Simmered Meat and Potatoes (with my family's "Golden Ratio")
Simmered Meat and Potatoes (with my family's "Golden Ratio")

Hello everybody, it is me again, Dan, welcome to my recipe page. Today, I’m gonna show you how to make a special dish, simmered meat and potatoes (with my family's "golden ratio"). It is one of my favorites. This time, I am going to make it a bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious.

Simmered Meat and Potatoes (with my family's "Golden Ratio") is one of the most favored of recent trending foods in the world. It is simple, it is quick, it tastes delicious. It is appreciated by millions daily. Simmered Meat and Potatoes (with my family's "Golden Ratio") is something which I have loved my entire life. They’re fine and they look wonderful.

Using the Golden Ratio, you split the picture into three unequal sections then use the lines and intersections to compose the picture. This cover of Feld magazine uses the Golden Ratio cropping to center the eye of the model on the cover. It works well because he is off center and the side of his. In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the same as the ratio of their sum to the larger of the two quantities.

To begin with this particular recipe, we have to first prepare a few ingredients. You can cook simmered meat and potatoes (with my family's "golden ratio") using 11 ingredients and 17 steps. Here is how you cook that.

The ingredients needed to make Simmered Meat and Potatoes (with my family's "Golden Ratio"):
  1. Prepare 100 grams Thin-sliced beef (pork or chicken also OK)
  2. Get 2 large Potatoes
  3. Get 1/2 to 2/3 of a large one Onion
  4. Get 1 tbsp Sugar…A
  5. Prepare 1 tbsp Soy sauce…A
  6. Make ready 1 tbsp Sake…A
  7. Make ready 400 ml Dashi stock (It's OK to use instant dashi granules mixed with water at about the same strength you'd use in miso soup)
  8. Take 1 tbsp Sugar…B
  9. Get 1 tbsp Mirin…B
  10. Prepare 1 tbsp Soy sauce…B
  11. Make ready 2/3 to 1 tablespoon Soy sauce…C

The Golden Ratio is not less precious than gold. If you believe that God created our universe then you must have to agree that God is a mathematician. Golden Ratio is hidden in between everything in this universe. In this paper, I will treat many different aspects of the Fibonacci Sequence by generalizing the relationship of numbers, making a data with spreadsheet, drawing a chart for the data, extending the ratio of each pair of adjacent terms to the golden ratio, examining the ratio of every second term.

Steps to make Simmered Meat and Potatoes (with my family's "Golden Ratio"):
  1. Cut the beef into reasonable bite-size pieces. Cut the onion into wedges about 1.5 to 2 cm thick. Chop the potato into 3-4 cm chunks.
  2. Spread just a little vegetable oil (even better if you use suet) in a non-stick pan over medium-high heat, and brown the beef in it.
  3. Once the beef has browned, add in the onions and potatoes and stir-fry them together.
  4. Once the oil has coated all the ingredients a bit, add the A seasonings, and stir-fry / simmer. Stir continually so that the items don't stick or burn, continuing until the ingredients have blended well and started to absorb the colors of the seasonings.
  5. Add the B ingredients and turn the heat up to high to bring it to a boil.
  6. Once the pot boils, cover the ingredients with an otoshibuta / drop lid (this is a must) that sits right on top of the ingredients inside the pot, and turn the heat down to medium-low. Simmer like this for about 20 minutes.
  7. Be careful not to let the pot boil too briskly. Set the heat so that the simmering liquid just gently bubbles through the holes in the otoshibuta.
  8. After 20 minutes, turn the heat down to the lowest setting, and take out a larger of the potato chunks to check its softness. The flavor will still be weak at this point.
  9. If the potato still seems too firm, put the otoshibuta back on, turn the heat back up, and simmer for 3 more minutes. If the potatoes seem tender after this, remove the otoshibuta and drizzle in the C seasonings.
  10. Turn the heat up to high, and boil for about a minute, gently swirling the pot occasionally to keep the potatoes from falling apart.
  11. You could just eat the nikujaga as it is at the end of Step 10, but I recommend putting a lid on the pan and letting the contents cool for a bit (this also allows the potatoes to absorb even more flavor), and then it's done.
  12. When you're ready to serve the nikujaga, warm it up carefully so that the potatoes don't fall apart, and then serve into bowls.
  13. Rather than keeping the potatoes completely smooth and intact, it deliciouos when the potatoes are dense and floury.
  14. This is a simple recipe that makes for a really flavorful, very delicious nikujaga.
  15. Try to make this when you have plenty of time and can let the nikujaga cool down and really absorb the flavors before eating.
  16. If you want to add in shirataki noodles, do so between Steps 6 and 8.
  17. There is also a recipe for "Waterless Nikujaga" made in a Staub cocotte ronde (a round thick-bottomed cat iron pot) at. Please have a look! - - https://cookpad.com/us/recipes/150645-waterless-nikujaga-simmered-meat-and-potatoes-in-a-staub-cocotte

Golden Ratio is hidden in between everything in this universe. In this paper, I will treat many different aspects of the Fibonacci Sequence by generalizing the relationship of numbers, making a data with spreadsheet, drawing a chart for the data, extending the ratio of each pair of adjacent terms to the golden ratio, examining the ratio of every second term. Over the years, I've built up a collection of Golden Ratio Calipers… and I decided it might be quite useful for people if I made a video comparing them. So I decided to make a video of me painting a painting - to demonstrate how the golden ratio works with artistic composition. In a golden rectangle, the ratio of the width and the length are equal to phi.

So that’s going to wrap it up for this exceptional food simmered meat and potatoes (with my family's "golden ratio") recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I am confident you will make this at home. There is gonna be more interesting food at home recipes coming up. Remember to save this page in your browser, and share it to your family, friends and colleague. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!