Steamed litid ng baka (beef ligaments)

December 24, 2007 
Filed under Asian cooking, Chinese recipes

One of my guilty pleasures: steamed litid ng baka. Until recently, I only get to enjoy them from the dimsum cart of bigger Chinese restaurants. Then, I bought this tray of beef litid from Unimart, used some to make my beef and hofan noodle soup and, the rest, I cut into bite size pieces, arranged the pieces on small plates, garnished them with toasted garlic and chopped onion leaves, seasoned with a little light soy sauce mixed with grated ginger and steamed everything for 20 minutes (or, you can add the onion leaves just before serving if you want them crunchy). I served the steamed beef litid as an extra dish for lunch yesterday.

Steamed litid ng baka

Although uncooked beef litid is very inexpensive, I can understand why steamed litid does not come cheap in Chinese restaurants. It takes about six hours of non-stop simmering to get the litid to that stage of tenderness when it literally melts in the mouth. And it is only when it has reached this stage when the litid can be fished out of the broth and cut into bite-size pieces to prepare them for the steamer. I suggest that you cut them into 2-inch lengths, then, arrange on a heatproof plate. I suggest not overcrowding the plate so that all pieces of litid get soaked in the seasonings and spices during steaming.

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Comments

14 Comments on "Steamed litid ng baka (beef ligaments)"

  1. Language Hack blog on Mon, 24th Dec 2007 12:05 pm 

    Do you happen to know if there is a Chinese name for the dish?

  2. Ellen on Mon, 24th Dec 2007 9:25 pm 

    One of my favourite ‘dim sum’ dishes i love to order in chinese restos. I have no idea what it’s called in chinese. I only know it as ‘beef tendon’. I don’t think I’ll have patience to cook this myself. I’d rather keep ordering it at yum cha..hehe.

  3. brenda on Mon, 24th Dec 2007 11:52 pm 

    Merry Christmas Connie!

  4. solraya on Tue, 25th Dec 2007 8:39 am 

    Connie,

    The litid sold in supermarkets are ready for steaming? Or do I have to simmer first for 6hrs?

    I see it in Makati Supermarket, but am not sure how to use it.

    I love the beef litid too!

  5. wyatt on Tue, 25th Dec 2007 10:27 am 

    Try using tuhod ng baka - I use it for sinigang.

  6. Connie on Tue, 25th Dec 2007 12:24 pm 

    solraya, those are raw litid. you need to simmer them first.

  7. jeff on Tue, 25th Dec 2007 11:04 pm 

    love liitid, the whole family loves litid:)

  8. solraya on Wed, 26th Dec 2007 8:06 am 

    Connie, thank you. It means I have to be home the whole day to look after it. I wonder if I can just put all the ingredients you mentioned in a crock pot?

  9. Connie on Wed, 26th Dec 2007 10:48 am 

    solraya, yes, that’ll work.

  10. peterb on Wed, 26th Dec 2007 3:16 pm 

    Hi Connie, will i get similar results with a pressure cooker?

    Merry Christmas! :)

  11. Connie on Wed, 26th Dec 2007 3:36 pm 

    peterb, yah, but cut the cooking time in half. 6 hours in the pressure cooker will liquefy the litid.

  12. elaine on Wed, 2nd Jan 2008 5:50 pm 

    For the litid, my mom experimented by pressure cooking the litid for 30 minutes then boiled/simmered it for another 30 mins(total of 1 hr) and it turned out melt in your mouth type! A real savings on gas and time. The type of litid she got weren’t the thick ones though..so one may really have to adjust.

  13. jane on Fri, 4th Jan 2008 7:10 pm 

    I was thinking of cooking a beef ligaments because I’ve tried a sizzling ligaments before at the Congo Grill and it taste good, but my mom-in-law told me that its bad for the health of my husband may lahi daw kasi silang high blood…is it bad for the body???

  14. Connie on Sat, 5th Jan 2008 10:10 pm 

    Jane, I think it’s better is you consult a doctor. Personally, I don’t think any food is bad so long as it is taken in moderation. However, people with medical histories may have different requirements.




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