39 Comments

  1. mmmm, that looks so good, my mouth is watering! Why do I torture myself late at night watching Chef John videos and getting so hungry??? Its not just his food, i confess it's his voice! Ennnnnn joyyyy 🙂

  2. Are your lives so hopefully meaningless and worthless that you have to argue where a food theoretically came from especially when your entire region thrived from trading and due to that, acquired culture, food and everything in between through trading thanks to sailors introducing their culture and believes on your lands?

    Retards. No wonder SEA is still backwater

  3. its yummmmmmy yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhh loveleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee noowwww im gunnaaaaaaaaaaa fartttttttttt and plopppppppppppppppppppppppp yumyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy

  4. not Thai
    Indonesian from origin
    lol yes Agita
    with gula jawa sugar ….sambal manis , djahe , jinten ……etc etc with origin satay sauce ……..hmmmmm
    to many cooks play chef …….a house cook

  5. I am marinating these in the fridge now, Is beef Loin Top Sirloin the same thing? also 2 pounds looks like double the amount you show in your video. was that two pounds you added to your marinade bowl? or was it less for video purposes?

    I also made the Peanut Sauce Dip ?

  6. Although the beef version is delicious, you would have a very hard time finding this in Thailand, where satay is typically pork, or chicken. Not to mention that good beef is near impossible to find, except at boutique markets, which most Thais cannot afford. Still, I really like this recipe, and will make it at my first opportunity. Thanks!

  7. How is it that I have to add every one of Chefs vids to my favorites list?  Now I have to go about constructing various folders and sub folders within my favorites to organize this mess.  However I will be traveling to the grocery for meat to give this one a try.

  8. Tried this last night along with the corn pudding recipe, but with an oddball variation that turned out wonderful. We got a late start, and after the marinating time, it got cold and dark outside so we decided not to fire up the grill. So we did the little meat strips in a sauce pan. The idea was to put each individual strip on a little bamboo skewer and finish them over one of those little hibachi grills like comes in the middle of a pu-pu platter. But since there was that good "stuff" left in the pan, we made gravy to dip the skewers into. Came out amazing.

  9. It's an Indonesian dish as well (since the two countries and mush of SE Asia share a strong history). Mainly made with cubed chicken breast. Best part of the chicken is keeping a little bit of chicken skin on the breast here and there, and so when you cook it (traditionally on open coals) it crisps a little and you get a little yummy surprised. <3 Best served with the peanut sauce, some fresh white rice, and a fresh vegetable dish.

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