When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Carne asada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carne_asada

    Carne asada is grilled and sliced beef, usually skirt steak, flap steak, or flank steak though chuck steak (known as diezmillo in Spanish) can also be used. It is usually marinated then grilled or seared to impart a charred flavor.

  3. Bistec de palomilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bistec_de_Palomilla

    In Spanish, palomillo means moth or butterfly, referring to the way that it is split in thickness to make two thin steaks of equal size. Because it is a tougher (but inexpensive) cut of meat , this makes it easier to chew, and more susceptible to being tenderized with a meat mallet , which is an essential part of the dish's preparation.

  4. Bistek - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bistek

    Bistek (from Spanish: bistec, "beefsteak"), also known as bistek tagalog or karne frita, is a Filipino dish consisting of thinly-sliced beefsteak braised in soy sauce, calamansi juice, garlic, ground black pepper, and onions cut into rings.

  5. Beefsteak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beefsteak

    A beefsteak, often called just steak, is a flat cut of beef with parallel faces, usually cut perpendicular to the muscle fibers. In common restaurant service a single serving has a raw mass ranging from 120 to 600 grams (4 to 21 oz). Beef steaks are usually grilled, pan-fried, or broiled.

  6. Churrasco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churrasco

    Churrasco (Portuguese: [ʃuˈʁasku], Spanish: [tʃuˈrasko]) is the Portuguese and Spanish name for grilled beef prominent in South American and Iberian cuisines, and in particular in Bolivia, Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina. The term is also used in other Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries for a variety of different meat products.

  7. Fajita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fajita

    A fajita (/ f ə ˈ h iː t ə /; Spanish: ⓘ), in Tex-Mex cuisine, is any stripped grilled meat, optionally served with stripped peppers and onions usually served on a flour or corn tortilla. [2] The term originally referred to skirt steak, the cut of beef first used in the dish. [3]

  8. Suadero - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suadero

    Suadero, also known as matambre in Argentina, sobrebarriga in Colombia, and rose meat in the United States of America, is the name of a very thin cut of beef in Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, taken from between the skin and the ribs, [1] a sort of flank steak. In Mexico City, México, it is very common and popular, offered mainly on street ...

  9. Matambre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matambre

    Matambre is the name of a very thin cut of beef in Argentina, Uruguay, Rio Grande do Sul and also Paraguay. It is a rose colored muscle taken between the skin and the ribs of the steer, [1] a sort of flank steak. It is not the cut known normally in the U.S. as flank steak.