Beef shank and beef tendon go together to make a classic
Chinese stew. This dish is very similar to the Beef
Flank and Tendon Stew (燜牛筋牛腩, Man1 Ngau4
Gan1 Ngau4 Naam5) recipe. Chee Hou sauce
is an important ingredient to making this dish. Chee Hou sauce is a prepared
sauce and is similar in taste to hoisin sauce (which can be substituted if you
can’t find it at your local Asian market) and has a slightly spicier taste to
it.
Boneless beef shank is usually prepared and served as a cold
dish appetizer at Chinese banquets, in a very similar preparation as for this
stew dish. This cut of meat is usually not available at your local market, but
can be found in Asian markets. If you can’t find beef shank, beef outside flank
makes a good substitute. Beef tendon is another part of the cow available at
Asian markets either whole or already cut into pieces. It’s a texture ingredient
that produces a great mouth feel when eaten. Uncooked, it’s tough and hard to
cut, cooked long and slow, and it becomes soft. There’s really no substitute
for this ingredient, so if you can’t find it, it can be omitted, but the stew
won’t be the same.
Enjoy!