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This recipe gains inspiration from a Japanese steakhouse-style hibachi dinner, and it's one of my family's personal favorites. Don't forget the yum yum sauce. Recipe: Life Love Good Food
Uong likes to rub her steak with olive oil, season it with "lots of kosher salt and cracked black pepper," and then get a griddle to medium-high heat and let the steak grill and caramelize.
Teppanyaki (鉄板焼き, teppan-yaki), often called hibachi (火鉢, "fire bowl") in the United States and Canada, [1] is a post-World War II style [2] of Japanese cuisine that uses an iron griddle to cook food.
In its most common form, the hibachi is an inexpensive grill made of either sheet steel or cast iron and composed of a charcoal pan and two small, independent cooking grids. Like the brazier grill, heat is adjusted by moving the cooking grids up and down. Also like the brazier grill, the hibachi does not have a lid.
The meat was melt-in-your-mouth perfect, with soft, buttery fat and a seasoned, charred outside that felt like a burst of flavor in each bite. My whole family loved Garten's steak recipe.
Some griddle-grilled foods may have grill marks applied to them during the cooking process with a branding plate, to mimic the appearance of charbroil-cooked food. A flattop grill is a cooking appliance that resembles a griddle but performs differently because the heating element is circular rather than straight (side to side).
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Yakiniku (Japanese: 焼き肉/焼肉), meaning "grilled meat", is a Japanese term that, in its broadest sense, refers to grilled meat cuisine.. Today, "yakiniku" commonly refers to a style of cooking bite-size meat (usually beef and offal) and vegetables on gridirons or griddles over a flame of wood charcoals carbonized by dry distillation (sumibi, 炭火) or a gas/electric grill.