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Raise your hand if you’re on the hunt for a great appetizer for Thanksgiving! Raise your other hand if you want it to be something OTHER than turkey! I know there are a few of you out there who -like me- love that turkey, but need a little variety in the proteins at their Thanksgiving feast. This Korean Inspired Simple Roast Beef is JUST the thing to keep your holiday meals exciting.
It’s versatile, too. You can serve it thinly sliced on Savoury Rice and Egg Pancakes (minus the cheese) and top it with Ginger Scallion Sauce as I have here, or you can slice thinly and serve with cheese and crackers, make lovely sliders with horseradish, or use leftovers with leftover sliced turkey for sandwiches, in pepper steak, or in fried rice. You start with a humble cut of beef -top round- sliced into 1 pound logs (a technique cribbed from the great Chef Michael Ollier of the Certified Angus Beef® culinary team) then dry rubbed in a mixture of brown sugar, salt, Korean chili pepper powder, and black sesame seeds and left to soak in all that goodness overnight. The next day, you simply quickly sear the beef in a cast-iron or heavy-bottomed skillet and roasted quickly to perfection in the oven. After roasting, it’s tented with foil and left to rest so the juices can redistribute. The whole searing/roasting/resting process takes about an hour. Easy, easy, easy! And oh, the flavours!!!
Cook’s Notes
- The method behind taking such a humble cut of beef as Top Round and turning it into a succulent, tender roast is a simple one, but you do need to do two important things.
- 1) Cut the roast lengthwise (along the grain) into logs that are roughly 1 pound each. This gives you the surface area to let more of the flavours of your rub soak in AND gives you more control over cooking it.
- 2) When you slice the finished roast, you absolutely, positively MUST slice them ACROSS or against the grain. This shortens the fibers your teeth have to chew, making it more tender. It’s not-negotiable!
- The rub is comprised of brown sugar, kosher salt, granulated garlic, black sesame seeds, and Korean chili powder. None of these is expensive, but a couple are tough to find, so I’ve given you Amazon links to each of the trickier products.
- Resting the roasted beef is not negotiable! If you slice into it fresh from the oven, all the juices will run out and you’ll have dry, sad roast beef. Patience is rewarded!
Korean Inspired Simple Roast Beef
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1 top round beef roast Preferably Certified Angus Beef Brand, about 3 pounds
- 1/2 cup brown sugar
- 1/4 cup kosher salt
- 1 tablespoon Korean chili pepper powder
- 1 tablespoon black sesame seeds
- 2 teaspoons granulated garlic
- 1 tablespoon neutral oil canola, grapeseed, or vegetable
Instructions
- Cut the top round roast lengthwise into 1-pound(ish) logs. Set aside. In a small mixing bowl, use a fork to combine the brown sugar, kosher salt, Korean chili pepper powder, black sesame seeds, and granulated garlic. Rub it all over the the beef logs, put them on a rimmed plate, cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.
- The next day, preheat the oven to 450°F. Position a roasting rack in a roasting pan and set aside.
- Heat the neutral oil in a cast-iron or other heavy-bottomed skillet over high heat until shimmering. Use tongs to gently lay the beef logs into the pan. It should sizzle audibly when placed in the pan. Let them sear for about a minute on each side, turning with the tongs, until the surface is brown in colour. Use the tongs to transfer the beef to the roasting pan. Roast for 15 minutes at the 450°F, then drop the temperature to 325°F and continue roasting until an instant read thermometer measures 120°F in the thickest part of the beef. Remove the pan from the oven and lightly tent with foil. Rest the beef for at least 10 minutes to allow the juices to redistribute before slicing thinly across the grain.
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
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Last month, I had the pleasure of traveling to Wooster, Ohio to spend a couple of days at the headquarters of Certified Angus Beef®. Several other bloggers and I had the opportunity to work with the fantastic culinary, creative, and public relations staff of CAB, picking their brains, cooking with them, and learning more about the 10 criteria that define Certified Angus Beef®. They even brought in their photography team to shoot some of the dishes we made. Have a look at what their team did to gussy up my Korean Inspired Simple Roast Beef!
Did you know that they are not actually cattle ranchers and they’re a not-for-profit organization? Their raison d’être is to inspect and judge beef according to their stringent quality specifications ensuring that there is a product at market that consumers can trust to provide quality with every single purchase. You can read more about those 10 specifications and what they mean to you as a consumer here.
