T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1897.1 | Grill it! | HOONOO::PESENTI | JP | Wed Jul 26 1989 10:16 | 6 |
| Marinate it, grill it (briefly, because it cooks quickly), then slice in very
thin slices, almost parrallel to the cutting board. Very juicy, very tender,
and VERY DELICIOUS!
- JP
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1897.2 | Edie's Flank Steak | POCUS::FCOLLINS | | Thu Jul 27 1989 13:37 | 47 |
| Here's another.
Edie's Flank Steak
l flank steak 1 1/2 - 2 lbs.
1/2 + 1 Tbsp. oil
1/2 cup tomato juice
1/2 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
3 garlic clovers minced
1/2 tsp. pepper
Using a sharp knife lightly score steak in a diamond pattern and
place in a shallow dish.
Combine 1/2 cup of the oil, tomato juice, soy sauce, brown sugar,
garlic and pepper. Pour over steak. Refrigerate covered overnight.
Let stand at room temperataure 2 hours. (Use your discretion during
a heat wave, etc.)
Preheat broiler or grill. Brush rack or grill lightly with the
remaining 1 tbsp. of oil. Remove meat from marinate and grill over
very hot coals or broil abotu 4" from the heat about 3 mins per
side for rare and 4 mins. for medium rare. Care crosswise on a
slide angle.
AND ANOTHER ANOTHER
Grilled Marinated Flank Steak
l cup cider vinegar
1 cup worchestershire (sp?) sauce
1/4 cup hot pepper sauce
1 tsp. brown sugar
3 1/2 lbs. flank steak
Garnish - Fresh rosemary sprigs - Greek olives
Bring first 5 ingredients to a boil in heavy saucepan stirring until
sugar dissolves. Cool. Place steak in non-aluminum pan. Pour
marinade over. Cover with plastic and refrigerate at least 3 hrs.
turning occasionally (can be prepared up to 8 hrs.). Prepare grill,
high heat. Drain steak - reserve marinate. Grill about 4 minutes
per side or until desired doneness basting occasionally with marinate.
Thinly slice steak across grain.
Bon Appetit - August, 1987.
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1897.3 | And After it's cooked, make Fajitas | COMET::INDERMUEHLE | Isaiah 40:31 | Thu Jul 27 1989 17:48 | 0 |
1897.4 | Slice into strips for fajitas | CSSE32::BELLETETE | afghanistan banana stand | Fri Jul 28 1989 16:07 | 8 |
| To make Fajitas from flank steak I slice the steak against the grain in
thin strips. Marinate the strips in your favorite fajitas marinate for
anywhere from a couple of hours to a day. I just throw the beef slices
into a hot cast iron pan and let them sizzle until most of the liquid
has evaporated. Serve with the condiments of your choice.
Rachelle �
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1897.5 | Stringy Steak | GENRAL::SHERWOOD | I would rather be camping | Mon Jul 31 1989 13:08 | 12 |
| All the previous replies sound real tasty. One method my family has
used for years (especially back in the days when the butchers would
throw away the *TOUGHEST PIECES* read=flank steak) or sell them
real cheap---- Is to Dust it quite liberally with black pepper
and salt to taste--- then stick in the broiler until "crispy" on the
outsides---then everyone participates and pulls off the strips/strings
of delicious meat and this way it is very tender also. We call it "Stringy
Steak" and serve a nice mixed/tossed vegetable salad ,home fries
favorite beverages and "PIG OUT"--- we usually buy the 3 to 4 pound
flank steaks--- but this way works on all sizes of this cut..........
Try it you will like it... good stuff!!!!! <DICK>
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1897.6 | A teriyaki marinade | CURIE::TOBIN | | Mon Jul 31 1989 13:46 | 12 |
| My favorite teriyaki-type marinade for flank steak (also good on whole
sirloin tips):
1/2 c. oil
1/4 c. soy sauce
2 T. minced garlic
2 T. honey
2 T. cider vinegar
2 T. ground ginger
1/4 c. minced green onion
Mix well and marinate meat at least 4 hours - overnight is preferable.
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1897.7 | My Way | GRANMA::WFIGANIAK | | Tue Aug 01 1989 12:28 | 10 |
| This has been my favorite.
Score both sides of the meat. In a shallow baking disk pour in one
of those small cans of pineapple juice and then soy sauce untill
it looks muddy. Put the steak in sprinkle it with garlic salt and
leave it about eight hours. When you turn it use more garlic salt
and leave it for anothe eight hours or so. Fire up the grill and
cook it to your liking. I made for some friends this weekend and
they loved it.
Enjoy.
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1897.8 | Beef Alamo | HYEND::JDYKSTRA | | Thu May 24 1990 16:24 | 17 |
| Here is yet another one, adapted from a recipe I saw 10 years ago in
the Toronto Star called Beef Alamo or some such.
1/2 cup loosely packed chopped fresh cilantro leaves
1/2 cup Dijon style mustard
Mix the the above together as the marinade. Trim the flank steak and
score both sides in a diamond pattern. Spead most of the mustard
mixture over one side of the meat and roll it up. Smear the remaining
mixture over the exposed meat and wrap the roll in plasic wrap.
Refigerate for at least 4 hours (24 is better).
Grill over hot coals for 5 minutes on each side, or to desired
doneness. Slice meat diagonally agianst the grain and serve rolled up
fajita style with fresh tomato/jalipeno/onion pepper salsa.
Leftovers are great cold.
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1897.9 | Substitute for Flank Steak | KYOA::SHAIN | Jennifer Shain | Tue Oct 23 1990 14:36 | 7 |
| I am looking for a dent substitute for flank steak. I have a burrito
recipe that calls for browning a flank steak and then cutting it io
strips and wrapping it into tortilas with a cheese/chili sauce. The key
to this is having the beef really tender. My goal here is to keep the
cost of this to a miminum.
Any suggestions?
|
1897.11 | Top of Round? | DELREY::PEDERSON_PA | Hey man, dig this groovy scene! | Tue Oct 23 1990 15:04 | 5 |
| How 'bout top of the round steak? Slice it across the grain
and it's similar in tenderness to flank (not sure how
(in)expensive it is, tho)
pat :-)
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1897.12 | boneless chuck? | CLUSTA::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 @TAY Littleton MA | Tue Oct 23 1990 17:54 | 4 |
| We use boneless chuck for a lot of dishes which call for stuff like
flank steak and sirloin tips. Chuck has great flavor, and can be very
tender when cooked right. It's probably about as tender as flank in
most recipes, and less expensive ($1.89/lb around Greater Maynard).
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1897.13 | steak� | BLKWDO::KWILSON | Just plane crazy | Wed Oct 24 1990 00:39 | 14 |
| A few of the "fast food" type Mexican restaurants here in the greater
Phoenix area use cubed (or is it just cube) steak. One place in
particular uses it in their fajitas and it's actually quite good. I
don't think I ever pay much more than $2.00/lb which is about half
the price of flank steak. I just throw it on the grill along with some
chicken breasts and cut into fajita size pieces when done.
Keith
p.s. If you ever get desperate for AZ goodies you can't get in NJ, I'd
be happy to send you whatever for some good bakery hard rolls. You
know, the kind that turn into rocks the next day. Sure do miss
'em.
|