Posts Tagged ‘noodles’
* Sukiyaki
Posted on July 1st, 2010 by Linda. Filed under Entree, Japanese, Noodles, Soy sauce, Stir Fry.

I probably should rebrand my site as the noodle blog! Noodles are just a totally Asian favorite go-to fast food….almost in every Asian country east of India. I love my noodles. I guess you can take the girl out of Asia but you can’t take the noodles out of her…
The sukiyaki is really a dish, rather than a noodle dish. Eaten with rice, but I like it just as it is — a big bowl of noodles.
Chef’s tip: To thinly slice the beef, pop the beef into freezer for about 20 minutes,
1/2 cup mirin
1/2 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup sake
2 cups water
1 Tablespoon sesame oil
1 lb thinly sliced beef (rib-eye, sirloin)
1 yellow onion, thinly sliced
4 cups napa cabbage, thinly sliced
4 oz cellophane / glass noodle, soaked in cold water till soft
1 sprig green onion, thinly sliced
1. Mix the mirin, soy, sake and water together and set aside.
2. In a pan, heat the sesame oil, then saute the beef and onion till slightly browned.
3. Pour in the sauce mixture, add cabbage and.
4. Simmer till tender. Add the noodles, bring till boil again.
5. garnish with green onions.
Serves: 4
* Chap Jae
Posted on May 31st, 2010 by Linda. Filed under Cuisine, Entree, Mushrooms, Peppers, Sesame oil.
At our recent chefs meeting at Parties That Cook, our chef chief, Bibby, mentioned she read an article on how San Francisco’s vegetarians are turning vegan and restaurants are getting into offering vegan on the menu. Here’s the SF Chronicle article. Yesterday, as I drove down O’Farrell to get to Sur La Table, I noticed a big blinking neon sign outside a Chinese restaurant that spells VEGAN! I can just imagine some dude out in Guangzhou feverishly making neon signs that no longer says Free Delivery or All You Can Eat Buffet but a simple Vegan instead!
The nice thing about a lot of Asian cuisine is that they are typically vegan. I love toying with the different noodle types made out of various different grains – buckwheat soba, rice vermicelli sticks, glutinous rice disc, mung bean cellophane noodles and here, sweet potato starch noodles.
Chef’s tip: You’ve gotta eat this dish immediately. Chilling a starch noodle makes the noodles stiff.
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 small yellow onion, sliced thinly, makes 1 cup
4 oz shitake mushrooms, sliced thinly
1 carrot, julienned
1 red pepper, sliced thinly
2 red jalapeno, seeded, and julienned finely, optional
2 sprigs green onion/ scallions, julienned into 2 inch sprigs, makes about 2 cups
2 cups baby spinach
Sauce:
3 tablespoons sugar
¼ cup tamari/ light soy sauce
2 tablespoon water
Noodles:
3-4 tablespoons sesame oil
6 oz potato starch noodles, soaked in hot water 10 mins
- In a small bowl, mix all sauce ingredients. Set aside.
- Boil noodles according to package directions. Drain and set aside.
- Heat a wok over high heat. Add 1 tablespoon sesame oil, add garlic, onions, mushrooms. Stir fry for 1 minute, push to the side, or remove from pan.
- Add 1 tablespoon sesame oil, stir fry carrots, red pepper and jalapeno. Fry till fragrant and vegetables are tender – about 2 minute.
- Add sauce mixture to the wok, and bring to boil.
- Add noodles and simmer until all the liquid has been absorbed. Toss in mushroom and spinach. Cover and steam for 1 minute. Add a little more water if necessary.
- Garnish with chopped green scallions. Drizzle with more sesame oil and soy sauce if necessary.
- Serve immediately.
Serves: 6
* Pho Bo – Beef Pho
Posted on March 19th, 2010 by Linda. Filed under Basil, Cuisine, Entree, Fish sauce, Palm sugar, Soup, Vietnamese.
Pho purists will probably pooh pooh over this faux pho since I used store-bought beef broth. Horrors. But before you click on to another page, give this a try. For 20% of the work, you get more than 80% of the flavor. Frankly, it’s almost as good as the real thing. I recently taught a class on South East Asian street foods at Sur La Table, and had 2 hours to do 5 dishes. Given a decent pot of beef stock takes 5-6 hours, we had to use the boxed version. It takes literally less than 15 mins to pull this noodle dish together. How is that for a quick pho?
Chef’s tip: OK — if you want truly want the real thing, buy about 6 lbs or more of beef bones – shanks, oxtails…those parts with good marrows. Place bones in a big pot of water, bring to boil and let boil 10 mins. Pour off the water and rinse the pot and bones of scum. Next, measure in 10 quarts of water, and bring to boil, then simmer 5 hours, while continuously removing scum and oil that form on top Remove bones and any other solids. Strain the broth. Place in the fridge overnight, remove the solid layer of oil that forms. Now, the broth is ready for use. Move on to Step 1 below.
Broth:
8 quarts beef broth (unsalted preferably)
2 (3-inch) pieces ginger, skin on
2 small yellow onions, skin on, root removed
1 large white radish, peeled, cut into 2 inch chunks
8 whole star anise
6 whole cloves
1 cinnamon stick
1 teaspoon fennel seeds
Cheesecloth
¼ cup fish sauce, or more to taste
3 tablespoons sugar
1 ½ lbs dried 1/16-inch-wide rice sticks, soaked
1 lb beef sirloin or tenderloin
Garnish:
½ yellow onion, sliced paper-thin
½ cup scallions, chopped
½ cup cilantro, chopped
4 cups mung bean sprouts
16 sprigs Asian basil
1 serrano or jalapeno chili, cut into thin rings
2 lime, cut into thin wedges
Sri Racha hot sauce
Hoisin sauce
- Bring the beef broth to a boil in a large stockpot.
- Char the onion and ginger pieces over an open flame. Peel and discard the blackened skins of the ginger and onions, then rinse, cut into 2 and add to the broth. Add radish. Boil at medium flame for 30 minutes.
- Place all spices into a cheesecloth and make into a bundle. Add spice bags into broth, boil another 30 minutes.
- Add fish sauce and sugar. Taste, and add more if needed. The broth should be quite salty as it will be balanced by the noodles. Remove spice bag, onion, ginger and radish. If necessary, strain the broth.
- Slice the onion paper thin. Soak in cold water for 30 minutes, drained and pat dry.
- Chop scallions and cilantro and mix together. Set aside
- Place bean sprouts, herbs, chilies and lime wedges on a central plate.
- Soak the rice noodles in cold water for at least 20 minutes. Bring a large pot of water to a boil and add the drained rice noodles. Give the noodles a quick stir and cook until tender but firm — less than 1 minute. Drain immediately. Use immediately.
- Pop the beef into the freezer. When slightly frozen, remove and slice paper thin against the grain.
- To serve, place the cooked noodles in bowls. Place a few slices of the raw sirloin on the noodles. Bring the broth to a rolling boil; ladle about 2 to 3 cups into each bowl. The broth will cook the raw beef instantly. Garnish with yellow onions, scallions and cilantro mix. Serve immediately with the platter of sprouts and herbs, and Sri Racha and hoisin sauce.
Serves: 8
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