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Ground Beef and Rice Skillet Dinner. This is a one-pot meal that’s on the table in 30 minutes. Simple ingredients including rice, tomatoes, bell pepper, onion, beef broth, and cheddar cheese ...
Add the beef and stir-fry until tender, 1 to 2 minutes. Transfer to a plate. Add the remaining tablespoon of oil and when hot, add the broccoli, stir-frying so that the oil coats the broccoli.
Stir the cornstarch, consommé and water in a small bowl until the mixture is smooth. Heat the oil in a 10-inch skillet over medium-high heat. Add the beef and stir-fry until well browned. Push the beef to one side of the skillet. Add the broccoli, onion and garlic to the other side of the skillet and stir-fry until tender-crisp.
The dish is prepared by stir-frying sliced steak and broccoli florets with oyster or soy sauce and aromatics such as garlic and ginger. Sugar or honey may be used to sweeten the sauce. [7] Corn starch is commonly used to tenderize the beef and thicken the sauce. [8] [9]
Plain cheung fun with hoisin sauce and sesame seed sauce. Hoisin sauce is used in Cantonese cuisine as a marinade sauce for meat such as char siu, or as a dipping sauce for steamed or panfried rice noodle roll (cheung fun 肠粉). [4] Hoisin sauce on a Peking duck wrap. Hoisin sauce is used as a dipping sauce for Peking duck and lettuce wraps ...
The term "stir fry" as a translation for "chao" was coined in the 1945 book How To Cook and Eat in Chinese, by Buwei Yang Chao. The book told the reader: Roughly speaking, ch'ao may be defined as a big-fire-shallow-fat-continual-stirring-quick-frying of cut-up material with wet seasoning. We shall call it 'stir-fry' or 'stir' for short.
Stir the cornstarch, consommé and water in a small bowl until the mixture is smooth. Heat the oil in a 10-inch skillet over medium-high heat. Add the beef and stir-fry until well browned.
This recipe features wild rice and apricot stuffing tucked inside a tender pork roast. The recipe for these tangy lemon bars comes from my cousin Bernice, a farmer's wife famous for cooking up feasts.