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Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables.

Marinade in baking soda?



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 27-06-2004, 07:53 PM
Duwop
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Default Marinade in baking soda?


Thinking about brining a chuck roast and was inspired by Chinese orange beef
to go for something a little like that. I did a quick google to see what
spices might be good and saw the instructions to marinade in baking soda
(presumably with water?)

I'm not going to try this today, but anyone familiar with this technique?

http://chinesefood.about.com/library/blrecipe136.htm


Dale
--



  #3 (permalink)  
Old 28-06-2004, 03:29 AM
Thomas Cormen
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Default Marinade in baking soda?

Steve Wertz writes:

Baking soda is a tenderizer - and quite effective, too. I use it
all the time for meat destined for a chow fun for stir fry. About
1ts per pound of meat. I've never tried it on whole cuts of beef,
only sliced. Don't use too much or you may get an off-flavor.

I usually mix it with a little soy and sherry, so yes - you'll
need something wet to go with that soda.


Steve wrote almost exactly what I would have written. Except that I
don't make chow fun. But I do use baking soda to tenderize meat while
it marinates for Chinese food. In fact, I used it last night to
tenderize elk. Yes, I made Chinese elk. Not bad at all.

--THC

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