Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms Recipe - Pamela Salzman Skip to content

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms Recipe

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms | Pamela Salzman

Admittedly, these images aren’t the best, because I took these after the sun set and everyone was rushing me to eat.  “OMG.  Can you puh-leeease take the picture already?  I’m starving!”

“Puh-lease yourself.  You just ate 2 hours ago and 4 hours before that.  Fine, I’m almost done.  Can you just get out of my light a little?”

“Ugh!”  Sorta happens a lot around here.  😉

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms | Pamela Salzman

Because I believe so much in the tastiness and simplicity of this recipe, I figured you would trust me and look past the fact that it doesn’t look Insta-worthy!  There are so many things I love about this recipe, despite the fact that I personally do not like or eat beef.  My family loves meat of every kind, though.  And this is a stir-fry with a different, fresher flavor.  I used to think of stir-fries as having a heavy, soy-based sauce.  Not that there’s anything wrong with that.  I have several recipes on the blog like that.

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms | Pamela Salzman

But I like to mix it up a little, and I love the cleaner flavor of this dish with lots of cilantro, ginger, garlic and a nice squeeze of lime at the end.  This recipe is really easy and doesn’t require any unusual bottles of Asian ingredients you may or may not use again. Plus, many of my students are playing around with a Paleo diet or certain elimination diets, and these ingredients fit in perfectly.

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms | Pamela Salzman

I always, always opt for grass-fed beef and have written about it many times on the blog.  I will literally not buy beef at all and change my menu if I cannot buy grass-fed.  But I don’t make that much red meat for my family regardless.  Maybe I make it three times a month, and even then I am serving few ounces per person (e.g. meatballs, kabobs, stew.)  Meat can be pro-inflammatory and I try to limit those foods.

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms | Pamela Salzman

My family likes this stir-fry with plain or cilantro-lime rice.  You can also go with cauli-rice for a grain-free/Paleo meal.  Or serve it with Mexican-style sautéed greens or grilled broccolini.  Why not??  Or skip the extra veg side since there are plenty of nutrient-rich shiitake mushrooms here — always a favorite of mine and so, so good for you!

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms | Pamela Salzman

This is one of my last recipes the non-Thanksgiving type.  Since this Thursday is exactly 4 weeks from Thanksgiving, look out for my posts on how to organize yourself for the holiday which I consider to be the Olympics of cooking, as well as lots of great Thanksgiving recipes to give your menu a makeover!

Stir-Fried Ginger Beef with Shiitake Mushrooms Recipe
Author: 
Serves: 4-6
 
Ingredients
  • 1 pound grass-fed beef, such as rib-eye, sliced thinly against the grain
  • 2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh ginger
  • 4 cloves of garlic, chopped
  • ¼ cup cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 cup fresh cilantro leaves, chopped (can have some stems, too)
  • Sea salt and freshly ground pepper
  • 1-2 tablespoons coconut oil
  • ½ pound shiitake mushrooms, sliced ¼-inch thick
  • ½ large onion, sliced thinly
  • Juice of half a lime
Instructions
  1. Combine beef with ginger, garlic, olive oil and cilantro in a bowl. Cover and refrigerate for 1-2 hours. Bring beef out of refrigerator at least 45 minutes before cooking. (If you are pressed for time, marinate at room temperature for 1 hour.)
  2. Heat a wok or a large (12-13 inch pan) over medium heat and add half of the meat mixture. Season with sea salt and pepper. Stir fry 2 to 3 minutes, just until cooked. Remove the meat and stir fry the next batch, seasoning first with sea salt and pepper.
  3. Heat the coconut oil in the pan over medium-high heat and cook the onion until softened, 3-4 minutes. Add the shiitake mushrooms and season with sea salt. Stir fry the onions and mushrooms until the mushrooms have softened and are cooked through, about 4-5 minutes.
  4. Return the meat to the pan and squeeze the lime over the meat and vegetables. Toss to coat and season with sea salt and pepper to taste.

 

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Comments

14 Comments

  1. What could I sub for Cilantro? (Can’t eat it at all!)

    • Omit it or try a combo of parsley and dill!

  2. Thanks for another great recipe to try! If I double the recipe, should I double the olive oil in the marinade? Thanks!

    • Yes! And if you double the recipe, stir-fry in two skillets or in two separate batches so everything cooks properly.

  3. We’re not cilantro eaters..if I leave it out will it still work?

    • Yes, it will still work.

  4. This is delicious! Even my 14 year-old Miss Picky devoured it. This is one that I’ll make again and again. Thank you!

    • Yes! Love to hear that, Mary 🙂

  5. I made this last night. Whole family enjoyed it. My boys even ate the mushrooms which they usually pick out if other dishes. I think it’s because Shitakes don’t have the usual mushroom shaped when cooked. One question though,I used only the tops of the mushrooms. Do I use the stems too? I’m new to cooking with Shitakes. The stems seemed too hard.

    • So nice to hear this was a success. Those shiitakes are so nutritious!! Yes, I only use the tops. I actually freeze the stems and use them in vegetable stock.

  6. Hi! It is so hard to find kosher grass fed beef. I assume this would work well with sliced chicken breast?

    • I actually think it would work well!

  7. Hi Pamela!

    We don’t eat mushrooms. Could Isub broccoli? Or something else?

    Thanks!

    • It’s not a saucy stir-fry, so you need something which wouldn’t require a sauce. Maybe thinly sliced cabbage?


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I come from a large Italian-American family with 28 first cousins (on one side of the family!) where sit-down holiday dinners for 85 people are the norm (how, you might ask – organization! But more on that later …).

Some of my fondest memories are of simple family gatherings, both large and small, with long tables of bowls and platters piled high, the laughter of my cousins echoing and the comfort of tradition warming my soul.

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