Stewed Beef Shank | Hong Kong Food Blog with Recipes, Cooking Tips mostly of Chinese and Asian styles | Taste Hong Kong

Stewed Beef Shank

Stewed Beef Shank

Beginning of August, hot! I choose to cook this dish again because it requires no sautéing in oil or stir frying, so am going to label this as a recipe for summer. This dish can be cooked in advance and put in fridge for a couple of days before consumption. Actually I love to consume it after chilled for 1 to 2 days when the texture of beef turns more compact. Serve as appetizer or main course (sometimes, I merely fetch slices of beef shank directly from fridge as snack).

One more, one more recommendation is just to top a bowl of noodles, hot or cold, with this beef shank and seasoned with some finely chopped spring onion. Enjoy!

      Beef Shank
  • Ingredients
  • 500g beef shank
  • 2 tbsp dark soy sauce
  • 1 tbsp light soy sauce
  • 1 tsp cooking wine (I use Shaoxing wine)
  • 1 tsp ground white pepper
  • 30g rock sugar or brown sugar
  • 2 sprigs spring onion (cut into ~5 cm long)
  • 6 slices ginger

Method

1) Rinse shank and vertically cut it into 2 portions of similar diameter (~6-8cm), just to ensure that it will be stewed evenly.

2) Add spring onion and 3 slices of ginger into 3 cups of water and bring it to boil. Scald shank in it for ~2 minutes (scalding with the ginger and sping onion will help remove the raw smell of beef). Drain water and set shank aside.

3) Mix all remaining ingredients with 2 cups of water in a pot and bring all of them to boil. Then, transfer the scalded beef into pot, and cover. Stew it over low heat for ~1 hour; or until there is only 1/3 to 1/2 cup of sauce left.

4) Dish up shank after cool and chill it with the sauce in fridge overnight.

5) Slice the chilled shank, pour sauce on top and dizzle some sesame oil to taste.

Tip

The stewing time actually varies according to the type of pot use. Suggest to turn the shank over after the first 15 minutes and check how much sauce is left. That will help estimate the time required for stewing. It should be better to choose a pot that is less likely to dry up water quickly.

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Comments

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  1. MaryMoh

    That looks such an awesome dish. I love beef. It looks easy to cook. Thx for the recipe.

  2. Casey

    Hey Taste, great blog! In this recipe, what is scalding? Do you mean searing it on a pan first before braising?

    Love from Toronto

  3. TasteHongKong

    @Casey,
    Thanks and glad that you ask.

    After bringing water to a boil (with ginger and spring onion), blanch the beef shank in it for about 2 minutes. Drain water …

    Hope this makes more sense to you.
    Enjoy and have fun!

  4. Ellis

    Hi there.. I really like your blog, it has made me want to spend more time in the kitchen 🙂 I like your recipes because they are easy to follow, I just need to make sure I follow them and they turn out like yours 🙂 I just want to ask for beef shank, I tried to find them here in Melbourne and cant seems to find in many place. what recommendations would you made to the cut of beef that is the closest to beef shank I can use in this recipe? thanks a lot..

  5. TasteHongKong

    @Ellis,
    Thanks for your kind feedback!
    There are recipes that prepare ox tongue in similar way (stew and chill), yet not sure how it will turn out since I do not eat it.