly brown.
- Continue to stir-fry the beef until about 80% cooked. Then remove the beef from the wok with a strainer, and leave excess oil in the wok.
- Saute the chopped garlic and ginger with the remaining oil in the wok.
- Add the black bean sauce and the stir-fry sauce to the wok, then put all the vegetables into the wok. Turn up the heat to stir-fry the vegetable until crisp-tender. You can add a splash of water if it is too dry.
- Return the beef to the wok.
- Add the cornstarch slurry to thicken the gravy.
- Add the spring onion, a teaspoon of sesame oil, and a tablespoon of Shaoxing wine. Dish out.
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Website:
National Champion Chili Recipe (2018)
This chili recipe is a World Champion Chili Recipe from the 2017 Terlingua Chili Cook-Off. This is the championship-winning recipe from Brent Allen. In the video, we show you how to make a competition style chili (which doesn't allow for fresh ingredients) but we do not follow the recipe to a T, so please check out Brent Allen's competition-winning chili recipe here:
All of the world champion recipes are also posted on the Chili Appreciation Society Appreciation website.
There are several different ways to make a red chili recipe and this is a competition championship chili recipe so it does not include many of those raw ingredients found in a home version of the traditional comfort food chili recipe such as onions or peppers. In competition, you can't add raw ingredients so you must use powders. If you want to try this at home -- which I recommend because it is DELICIOUS -- you can buy all of the chili powders I named online.
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Paul's Fat Tire® Lamb Chili
Ground lamb and black bean chili made with Fat Tire® beer.
Recipe, recipes, food, cooking, food and drinks
15-Minute Weeknight Chili | Kenji's Cooking Show
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If you want a bean-free, Texas-style chile con carne, here's a video for that:
Here's a very complicated chili recipe (my Best Chili Ever):
Here's a pressure cooker chili recipe:
And here is a recipe for chile paste, which can and should replace chili powder in any recipe you'd like:
Here's the Easy Weeknight Chili recipe from my first book, The Food Lab:
EASY WEEKNIGHT GROUND BEEF CHILI
Adapted from The Food Lab
Sometimes even the best of us don’t feel like going all out. Here’s a much quicker weeknight chili that uses a few of the tricks learned from my Best Short-Rib Chili (page 259) and the 30-minute bean soup recipes (pages 196–200). I use ground beef here, which precludes real browning as an option, but a couple of smoky chipotle chiles added to the mix lend a similar sort of deep complex- ity. Serve the chili with grated cheddar cheese, sour cream, chopped onions, scallions, sliced jalapeños, diced avo- cado, and/or chopped cilantro, along with corn chips or warmed tortillas.
SERVES 4 TO 6
4 tablespoons unsalted butter2 medium onions, grated on the large holes of a box grater (about 11⁄2 cups)2 large cloves garlic, minced or grated on a Microplane (about 4 teaspoons)1 teaspoon dried oreganoKosher salt2 chipotle chiles packed in adobo, finely chopped2 anchovy fillets, mashed to a paste with the back of a fork1⁄2 cup Chile Paste (page 259) or 1⁄4 cup chili powder1 tablespoon ground cumin1⁄2 cup tomato paste2 pounds boneless ground chuck One 28-ounce can whole tomatoes, drained and chopped into 1⁄2-inch piecesOne 15-ounce can red kidney beans, drained1 cup homemade or low-sodium canned chicken stock, or water2 to 3 tablespoons instant cornmeal (such as Maseca)2 tablespoons whiskey, vodka, or brandy (optional)Freshly ground black pepper Garnishes as desired (see the headnote)
1. Melt the butter in a large Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add the onions, garlic, oregano, and a pinch of salt and cook, stirring fre- quently until the onions are light golden brown, about 5 minutes. Add the chipotles, anchovies, chile paste, and cumin and cook, stirring, until aromatic, about 1 minute. Add the tomato paste and cook, stirring until homogeneous, about 1 minute.
2. Add the ground beef and cook, using a wooden spoon to break up the beef into pieces and stirring frequently, until no longer pink (do not try to brown the beef ), about 5 minutes. Add the tomatoes, beans, stock, and cornmeal and stir to combine. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the flavors have developed and the chili is thickened, about 30 minutes.
3. Stir in the whiskey, if using. Serve with some or all of the suggested gar- nishes, along with corn chips or tortillas.
Texas Chili Recipe (Won over 30 Cookoffs!)
It's the perfect season for making authentic Texas chili, and this award-winning chili recipe has over 100 5-star reviews on the blog, as well as 30 readers who have won their own local chili cook-offs, using this tried and true Texas recipe.
Printable Recipe:
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This video is inspired by our Texas Brisket Chili blog post where we have a printable recipe and guide:
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We think this is the best Texas chili recipe and the internet seems to agree. In this recipe, we use the flat of a brisket for creating tender morsels of chili meat that doesn't come out tasting like pot roast.
