Asian Marinated Portabella 'Steak'
Recipe from
Fine Cooking Magazine
Serve this full-flavored portbella "steak" with jasmine rice and greens tossed with some of the marinade. Seared baby bok choy is also a nice accompaniment.

Servings:
Serves 2
Ingredients
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1 teaspoonolive oilsee savings

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3cloves garlic, mincedsee savings

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1-inchpiece fresh ginger, mincedsee savings

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1 teaspoonfive-spice powdersee savings

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1/2 teaspooncoriander seedssee savings

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1/2 cuprice winesee savings

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1/4 cupsoy saucesee savings

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1/4 cuporange juicesee savings

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2strips orange zest, 1 inch widesee savings

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2 tablespoonsAsian sesame oilsee savings

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4medium portabellas, stems and gills removed, caps wiped clean with a moist paper towelsee savings

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1/4 cupvegetable oilsee savings

Directions
1.
In a small pan, heat the olive oil until moderately hot. Add the garlic, ginger, five-spice powder, and coriander. Cook for 2 minutes, stirring to prevent burning. Add 1/2 cup water, the rice wine, soy sauce, orange juice, and zest. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat, and simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and add the sesame oil.
2.
Arrange the portabellas in a shallow container in one layer and pour the hot mixture over them. Marinate for 1 to 2 hours, turning the mushrooms occasionally. Remove the portabellas and let them drain for a few minutes; reserve the marinade.
3.
Heat the vegetable oil in a large saute pan until hot. Sear the portabellas in one layer on one side, undisturbed, for about 5 minutes. Turn and sear the other side. Lower the heat if the portabellas are browning too fast. When tender, transfer them to paper towels to absorb some of the grease. Slice each portabella very thinly on the diagonal as you would a flank steak- drizzle with some of the reserved marinade, if you like.
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..., then, that they're calling it the Vegas strip steak. Just in time for grilling season, the steak weighs....) "There's nothing else quite like steak, and it epitomizes the pleasure of eating beef," reads the website... dedicated to the Vegas strip steak. "That's what prompted a meat scientist, a chef and a university to team... read more...

