Search articles from thousands of Examiners
Write for us
National Restaurants Baltimore Dining Examiner
This article is part of Baltimore's Best
Baltimore Dining Examiner

I heart teriyaki - 2 ingredient recipe

May 14, 8:28 AMBaltimore Dining ExaminerDara Bunjon
1 comment Print Email RSS Subscribe

Subscribe


Get alerts when there is a new article from the Baltimore Dining Examiner. Read Examiner.com's terms of use.
Email Address


  Include other special offers from Examiner.com
Terms of Use


Teriyaki Sauce © D Bunjon
I should say I heart Kikkoman Teriyaki Marinade & Sauce and no, they aren’t paying me to say any of this and no they haven’t sent me free bottles of their teriyaki marinade and sauce. I have tried other brands because they were there and they didn’t do the 'make the taste buds dance' trick. I always come back, like the wayward lover, home to their true love.
 
This love affair started about 30 years ago when I dined at a cousin’s home and she served bone-in chicken breast that had been marinated in the teriyaki sauce. Was it two or three pieces I ate that night? If it was three, she might still be talking about me.
 
Why do I love thee Kikkoman Teriyaki Marinade & Sauce – let me count the ways:
 
1. Your taste and flavor.
 
2. You are simple to prep - 2 ingredients: I put steak, chicken or seafood in a baggie or non-reactive pan and over it you are poured. Steak and fish can be ready to cook in 30 minutes and I would do at least an hour marinade for chicken. So simple, a child can help make the dinner.
 
3. Your selection of cooking methods: baked, broiled or grilled.
 
I use Kikkoman’s Teriyaki Marinade & Sauce as one of my regular go-to meals that is quick, simple and tasty. Interestingly, I don’t order anything teriyaki dishes when I go out.
 
I am capable of making my own teriyaki sauce and there are many recipes you can find on the internet. Like any other recipes, there are many variations, one constant is soy sauce but from there it can have sugar, brown sugar and/or honey, it can have mirin or sherry, garlic or no garlic, ginger or no ginger. Like an Italian gravy recipe it can vary from cook-to-cook, each puts their own defining touch.
 
I am not a strong proponent of using a lot of bottled products, scratch is better but I am hooked, passionate and a love slave to Kikkoman’s Teriyaki Marinade & Sauce.
 
Final Notes
 
Kikkoman’s Teriyaki Marinade & Sauce is available in any grocery store, check the Asian section. Put the food in the refrigerator while marinating.
 
Because of the sugar content which can burn, you may pat dry the chicken, steak or fish dry before putting on the grill.
Safety note: Once raw food has been in a marinade DO NOT re-use.
 
Baltimore Magazine 's food editor, Suzanne Loudermilk writes In Good Taste Blog and this is a repost of a story I wrote for her blog this week while she is having surgery.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Follow me at www.twitter.com/daracooks, Facebook, Linkedin or e-mail me at examiner@diningdish.otherinbox.com. Thank you for your continued readership - every click counts.
 
 

 

 

Comments

Name:


Comments:
characters left

NOTE: Do Not Alter These Fields:

Holiday Guide
Examiners spread the seasonal cheer with the Examiner.com Holiday Guide.

Recent Articles

Thursday, December 17, 2009
From time-to-time, I help out a chef friend and work in her kitchen in Washington DC as her “kitchen slave” or in the French kitchen …
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Clever little video parody of Top Chef Season 6 with a fake Gail Simmons, Mattin, Ashley and Bryan Voltaggio. Tonight is the reunion show at 9 p.m. …

Dara's NPR Radio Interview on YUM Tasty Recipes from Culinary Greats

My Cookbook: Yum - Tasty Recipes from Culinary Greats - Where to Purchase

Help the Hungry - Cure Empty Plates!

Where You Can Find Dining Dish (aka Dara Bunjon)