This recipe is in the style of Texas barbecue restaurants and is a chili recipe with no beans.
It's a bit like a chile con carne recipe, but we slowly simmer these chunks of beef until they are one solid soup. In fact, you might find that using an immersion blender after the chili cooking gives you even more of a Texas quality chili. Just buzz it a few times to make it extra broken up and mixed well. :)
Ingredients Used:
• 4 slices thick cut bacon
• 3-4 lb. beef brisket, trimmed
• Kosher salt, pepper, onion powder – for liberally sprinkling on the meat while browning.
• 2 c. white onion, small diced (one large onion)
• 5 garlic cloves, pressed through a garlic press
• 1 T paprika
• 1 T. cumin powder
• 3 ½ T Texas chili powder, such as Mexene or Gebhardt’s
• ½ t. dried thyme
• ½ t. chipotle chile powder
• ½ t. salt
• 1 quart beef broth
• ½ c. strong black coffee (you can save this from your morning coffee)
• 28 oz. can whole tomatoes, in juice
I have full step-by-step instructions on the blog and you can read lots of reviews by readers who have won chili cookoffs using this recipe, made this chili and modified the recipe, or even substituted smoked brisket.
We have additional award-winning recipes, a bestselling cookbook, and a FREE BRISKET SCHOOL at: UrbanCowgirlLife.com
Any questions or concerns about this authentic Texas chili recipe? Leave us a comment and we will get back to you asap! You can also use the contact tab on the recipe website.
Thanks, Sarah Penrod & Team
Jamaican Lamb & Black Bean Recipe Video - West Indian cooking Coconut Milk
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Jamaican How to cook Great food recipe
If you need Jamaican curry powder, note this is not the same as Indian. Please see our other videos on how to make this.We also have many more recipes from Jamaica including jerk, beef, jerk chicken, belly pork, rice and peas, fish tea, curry chicken, fried dumplings, bammy, escoveitch fish, fried fish, steam fish, patties, sweet potato, yam, rum punch and lots of other food from around the world on all our other sites from Ethiopian recipes to Filipino recipes and Curries.
The Jamaican spiced bun is shaped like a loaf of bread and is a dark brown colour. It is commonly eaten with cheese and is also eaten with butter or alone with a glass of milk. Jamaican spiced buns can be toasted. It is also popular in other Caribbean nations.
Jerk is a style of cooking native to Jamaica in which meat is dry-rubbed or wet marinated with a very hot spice mixture called Jamaican jerk spice. Jerk seasoning is traditionally applied to pork and chicken. Modern recipes also apply jerk spice mixes to fish, shrimp, shellfish, beef, sausage, lamb, and tofu. Jerk seasoning principally relies upon two items: allspice (called pimento in Jamaica) and Scotch bonnet peppers (similar in heat to the habanero pepper). Other ingredients include cloves, cinnamon, scallions, nutmeg, thyme, garlic, and salt. Plantain is one of the common names for herbaceous plants of the genus Musa. The fruit they produce is generally used for cooking, in contrast to the soft, sweet banana (which is sometimes referred to as the dessert banana). Breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis) is a species of flowering tree in the mulberry family, Moraceae, growing throughout Southeast Asia and most Pacific Ocean islands. Callaloo (sometimes calaloo or kallaloo) is a popular Caribbean dish originated from West Africa served in different variants across the Caribbean. The main ingredient is a leaf vegetable, traditionally either amaranth (known by many local names, including callaloo or bhaaji), taro or Xanthosoma. Cassava (Manihot esculenta), also called yuca, mogo, manioc, mandioca, and kamoteng kahoy, a woody shrub of the Euphorbiaceae (spurge family) native to South America, is extensively cultivated as an annual crop in tropical and subtropical regions for its edible starchy, tuberous root, a major source of carbohydrates. Scotch Bonnet, also known as Boabs Bonnet, Scotty Bons, Bonney peppers, or Caribbean red peppers (Latin: Capsicum chinense) is a variety of chili pepper. Found mainly in the Caribbean islands, it is also in Guyana (where it is called Ball of Fire), the Maldives Islands and West Africa. Soursop is the fruit of Annona muricata, a broadleaf, flowering, evergreen tree native to Mexico, Cuba, Central America, the Caribbean and northern South America: Colombia, Brazil, Peru, and Venezuela. Soursop is also produced in sub-Saharan African countries that lie within the tropics. Annatto, sometimes called roucou or achiote, is derived from the seeds of the achiote trees of tropical and subtropical regions around the world. Sorrel The roselle (Hibiscus sabdariffa) is a species of Hibiscus native to the Old World tropics, used for the production of bast fibre and as an infusion. Pimento or allspice is probably the number one ingredient in Jamaican cooking and for sure the man man when it comes to any form of jerk. Dried pimento berries are in appearance similar to whole black pepper.
Jamaican Lamb & Black Bean Recipe - West Indian cooking