• Blog
  • A La Carte
  • Archives
  • About Me
Menu

The Hungry Scribbler

  • Blog
  • A La Carte
  • Archives
  • About Me

Vietnamese Beef Rolls

June 6, 2014

The woods are busy with activity this time of year. Long-legged fawns are foraging with their mothers. Rabbits bound by low-growing stag ferns. The barred owl who lives close by swoops and dives between trees at dusk. Warblers join with the finches while the pileated woodpeckers punctuate the chorus with their staccato sounds. 

Walking through the woods the other day, I was listening. So much life. So much going on.

Somehow, it made me hungry.

As I rounded the uphill trail on the way home, this is what I hoped to stumble across.

Ingredients for a feast.

I didn't find it in the woods, so I walked across our front lawn, past the pair of young deer who were staring at me. When I got inside, I made these rolls.

Fold the sides in, then roll tightly. No one likes a loose roll that will fall apart.

There is nothing more refreshing in warm weather (finally!) than biting into something cool, crisp and full of quietly rambunctious flavors. This is the Vietnamese Beef Roll.

We’ve had the good fortune to be the temporary caretakers of our neighbors' kitchen garden while they are in California for several weeks. The garden has been abundant with baby lettuces, spinach and red romaine, among other things.

Sexy lettuce!

Red romaine...have you seen the stuff?

If not, you must run out immediately to get some. I urge you to know its beauty. It is nothing less than remarkable. 

These rolls have been a good way for us to use the early Pacific Northwest bounty well. They are so easy to make too.

Other than cooking the beef, which you can do ahead of time, there is absolutely no stove top time involved. 

You can use leftovers, as well as chicken or pork if you have that instead. All you have to do is cut up your veggies, pickle the carrots (easy peasy) and roll it up nicely.

Cut your roll in half on the diagonal, dip it in a little sauce. Take a bite.

Magical as the woods this time of year.

 

Vietnamese Beef Rolls

Ingredients

Two small sirloin steaks or other lean, boneless beef
Lettuce leaves of your choice (Red romaine and butter lettuce are nice)
Cucumber
A medium carrot
Mint leaves
Basil leaves
Cilantro leaves
Round rice paper (banh trang)

¼ cup unseasoned rice wine vinegar
1 teaspoon dark toasted sesame oil
2 Tablespoons honey
Small red chili pepper
1 teaspoon Fish sauce (I like Red Boat brand), or substitute salt.

Instructions
Cooking the beef: Season steaks with salt and pepper. Set aside while you your heat oven to 500 degrees (you may also cook the steaks on your outdoor grill instead). Place a cast iron skillet in the oven.

When your oven reaches 500, remove the skillet and put it on the stove top, over high heat. Place steaks on skillet for 4 minutes to sear. Move pan into oven for another 4-5 minutes, depending on how cooked through you want the meat to be. Rosy pink is nice. Remove from oven when meat has reached your desired level of doneness. Remove beef from pan and allow the meat to rest while you work on the veggies and sauce.

Preparing the Veggies: Halve the red chili pepper, scrape out the seeds to discard and chop the chili finely. Place in a small mixing bowl. Add the rice wine vinegar, honey, fish sauce and sesame oil and mix thoroughly. Set aside.

Peel cucumber and carrot if you wish. Cut cucumber into matchsticks. Julienne carrots. Place carrots in the pickling mixture you have already made. Allow carrots to pickle for at least 20 minutes.

Wash lettuces and herbs. Tear mint and basil into small pieces.

Slice rested beef into thin slices.

After the carrots are pickled, place everything on a counter or tabletop so that all ingredients are at the ready for assembly. Place a plate with some warm water in it on your work area.

Dip one sheet of rice paper into the warm water to soften. It will still seem slightly stiff when you remove it, but will continue to soften as you work with it.

Place lettuce leaves on paper wrapper first. Add a slice or two of beef. Top with pickled carrots, cucumber, herbs.

Fold sides (left and right) slightly over filling. Roll from bottom end to top, rolling as tightly as possible as you go. Make sure to keep your filling tucked in on the sides. If for some reason the ends are not holding together, wet slightly with more warm water. 

Roll as many as you'd like to eat and/or serve.

The pickling brine for your carrots also doubles as your dipping sauce.  Easy!

Now go eat!

Note: This is fun to do with a group of friends or family. Everyone can fill each roll the way they want and eat as much as they want. Play around with the filling if you want. Today, for instance, I also added Sunflower Sprouts from our CSA. That added a nutty taste.

Tags Vietnamese Beef Rolls
Comment
Change is in the air/hair. #haircut #newhair #goldcombsalon #pnwfall
When’s the last time you saw a 5-day old baby donkey? We saw this one today. He stopped to say hi to us after nuzzling his sweet mama. #cutenessoverload #donkey #farmlife #pnw
New bread board, close up. My goodness, what an amazing Mother's Day present! It's a single piece of maple 2 1/2 x 4 feet with gorgeous spalting. Mark the woodworker at Hardwood to Get here in town spiffed it all up for me. Happy Mother's Day to all
So here's my question. If it's a double rainbow does that mean there are two pots of gold? #rainbow #pnw #pnwspring
This book! Ugh, just glorious. My brother keeps those Amazon warehouse robots busy by sending me amazing books he thinks I should read. Everyone needs a brother like him. #emilferris #readingbingetonight #myfavoritethingismonsters #graphicnovel
Bold bake for breakfast today. It's the rye-wheat from @blainewetzel 's beautiful Sea and Smoke. I love how this book highlights so many special plants and ingredients we have in this area, including those right here across the bay from alumni. #rye
From the weekend Easter Egg Hunt. While all the kids and competitive kids-at-heart were running through the woods looking for eggs, I was on the forest floor snipping nettles and fiddleheads. Priorities, you know? I managed to leave the hunt with one
Ssh! Don't tell. We went off the trail! But then we found salamander eggs, tree frogs and touched our fingers to a cascade of sap flowing down the side of a Douglas Fir tree. Spring means the woods are noisy and so alive. #exploringnature #nature #wo
So I was minding my own business, trying to get a #crumbshot of the Country Loaf I made during @matts_miche 'a awesome bakealong, when someone's paper airplane landed exactly on top of my loaf. #photobombed #bread #bread🍞#naturallyleavened #sourdoug
“It is impossible not to love someone who makes toast for you. People’s failings, even major ones such as when they make you wear short trousers to school, fall into insignificance as your teeth break through the rough, toasted crust and sink into the doughy cushion of white bread underneath. Once the warm, salty butter has hit your tongue, you are smitten. Putty in their hands.”
— Nigel Slater

Still Hungry?
Enter your email address:

Powered by Squarespace