Posts Tagged ‘Chinese’
* Barley with Beancurd and Gingko Nuts
Posted on March 6th, 2011 by Linda. Filed under Cuisine, Dessert, Eggs, Yuba.
On a cold rainy day like this, a nice hot bowl of “tong suey” warms the body like no other. This wonderful sweet soup is relatively high in protein and has gingko nuts which is supposed to be good for you.
Chef’s tip: Tying the pandan leaves into a knot crushes the leave cells, releasing the fragrant oils of the plant. Poaching the eggs without heat leaves the egg nice and tender.
12 cups water
1 cup pearled barley
3 pandan leaves, tied into a knot
3 sheets yuba
1 cup gingko nuts, shelled
1 cup rock sugar, to taste
2 eggs
1. Rinse pearled barley. Add water and bring to boil. Simmer for one hour till the “soup” is cloudy.
2. Add in pandan leaves, yuba skin and gingko nuts and simmer another 15 minutes.
3. Remove pandan leaves, add sugar, still till melted.
4. Remove from heat. Break the eggs into the sweet soup, wait 20 seconds, then stir very slowly to break the yolks to form “egg flower”.
5. Ladle the sweet soup into bowls. Serve piping hot.
Serves: 8
* Braised Pork Belly in Dark Soy Sauce
Posted on February 18th, 2011 by Linda. Filed under Braise, Cuisine, Entree, Malaysian, Nyonya, Pork.
Hello Rich. Here’s what Janet and I think is the recreation of our grandma’s recipe for dark soy sauce pork. I am not exactly sure whether this is a Hokkien or a baba dish. ”Ah Ma” is Hokkien, but her mother-in-law, our great grandmother “Ah Chor”, was Nyonya. As I understand it, Ah Ma picked up a lot of her cooking skills from Ah Chor. We used to go to my dad’s parents place for lunch every Sunday and every Sunday, there will be this dark soy sauce pork. I vividly remember how she would stuff a special little clay pot, in which she only makes this dish with, with the pork and then braise it under a super low flame. The pork literally melts in your mouth. It tastes even better the next day. We used to even eat this for breakfast, soaking up the sauce with some nice white and fluffy “wonder” bread.
Janet thinks there is some soy sauce added, I think otherwise. If you’d like it saltier and saucier, just add a splash or two of soy sauce. Enjoy!
Chef’s tip:
3 key things. 1. It’s essential to use a fatty cut of pork. The preferred cut is the “5 flower” cut, the creme de la creme of pork belly meat. It’s the same cut of meat they make bacon with. It literally has 5 alternating layers of fat and lean meat. It would be great to leave the skin on, too. 2. Low heat. You want to gently cook the fat, not sear it away. High heat will melt the fat prematurely (i.e., in the pot, not in your mouth) 3. The Malaysian dark caramel sauce aka dark soy sauce (the really thick, black and sweet kind). The best brand to get is the “Cheong Chan” brand.
2 lbs pork belly meat, skin-on, cut into 1 inch cubes, pat dry
6-8 cloves garlic, whole, skin-on, very lightly smashed
1/2 cup dark (caramel) soy sauce – enough to coat the pork liberally
1/2 teaspoon whole white peppercorns
Soy sauce, optional
1. Place all ingredients in a medium, heavy-bottomed pot, preferably a clay pot. The meat should fit snugly together. Liberally coat the pork with the dark soy sauce.
2. Cover and braised on LOW heat for at least two hours, till desired doneness. Stir occasionally. The pork will cook in its own juices and fat. May add a little water if it gets too dry too soon but try not to.
Serves: 6
* Sichuan Chicken and Mung Bean Cold Jelly Noodles
Posted on January 5th, 2011 by Linda. Filed under Appetizer, Chicken, Chinese, Cuisine, Entree, Green onions, Mung Bean Starch, Noodles, Sichuan Peppercorn, Sichuanese, Sides, Tahini.
A really light noodle dish that is full of flavor- nutty sesame and peanut butter, and hot Sichuan chili cooled down by the cucumber and cold noodles. You can make your own noodles or substitute with store bought egg noodles or even spaghetti. And if you really want to do this in under 30 minutes, use store bought rotiserrie chicken.
Chef’s tip: Mung bean starch is easily available in Korean grocery stores.
Noodles:
4 cups + 2 Tablespoons water
¾ cup mung bean starch
Meat and marinade:
2 chicken breast, bone-in, skin-on
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 Tablespoon ginger juice
2 cloves garlic, finely minced
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1 Tablespoon canola oil
Sauce:
3 Tablespoons tahini + 3 Tablespoons water (more if tahini is thick)
1 Tablespoon light soy sauce
1 Tablespoon Chinkiang or black Chinese vinegar
1 Tablespoon sugar
½ teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon ground roasted Sichuan peppercorn or Sichuan peppercorn oil
1 teaspoon ginger, grated fine
1 clove garlic, grated fine
1 Tablespoon Asian chili oil
1 Tablespoon sesame oil
1 stalk green onions, green parts only, julienned into 1 inch strips
2 Tablespoons sesame seeds, toasted
1 teaspoon Asian chili oil
½ teaspoon sesame oil
Preparing the noodle
1. Mix starch with 1 ½ cups of water till starch is fully dissolved. Mix in remaining water.
2. Bring to boil, stirring constantly till the mixture thickens. It’s easiest to stir from the center out. Stir until the mixture is clear and translucent. About 4 minutes total. Immediately pour mixture into a wet, glass or ceramic dish, about 9X12 inch, making a thin 3/8 inch layer.
3. Leave to cool for 45 minutes in the fridge or 2 hours at room temperature.
4. When set, cut noodles into thin ¼ inch strips
Preparing the chicken
5. Preheat oven 350F. Mix chicken marinade ingredients together. Place chicken breast on a baking sheet, rub skin with marinade. Roast for 35-40 minutes until chicken is just cooked (190F).
6. Remove the meat from the bones, discard skin and shred the chicken.
Preparing the sauce
7. Whisk together the sauce ingredients in a bowl.
Preparing the garnish:
8. Cut the green onions into 1 ½ inch section, then sliced lengthwise into thin shreds. Put into cold water and drain well and pat dry before use.
9. Pan-fry the sesame seeds (without any oil) under medium heat till golden brown.
Assembly:
10. In a bowl, place a heapful of noodles. Pour sauce over the noodles and toss to coat. Place on top of noodles some shredded chicken, green onions and sesame seed. Finish with a little chili oil and sesame oil.
Serves: 6
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