Adam Liaw Wagyu With Autumn-Leaf Recipe

The Carousel The Carousel has been verified by Muck Rack's editorial team

Nov 02, 2016

WAGYU WITH AUTUMN-LEAF RADISH

Good-quality Japanese beef (Wagyu) is heavily marbled and quite rich, so it’s better to share it. This dish is how I approach eating meat – pick the best quality meat you can, cook it well, serve it simply and share it.

SERVES 2

PREPARATION TIME 10 MINS

COOKING TIME 10 MINS

INGREDIENTS

½ tsp vegetable oil

1 wagyu sirloin steak (about 250g)

1 tsp salt

Lemon wedge, to serve

1 tsp Boosted Soy Sauce, to serve

AUTUMN-LEAF RADISH

1 red bird’s-eye chilli Block of peeled daikon (about 5cm square and 8cm long)

METHOD

1 To make the Autumn-leaf Radish, cut the stalk from the chilli and remove the seeds from the centre with a skewer. Using a pointed chopstick, poke a hole into the daikon block a little longer than the chilli. Place the chilli over the end of the chopstick and push it into the hole. Alternatively, you can cut a slit into the end of the daikon and push a sliver of chilli inside. Grate the daikon block with a fine Japanese grater or rasp grater, pushing the chilli side directly onto the grater. Transfer the grated daikon to a fine sieve and allow to stand for 5 minutes to drain off any excess moisture released by the daikon.

2 Heat a heavy-based frying pan over high heat and coat the base with a little vegetable oil. Season the steak well with salt and fry to medium rare. Rest well, and slice into thick slices.

3 Place the sliced steak onto a warmed plate with a small pile of the Autumn-leaf Radish and a wedge of lemon. Serve with the Boosted Soy Sauce.

The lightly spicy ‘autumn-leaf radish’ (momiji-oroshi) is named because its colour resembles that of Japanese maple leaves in autumn.

A little pile of wasabi is a great substitute if you don’t want to go to the effort of making it.

wagyu-with-radish

BOOSTED SOY SAUCE

I use this soy sauce in place of normal. Light soy sauce for absolutely everything. It’s lighter and less salty, but has a richer and more balanced flavour.

MAKES ABOUT 750ML

PREPARATION TIME 5 MINS

COOKING TIME 10 MINS, PLUS 1 HOUR STANDING

INGREDIENTS

  • 150ml sake
  • 100ml mirin
  • 1 tsp caster sugar
  • 500ml light soy sauce
  • 4 dried shiitake mushrooms
  • Handful of large bonito flakes (about 5g)

METHOD

1 Place the sake, mirin and sugar in a medium saucepan and bring to a simmer. Flambé with a blowtorch, match or lighter and allow to burn until burned out. Add the soy sauce and mushrooms and bring back to a simmer. Add the bonito flakes and turn off the heat. Allow the sauce to stand for 1 hour, then drain through a muslin-lined sieve. Store the sauce in an old clean wine bottle or soy sauce bottle in the pantry.

Like most umami-rich foods, this boosted soy sauce improves with age. I usually make a triple or quadruple batch and keep it in a big sealed jar in the pantry. When stocks are getting a little low, I just make a new batch and top it up. It will keep indefinitely.

zen-kitchen

The Carousel thanks Adam Liaw for this recipe from his book The Zen Kitchen. 

The Carousel

The Carousel is devoted to inspiring you to live your best life - emotionally, physically, and sustainably.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

By The Carousel The Carousel has been verified by Muck Rack's editorial team

The Carousel is devoted to inspiring you to live your best life - emotionally, physically, and sustainably.

SHARE THIS POST

[addtoany]

The Carousel
Newsletter

Loading...