Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Gyuniku Negimaki

P1470430_1024x768
Japanese beef rolls

Sushi Tei opened recently in KK and the whole town is checking the place out. We've been there twice, both times unplanned so I don't have photos to show. I must say that the restaurant is the most impressive Japanese restaurant in KK, with a good view of the sea and the nearby islands. The wait is long, especially for dinner. I found the food good (for KK standard) but portions are stingy. An example is the gyuniku negimaki or beef rolls, an appetizer I love.

Sushi Tei's beef negimaki is RM19.60 for 4 skinny rolls, if I don't remember wrong. We had two orders and that set us back by about RM39.20, before tax. I immediately set out the next day to prove to my kids that I can make enough negimaki with RM40 to make them wish they never crave for negimaki again.

I bought RM31 worth of shabushabu beef and 4 packets of enoki mushrooms at RM2.80 each. Ok, that makes a total of RM42.80. Each packet of enoki made 6 beef rolls, giving us 24 negimaki and that still left us with 1/2 packet of beef for our instant noodles. See how much restaurants make?

I sauteed the first batch of negimaki in butter and then glazed them with a thick teriyaki sauce. For the second batch, I noticed that the negimaki caramelized nicely and seared really well because of the teriyaki sauce from the previous frying and that's how I did the rest of the negimaki: melted the butter, added a spoonful of teriyaki sauce to the pan and sauteed the beef rolls briefly at high heat. That way, the teriyaki  sauce was cooked into the beef. Yum.

My kids found the spring onions too strongly flavored for the negimaki. You can leave the spring onions out and replace it with blanched asparagus or carrot strips or even french beans, or omit the veg altogether. I prefer steaming the enoki which keeps them in tidy little bundles whereas blanching them in water can make them soft and soggy. The enoki need to to pre-cooked because the beef will only take a couple of seconds to cook. You can use chicken breasts, flattened with a mallet, for toriniku negimaki but for the best negimaki, use wagyu sirloin. Oh boy.

And yes, my kids have had enough of gyuniku negimaki.


P1470421_1024x768

P1470427_1024x768


Gyuniku Negimaki
12 to 14 slices of paper-thin beef (the thinner the better; makes meltingly soft rolls)
2 packets of enoki
butter for frying

1. Make the sauce:
2 T light soy sauce
2 T mirin
1 T sugar
optional: 1/4 t dashi granules

--put everything into a pot or pan and cook until thickened but not too thick. Adjust the taste to your liking.

2. Trim the bottoms off the enoki. Pick any dirt off or give the enoki a quick wash. Separate into 6 to 7 equal portions. Lay on a steaming plate and steam for a couple of seconds only, just enough to slightly wilt them. The enoki in the middle of the bundle may not be wilted but that's ok. You don't want them too soft or they'll loose their bite and also be hard to handle.

3. Wrap a slice of beef snugly around each bundle of enoki. There's no need to secure the ends; cooking the beef will seal them.

4. Heat up a non-stick frying pan, add 1 t butter and 4 to 6 rolls. Add a spoonful of the sauce to the pan and sear (use high heat) the rolls on all sides. Do not overcook. Repeat for the remaining rolls.

5. Use a very sharp knife to cut the rolls into 2 or 3 each because the enoki is stringy if left whole.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yum! where do you get your shabu shabu beef?

malaymui said...

oh Terri, I am so going to make this here in Tokyo this weekend. Wagyu and enoki are plentiful here... thanks for sharing..

Unknown said...

My oh my oh my! Should I pay you a visit end of this month n with my fingers crossed, hopefully l too will had one too many negimaki that l'll never craved for them for the next 6 months? :p

gracie said...

hi Terri.. where to get shabu shabu beef here in KK?

terri@adailyobsession said...

anon, gracie: hong seng at damai (round the corner from coffee bean) can slice your choice of beef to the thickness you want. they also usually have ready-cut sukiyaki beef.

if you are buying a lot, make sure the beef slices are not stacked on top of each other esp if they are cut paper-thin bc when they thaw, it'll be hard to separate them.

malaymui: don't cook, just eat out! wow, you are having the life most of us want :D

joh: no problem :))

Baby Sumo said...

Wow it looks so yummy! I think I'll go buy some beef tomorrow.

tina said...

Haven't done this in a long time. Thanks for reminding me. Have to do it soon now! hehe

fresh said...

K.I.S.S

Keep It Simple Stupid.

great stuff.

terri@adailyobsession said...

babysumo:have you done so?

tina: hey, any trip to sing soon?

fresh: mutual:)

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...