Satoimo (Taro) and Minced Meat Topped with Sweet Sauce
Satoimo (Taro) and Minced Meat Topped with Sweet Sauce

Hey everyone, it’s Brad, welcome to our recipe page. Today, we’re going to make a distinctive dish, satoimo (taro) and minced meat topped with sweet sauce. It is one of my favorites. This time, I am going to make it a bit unique. This will be really delicious.

Satoimo (Taro) and Minced Meat Topped with Sweet Sauce is one of the most well liked of recent trending meals in the world. It’s easy, it’s quick, it tastes delicious. It’s enjoyed by millions daily. Satoimo (Taro) and Minced Meat Topped with Sweet Sauce is something that I have loved my whole life. They’re fine and they look fantastic.

Satoimo (Taro) and Minced Meat Topped with Sweet Sauce. If daikon radish and ground meat covered in sauce is good then satoimo should be delicious, too! The daikon radish had a mild flavor but I felt that a mild flavor would not go so well with satoimo so my recipe is sweet. Satoimo (里芋) or taro roots are a starchy root crop that is widely enjoyed in Japanese cuisine.

To get started with this particular recipe, we have to first prepare a few components. You can cook satoimo (taro) and minced meat topped with sweet sauce using 8 ingredients and 4 steps. Here is how you can achieve it.

The ingredients needed to make Satoimo (Taro) and Minced Meat Topped with Sweet Sauce:
  1. Make ready 300 grams Frozen satoimo (taro root)
  2. Make ready 150 grams Ground meat
  3. Make ready 2 tbsp ★Sugar
  4. Take 1 tsp ★Hon-dashi dashi stock granules
  5. Get 3 tbsp ★Soy sauce
  6. Make ready 2 tbsp ★Mirin
  7. Get 1 Katakuriko
  8. Take 1 Water

Simmered taro and minced meat 里芋とひき肉の煮物. Satoimo is often simmered in soy sauce, sugar and ginger (creating a sweet and salty flavor) and. California Roll with extra advocado thinly sliced on top. It actually tastes really good and feels silky smooth in my mouth although I've never been a big fan of advocado.

Instructions to make Satoimo (Taro) and Minced Meat Topped with Sweet Sauce:
  1. Fry the ground meat in a pan without adding oil.
  2. Once the ground meat's color changes turn off the heat, add the frozen satoimo (taro), pour in enough water to cover, and add all the ingredients marked ★. There's a chance that the meat oil will splash when you add the satoimo, so please be careful!
  3. Cover the ingredients with an otoshibuta (I use aluminium foil) and simmer on medium heat until the satoimo becomes soft and full of flavor. If scum forms on the top, skim it off.
  4. Turn off the heat, add the katakuriko to thicken and you're done.

California Roll with extra advocado thinly sliced on top. It actually tastes really good and feels silky smooth in my mouth although I've never been a big fan of advocado. Satoimo (里芋) or taro roots are a starchy root crop that is widely enjoyed in Japanese cuisine. With dark brown hairy exterior, they are often prepared through simmering in dashi and soy sauce in home-cooked and traditional Japanese dishes. Taro is grown across the country, but the method of cultivation depends on the nature of the island it The uplands produce crops like sugar cane and sweet potatoes, while the lowlands provide taro and fish.

Try Using Food to Improve Your Mood

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Now you realize that junk food isn’t necessarily what you have to eat when you wish to help your moods get better. Try some of these suggestions instead.