Best Vietnamese Beef Balls Thit Bo Vien Recipes

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RECIPE FOR VIETNAMESE BEEF MEATBALLS WITH TENDON (BO VIEN GAN)



Recipe for Vietnamese Beef Meatballs with Tendon (Bo Vien Gan) image

This is the homemade version of the Crunchy beef meatball in Vietnamese style with the extra tendon. Rich in flavor, aromatic, and totally safe from raw ingredients. Recommend to be made in large batches due to the long passive time required.

Provided by Victoria

Categories     Appetizer

Time 4h40m

Number Of Ingredients 13

4 lbs lean Ground beef chuck (shank , stew chunk or mixed)
2 tsp baking powder
8 Tbsp fish sauce
2 Tbsp sugar
2 tsp ground pepper
4 Tbsp potato starch
140 g crushed ice
½ cup vegetable oil
lots of ice cubes for icy water bath
1 lbs tendon (optional)
2 Tbsp vodka or similar (optional)
A quarter size piece of ginger (optional)
4 garlic cloves (optional)

Steps:

  • It's best to ask the butcher to grind the beef for you, if not, you can grind them yourself. To grind the beef, start by cutting them into 1-inch cubes.
  • Wrap all those cubes in a large plastic bag and chill in the freezer for 1 hour.
  • Remove the half-frozen beef from the freezer and grind them in the food processor, starting in small batches, one-by-one and work them through (I divided into 4 batches for grinding in my 16 cups food processor).
  • Use 4 quart-size freezer bags to store ground beef. Flattening the bags down so that ground beef will be chilled evenly. Chill the beefy bags in the freezer for an hour.
  • For each batch of half-frozen ground beef (1 freezer bag), divide and use 1/4 part of seasoning as the following.
  • First, take out 1 bag of half-frozen beef and add to food processor.
  • Now add 1/4 portion of the fish sauce, sugar, and ground pepper into the food processor and pulse/grind for about 20 -30 seconds.
  • Beef mixture should turn to a lighter pink and smooth to semi-paste-like texture with a few of darker spot. Transfer back to the freezer bag and chill for an hour.
  • Repeat with other remaining beef batches.
  • Take out 1 half-frozen beef-mixture bag and add to the food processor.
  • Also add ¼ of the baking powder, potato starch, vegetable oil, and crushed ice; then process on medium to high for 20-30 seconds.
  • Beef should be in paste-like texture, super smooth, and light pink color.
  • From here on, you can either mix with tendon or skip that step and go straight to the shaping and boiling steps.
  • If you choose not to use tendon, just skip this part of the procedure and go straight to shaping & boiling meatballs.
  • Start by washing tendon, patting dry before soaking with 2 Tbsp of wine (I used vodka) for 5-10 minutes. This will help removing any strange odor.
  • Pressure cooker: boil enough water, then add tendon and 1 Tbsp of salt, pressure cooked for 20 minutes so that tendon is almost done, but not fully tender. Vent manually.
  • Regular pot: boil tendon with 1 Tbsp of salt, but cook longer, 40-60 minutes
  • Prepare an icy cold water bath with 1 Tbsp lemon/lime juice, upon remove tendon, dip and soak them immediately in the cold water bath.
  • When the tendon is fully cool, cut it down to shorter length and throw into your food processor, pulse a few times to chop into smaller chunks, but not paste.
  • Grate ginger and finely mince garlic (if using) and mix together with the tendon bits.
  • Wrap tendon bits and store in the fridge until use. Do this while you're waiting for the beef mixture to chill in the freezer to save time.
  • Once you finished the second regrind paste step, take out tendon bits, divide and mix together the beef mixture. Use a stand mixer with a flat beater to achieve this. Don't prolong mixing time more than 30 sec, add crushed ice to cool the mixture down if you're in a hot climate.
  • You want as low to no air bubbles as possible in every meatball. To achieve this, you could either use a pastry bag and large coupler (no nozzle), use a thick plastic bag and cut off one corner to an inch diameter, or simply pull and pluck with your hand (already coated in veggie oil). Just choose whichever works best for you.
  • Now let set up the working area. You will need a "before" icy water bath (to pre-chill meatballs), a large pot of water on the stovetop (to cook the meatballs), and a "finish" icy water bath (to help set the texture and quickly chill meatballs after cooking).
  • Depend on your pot/container capacity, you can work on them at once or divide them in bag like when you're grinding earlier.
  • Anyhow, Pipe or pluck to form ball-shape and drop each meatball into the icy-cold water bath. Doing this will help them retain their crunch and chewy texture while keeping their color on the brighter side.
  • Once you finish forming balls out of one beef batch, transfer the chilled meatball from the water bath into the boiling pot to cook them.
  • Meatballs will be floating up and inflating a bit when they are done cooking. So once done, transfer them out to the "finish" chilling bath.
  • When meatballs are fully cool down, transfer out to a mesh/drip baskets.
  • Now you can enjoy them immediately as an appetizer, use in other recipes like Pho, Pad Thai, stir-fried noodles, etc. Pat dry and store the remaining in freezer bags/containers for future use.

