Thursday, October 19, 2023

Soy-Garlic-Honey Beef Marinade

Adapted from Simply Recipes, but I hate their auto-play website so much I simply refuse to deal with it anymore. I have made this dozens of times, and most recently have changed it to reflect the large quantities I need when smoking beef ribs. It’s probably most important there to cut off any silver skin before marinating, as well as as much surface fat as possible to maximize the amount of meat surface area exposed to the marinade. I like to use the largest semi-disposable plastic containers I can find for the marination vessel; Rubbermaid makes some very nice 4-5 quart ones that work very well for this application. Consequently, I have adjusted upwards the amount needed for this recipe, and rather dramatically increased the amount and kind of vinegar. Here in the South, you can find apple cider vinegar in bulk quantities, as it is a base for many kinds of barbecue sauces. It also works nicely here, as well.

  •  1-1/3 c. olive oil
  • 8 cloves garlic, minced or pressed (I always use the garlic press)
  • 1 c. apple cider vinegar
  • 1 c. honey
  • 1-1/3 c. soy sauce
  • 2 tsp. fresh ground black pepper
In a large steel vessel, combine all ingredients, and mix with an immersion blender. (Or, if you have a capacious enough blender, combine and mix there.) For flank steak, you can just immerse the steak in the marinating vessel. Ribs need to have the silver skin removed and as much surface fat as you can get off without stripping too much meat, then set to marinate. Let the meat sit overnight in the fridge, and cook as you would normally.

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