- marinade (ingredients and how long)
- meat (usually skirt steak, but sliced before or after cooking?)
- heat (stove or grill - briquettes or charcoal, wok or open flame)
Ingredients
(Serves 4-6)
- 2lb (1kg) skirt steak
- selection of green peppers (poblano, jalapeno, serrano)
- sides: lettuce, sour cream, grated cheese, chopped tomotoes, tortillas, peach salsa, guacamole, corona to drink
- Bunch of fresh cilantro (coriander)
- 1 tbs whole cumin
- 2 dried ancho peppers
- 3 cloves garlic
- 1 bottle corona beer
- 2 limes
Part 1. The Day Before
Try to marinade your meat the day before grilling, this will give the best results.
1. Slice limes in half and squeeze their juice into a mixing bowl
2. Finely chop the cilantro and add to the bowl
3. Grind the whole cumin seeds and add to the bowl
4. Prepare the meat; your meat probably has a layer of fat on one side; I usually remove this to make it tenderer
5. Thinly slice meat across the grain
6. Put meat into a tupperware and add the coriander-lime-cumin mixture; stir well
Okay - at this point I decided that it was too bland and decided to take it up a notch - adding ground ancho, garlic and corona...
7. Take 2 dried ancho peppers and grind using a coffee or spice grinder; add to the meat marinade
8. Crush and coarsely chop 3 garlic cloves; add to the meat marinade
9. Add a bottle of corona to the meat marinade and stir-well
10. Cover and place in the fridge overnight until cooking time. Reminder - remove the meat from the fridge 30-60 minutes before cooking - to bring it to room temperature. This makes it cook faster and is somehow tastier.
Part 2. Cooking day
1. Prepare the sides (see list above)
2. Wash and slice the green peppers, removing the seeds
3. Get your grill started. Here I'm using a weber with charcoal and a lump or two of mesquite.
4. Before cooking, remove meat from marinade and drain using a colander
5. OK , grilling time.!
For this experiment, I tried first using a "grill-wok", but then had an epiphany and switched to using two grill racks -- one 22" and the other 20", placed on top of one-another at right angles. I felt the wok wasn't working (too much meat in there..) and putting the meat directly on the two grill racks allowed it to quick faster and seared-in the flavour - without falling through to the coals.
I kept the lid off most of the time and turned the meat frequently using tongs. When cooked (about 8-9 minutes I counted) I then removed to a pre-heated cast-iron frying pan for serving (and it get the authentic "sizzle" your diners will expect from fajitas!).
11. Serving time
Serve fajitas with all the fixin's. Lettuce, tomatoes, grated cheese, tortillas, sour cream, guacamole, salsa and corona. Fantastico!
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