CATEGORY |
CUISINE |
TAG |
YIELD |
|
Japanese |
Sauce |
1 |
Servings |
INGREDIENTS
1/2 |
c |
Soy sauce |
2 |
|
Cloves garlic; crushed |
1 |
|
2" quarter (as in 25 cents) sized pieces of ginger; chopped |
2 |
tb |
Oil (sesame oil is excellent; other kosher oils are okay) |
1 |
tb |
Vinegar (your favorite) |
INSTRUCTIONS
From: egolden@lucia.HQ.ileaf.com (V. Ellen Golden)
Date: Mon, 15 Jul 96 01:04:56 EDT
Well, this may be the "Grandmother" of all soy marinades, being Teriyaki,
which is Japanese, but still quite Kosher:
For a 1.5 lb meat (flank steak, chicken breasts, whatever)
Combine ingredients and add to meat. Pierce the meat with a fork "some"
(like poke it so the stuff can get in), turn it in the marinade, and let it
sit for a hour or so (at room temperature), or put it in the refridgerator
overnight. Turn it a few times during the marinating. Grill, Broil, or
Pan Fry "until done". Some like the marinade, heated in a pan to boiling,
over rice (not in this house, though).
JEWISH-FOOD digest 258
From the Jewish Food recipe list. Downloaded from Glen's MM Recipe
Archive, http://www.erols.com/hosey.
A Message from our Provider:
“Down in the mouth? It’s time for a faith lift”