The weekend was a riot and I learned an amazing amount of information that I’m looking forward to sharing with you over the coming months. I’m telling you, when you buy CAB products, you can rest assured both that you’re getting a great cut of beef (whichever cut you choose) and that you’re supporting some awesome people, to boot. Those same awesome people have offered an AMAZING giveaway package.
The Giveaway
One (1) Certified Angus Beef® Brand Cattleman’s Premium Collection Steak package containing a premium selection of four 12-oz. strip steaks, four 8-oz. filet mignons and four 10-oz. ribeyes and one (1) Le Creuset 7 quart roasting pan.
How to Enter
Leave a comment on this post telling me what your favourite cut of beef is! Entries will be accepted through November 14th, 2014 at 10:00am EST. The winner will be notified by email and will have 24 hours to respond, or an alternative winner will be chosen.
Disclosure: I was not compensated to develop this recipe or post this piece. Certified Angus Beef ® gave me a Le Creuset roasting pan and has offered to give away a pan to one Foodie with Family reader. I am crazy impressed by their organization and the product they put their names on, otherwise this post would not be published! Big thanks to all the fine folks at Certified Angus Beef® and Le Creuset for this generous giveaway!
This is my tenth post in my commitment to post every. single. day in November for NaBloPoMo (National Blog Posting Month). Follow the craziness all month as I share recipes, family anecdotes, and throw a couple of giveaways in for good measure!
Reader's Thoughts...
Tom says
Can’t go wrong with a nice tender filet.
sharon taylor says
I don’t think you can beat the flavor of a bone in ribeye.
Erika says
Eye of round has always been my favorite cut for roast beef. Roasted medium rare and sliced super thin on my meat slicer it is absolute heaven on a plate!
tammigirl says
I live quite close to Wooster – welcome to our charming area of nowhere!
My favorite cut of beef is, was, and always will be a nice juicy filet.
Amelia says
Right now, skirt steak for tacos!
Chris says
Do you remember that scene from Monty Python’s Holy Grail where they had to answer the bridge keeper’s three questions to cross the Bridge of Death? The keeper asks “What is your favorite color?” and the knight so taken aback by how easy the question is says “Blue….no wait, yellow – arrrrgggh {thrown into the abyss}”
That’s me trying to answer what my favorite cut of beef is. The safe answer is probably whatever cut I am eating at the moment.
Rebecca says
Do I remember that scene? Oh man… I can’t even count how many times I’ve reenacted that. 😀 And I hear ya. Beef. It’s good stuff.
Dani Morrison says
I love a good, slow cooked, falling apart chuck roast. This time of year my tummy screams for fall root veggie pot roast dinners!
Susan Pettengill says
My hubby and I love a thick rib-eye.
Karen says
If it is celebration at our house, I would bet there is a flank steak on the grill. Bit if that celebration needs to be over the top (and for the adults in the house) a rare filet wrapped in bacon with blue cheese compound butter.
Phoebe says
Hands down, my favorite cut is hanger steak, but it can be hard to find…
Tim says
It’s tough to narrow it down to just one cut, but I think I could eat a rib eye every day of the week…but who can afford that? So, braised chuck roast with mashed potatoes and a reduction sauce would be a VERY close second…..now I’m hungry.
Rebecca says
At home, I love flank steak (medium, sliced thin) for fajitas and to throw on top of salads. When I am out, nothing beats a beautiful filet mignon!
Jacqui says
Rib-eye for sure! My boyfriend is willing to grill all winter long (even in New England) and I am willing to let him!
Elyse says
to cook at home, I love a good flank steak. So flavorful! But when I am out for a splurgy dinner, give me a rib eye every time! yum!
Amanda says
My favorite cut of beef is a ribeye.
Jeffrey says
I must say the Filet is my favorite cut and I like it medium rare…kinda just melts in the mouth!
Amber says
I love chuck roast: stuffed with garlic and onions, made into a stew, beef and mushroom over egg noodles, shredded beef tacos, or The Pioneer Woman’s drip beef – there is so much you can do with it!
Jackie says
I love a good chuck roast for braising!
Jenn M. says
My most favorite cut of beef in the entire world is bone in rib eye. It has the best combination of fat and flavor.
Kathy B. says
Since the weather has turned colder, we love beef short ribs!