VIETNAMESE BEEF BALLS - (THIT BO VIEN)



Vietnamese Beef Balls - (Thit Bo Vien) image

These crunchy little beef balls are very popular among the Vietnamese. They are served mainly as appetizers or added to noodle soups. Chili sauce (tuong ot) is the usual accompaniment, but any hot red pepper sauce can be served alongside.

Provided by Nat Da Brat

Categories     Meat

Time 40m

Yield 60 meatballs

Number Of Ingredients 11

1/4 cup vietnamese fish sauce, plus (nuoc mam)
1 tablespoon vietnamese fish sauce (nuoc mam)
1 tablespoon potato starch, plus
1 teaspoon potato starch
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon sugar
1/4 teaspoon fresh ground white pepper
2 lbs trimmed boneless beef shank
4 cloves garlic (crushed)
1 teaspoon oriental sesame oil
1/4 cup vegetable oil (for shaping meatballs)

Steps:

  • In a shallow dish, mix the fish sauce, potato starch, baking powder, sugar and white pepper.
  • Slice the meat into 1/8-inch-thick pieces.
  • Add to the marinade and mix well.
  • Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours, or overnight.
  • Before proceeding, transfer the meat to the freezer for 30 minutes.
  • Work with half of the beef at a time; do not overload the work bowl.
  • In a food processor, combine half of the beef with half of the garlic and sesame oil.
  • Process to a completely smooth but stiff paste, about 3 minutes.
  • Stop occasionally to scrape down the sides of the work bowl.
  • The completed paste should spring back to the touch.
  • Transfer the paste to a bowl.
  • Process the remaining beef, garlic and sesame oil the same way.
  • Rub some vegetable oil on one hand, and grab a handful of the meat paste and close your hand into a fist, squeezing out a small portion of the mixture, about 1 teaspoon, between your thumb and index finger.
  • Keep rolling and squeezing the same portion between your thumb and index finger until you obtain a smooth rounded ball.
  • Scoop out the meatball with an oiled spoon, and repeat until all of the paste is used.
  • Pour 1 inch of water into a wok or wide pot, place a steamer rack or bamboo steamer over the water.
  • Arrange the meatballs without crowding in a single layer on the rack.
  • Cover and steam for 5 minutes.
  • Serve as an appetizer with chili sauce.
  • These beef balls can also be added to a well-seasoned beef broth, sprinkled with chopped scallions and white pepper and served as a soup (noodles may be added).
  • Note: These meatballs may be frozen.
  • Thaw them thoroughly, then steam or simmer in boiling water until just heated through.

VIETNAMESE BEEF MARINADE (THIT Bò UOP)



Vietnamese Beef Marinade (Thit Bò Uop) image

Asian's rarely ever reveal secrets, especially when it comes to food or recipes. This recipe was verbally given to me by a Vietnamese girl, fabulous cook and great friend of mine. It's a very large (restaurant scale) recipe. So unless you plan on cooking for an army, reduce it to 2 cups total.(use the converter). If you want to have true Asian flavor in your beef ribs, stir-fry, steak or any other asian beef dish...this is your recipe.

Provided by Kobe Roux

Categories     Steak

Time 35m

Yield 50 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 11

2 medium yellow onions
2 large gingerroot (skin on)
3 tablespoons granulated garlic
3 tablespoons white pepper
1 pear (peeled and cored)
6 1/2 quarts soy sauce
8 lbs light brown sugar
8 cups white sugar
1 cup sesame oil
1 cup cooking oil
3 cups chopped green onions

Steps:

  • 1. Puree the chopped yellow onion, ginger root and pear in a robot coupe or food processor. Over medium heat, add cooking oil and bring to temperature Add the onion, ginger and pear. Cook until slightly brown.
  • 2. Add the garlic and white pepper, mix well.
  • 3. Add the soy sauce, ensuring all utensils are dry. Tap water will turn this marinade sour and ruin it.
  • 4. Add both brown and white sugar, cook until granuals are disolved.
  • 5. Add green onion and cool to room temperature.
  • 6. Store for up to a week or marinate beef for up to 24-hrs.
  • 7. Discard used marinade.
  • 8. 1 cup will marinate up to 10 steaks.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 577, Fat 8.9, SaturatedFat 1.2, Sodium 8471.4, Carbohydrate 113.9, Fiber 1.8, Sugar 105.7, Protein 16.3

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