Teriyaki Meat On-A-Stick

From: Hana Hou! What Hawaii Likes to Eat by Muriel Miura with Galyn Wong

Teriyaki Meat-on-a-stick is a traditional side dish for saimin. I can remember during small-kid-time always being served a bowl of hot saimin with Teriyaki Meat-on-a-stick for weekend lunches or as a snack.



Ingredients:

1/2 cup teriyaki sauce (recipe below)

3 pounds round steak, 1-inch thick

Cut meat into strips about 1/4-inch thick; cut strips into 1 1/2-inch pieces. Thread 4 or 5 pieces on bamboo sticks or small skewers. Marinate for 30 minutes in teriyaki sauce and broil. Serve with hot bowl of saimin noodles in broth. Cubes of uncooked chicken may be substituted for beef.

Teriyaki Sauce:

Soy sauce-based marinades give any meat a salty, yet tangy flavor perfect for any mixed plate. For a touch of Korean flavor, add sesame oil, toasted sesame seeds, hot sauce and minced green onion to the basic sauce.

Yield: About 1 quart

2 cups soy sauce

1/4 cup water

2 cups sugar

1/4 cup mirin or sherry

1 or 2 cloves garlic, crushed

1 piece, (1/2-inch) fresh ginger, crushed

Combine all ingredients in jar; cover and refrigerate. Shake well before using as marinade for meats, poultry, and seafood.

** I halved the recipe on both the meat and marinade.

Sesame Cabbage Salad

From http://hawaiianrecipes.org/sesame-cabbage-salad/

Ingredients:

1 head cabbage chopped

1 bunch green onions chopped

1/2 cup chopped celery or peppers

3 packages Ramen chicken soup (dry soup pks)

1 bag frozen peas

1/2 cup vegetable oil

1/4 cup cider vinegar

2 Tablespoon sugar

8oz chunk almonds, toasted

4 Tablespoons sesame seeds, toasted

Method:

Mix cabbage, green onions, and celery. Break up dry Ramen noodles and toss in. Mix dressing of vinegar, oil, and soup mix. Toss dressing and toasted almonds and sesame seeds with salad mix. This yields a lot of salad and is best served same day. Serves 15-20 people.

**Dana cut the recipe down to 1/3.

Spam Musubi

From: Serious Eats

Of all the foods people associate with Hawaii, Spam musubi seems to be most popular, with echoes of lau lau, lomi lomi salmon, and kalua pig trailing just behind. I’ve heard the terms Spam sushi and Spam sandwiches, but, no, get it right: It’s Spam musubi.

Back home in Hawaii, musubis are found at every convenience shop on the islands, 7-11 included (and, I must say, their musubis are pretty darn good!). Musubis are sold in school cafeterias and right alongside butter mochi at local bake sales. Picnic? Someone’s mom is bound to make at least two dozen. Sleepover? Either dinner that night, or straight out of the fridge for breakfast.

Ingredients

  • 1 can Spam
  • 3 cups uncooked sushi rice
  • Soy sauce
  • Sugar
  • Nori sheets
  • Furikake or li hing mui
  • A musubi-maker

Tip: Before you begin, have all your ingredients at the ready so the Spam is at its hottest and crispest once it hits the rice.

Directions

  1. Slice the Spam into eight even pieces—or ten if you prefer, but I like my musubi on the meaty side, heavy on the Spam.
  2. Next, mix some soy sauce and sugar in a bowl. How much of each? It’s all up to you. Some like it more sweet, others like it salty. Start with equal amounts, and adjust to taste.
  3. OK. Now comes the awesome part. Place a sauté pan on a burner, turn up the heat, lay the slices of Spam down, and fry away.
  4. After 1 to 2 minutes, pour the soy sauce–sugar mix over the Spam—the mix will effortlessly soak into the crisping Spam pores, making it more salty (as if that were even possible) and a tad sweet as the sugar caramelizes.

  5. Keep frying it until you reach your desired level of crispness. Once done, transfer the Spam to a plate.
  6. Now, work quickly and have everything else laid out for assembly, otherwise the Spam will no longer be hot and crisp by the time the musubis are assembled. That would suck.
  7. OK. Ready? Cut the nori strips in half lengthwise, and lay the musubi-maker — everyone has one, right? 😉 — on the middle of the nori.

    Use the rice paddle to scoop a generous mound of rice into the mold. Use the musubi-maker handle to press down on the rice. Press hard. The last thing you want is floppy, unpressed rice—that just makes it difficult to eat.
  8. Shake a thin layer of furikake over the rice (right); lay a slice of Spam on top, and then shake on another layer of furikake. Some like to use li hing mui in place of furikake, which gives it a completely different taste, venturing into the realms of tangy-sweet, but I prefer the added crunch and hints of sesame from the furikake. Add one more layer of rice, and one final press.
  9. Press with all your might! You want this packed tight. The musubi is intended to be a portable treat. You should be able to stuff it in your backpack for lunch on the beach, take it on a hike in Manoa Valley, or a bike ride around the island. It is durable.
  10. Once you’ve given it a firm press, hold the handle down with one hand, and use the other to pull the mold upward, thus unleashing the musubi.
  11. Quickly wrap the nori around the rice (use a few grains of rice to stick the nori together at ends if necessary).
  12. Now hurry and monch, monch away before the nori goes soft!

Quite ‘ono, eh?

There shouldn’t be leftovers, but if so, wrap each musubi individually in plastic wrap, so you may pop them in the microwave whenever you desire. Or if you have extra time on your hands, I sometimes put the entire musubi in a pan, over low heat, and fry on all sides, crisping up the nori. There is no wrong way to eat Spam musubi.