This is an idea I ripped off from a local restaurant, Maggie McFly's (I love this place!).
At the restaurant, they serve stir-fried beef, bean sprouts, shredded carrots, noodles (similar to Raman), tiny sliced cucumbers, and crushed peanuts along side lettuce leaves and three dipping sauces. It was delicious and I liked making my own lettuce wraps. I could use as little or as much as I wanted. I was able to eat three wraps; however, I had a salad beforehand, so I probably could have eaten more. I really enjoyed having these and figured it would be something different, for a change, and pretty easy to make at home. So, this weekend, off I went to get the ingredients!
Bibb lettuce (or Boston or Butter, same thing) is used for making the lettuce wraps. The leaves are pretty much the perfect size: not too big and not too small. Plus, they don't seem to tear easily. I wasn't sure I'd find this lettuce at the regular grocery store, so I checked Whole Foods while I was there. They wanted $6.99 for a head!! I said "no way" and decided to stop at another store on the way home. Lo and behold! They had the same exact branch for only $2.99! Still more than iceberg lettuce, but I feel like it works better. Tastes like something, too.
I grabbed the smallest bag of bean sprouts, which was huge considering I don't really have another use for them (I'll have to Google, "what to do with a million bean sprouts"), and also a bag of carrots. I didn't buy the pre-shredded carrots since I can easily do it with my food processor. I also grabbed some beef from the meat case, which was already cut into strips, and some limes for my marinade.
I made the lettuce wraps this week and it was easy. Just marinate the meet overnight (you don't have to, but I like it like that), prepare your toppings, tear off some lettuce leaves, and fry the beef. Super simple; however, this is one time where you want to have everything ready to go before you cook the beef. The strips were really thin and cooked very fast. In fact, I overcooked them a little.
I really liked the marinade (recipe below). It had lots of flavor. I actually used it on my husband's pork cutlets, too. He's not into making lettuce wraps, so he had pork with sautéed green beans and a pasta side dish. The one thing that would have made these better is dipping sauce. I totally zoned out and forgot to make a sauce. At the restaurant, they served a sesame ginger sauce, teriyaki sauce, and a peanut sauce. Next time I must remember!
Asian Marinade
1/4 cup soy sauce
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/2 cup olive oil or vegetable oil
3 TB honey
Juice of 2 limes
4 garlic cloves, minced
2 TB minced fresh ginger (or 1 tsp ground ginger)
3 scallions, thinly sliced
Whisk together the soy sauce, vinegar, and oil. Add the remaining ingredients and whisk again. Use to marinade anything you want!