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In a large slow-cooker, add steak. Add beef broth, soy sauce, brown sugar, sesame oil, Sriracha, garlic, and green onions. Cover and cook on low until beef is tender and cooked through, 3 1/2 to 4 ...
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Add tomato paste and cook, stirring, until brick-red, 1 to 2 minutes. Transfer onion mixture to a large slow cooker. In same skillet over medium heat, break up beef; season with salt and black pepper.
Mondongo: Beef soup with cow innards, pork rinds, corn, and parsley. Morusa: Mashed butter beans with roast beef or pork. Natilla: A typical dessert made from goats milk, chancaca (sugar syrup), and very fine rice flour. Ocopa: Boiled potatoes covered with a fresh cheese sauce, lima beans, onions, olives, and rocoto. [56]
Lomo saltado is a popular, traditional Peruvian dish, a stir fry that typically combines marinated strips of sirloin (or other beef steak) with onions, tomatoes, french fries, and other ingredients; and is typically served with rice.
Ground pork or beef cooked with garlic, onion, soy sauce, tomatoes, and potatoes and frequently with carrots, raisins, and bell peppers. Halabos na hipon: Seafood Shrimps steamed in their own juices and cooked with a little oil. Hamonado: Meat dish Also called endulsado in Zamboanga City. Pork cooked in a sweet sauce with pineapple juice and sugar.
Place corned beef fat side up in slow cooker, then layer carrots and potatoes around. Pour in stock; add seasoning packet and dry mustard. Cook on low for 2-3 hours, then add the cut up cabbage.
The seco is a stew typical of Ecuadorian and Peruvian cuisine. It can be made with any type of meat. According to an Ecuadorian popular etymology, the name of seco comes from the Península de Santa Elena in Ecuador, where at the beginning of the 20th century a camp English did oil work in Ancón, when referring to the second course of food, in English "second", the Ecuadorians repeated ...