T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
13.1 | | SDC006::JOET | | Mon Jul 02 1984 15:35 | 10 |
| To tell you the truth, I've never even been satisfied with my
electric wok's performance. In that PBS series about the restaurants of
New Orleans, an oriental chef said that his gas woks achieved temperatures
of over 800 degrees. Using gas has always been better for me, so I guess
that the much higher temperatures combined with the faster heat recovery
rate must be what does the trick. Otherwise, you end up sort of braising
what wou're trying to cook with the juices you were trying to seal in by
searing.
-joet
|
13.2 | | ROYAL::AITEL | | Thu Jul 05 1984 17:17 | 19 |
| I've found that the following combo tastes good on stir-fried
anything:
1/4 c soy sauce
2 Tbsp cooking sherry (or white wine - it's a good excuse to open
a bottle)
1 Tbsp honey (NOT sugar)
garlic to taste (I use a large clove)
ginger to taste (I use 1/4 tsp if dried, or a chunk about the
same size as the garlic, minced VERY finely, if fresh)
If you want more, increase the measurements. You can add some oil, if
you want. Also, if you want it to become lots of thick sauce so you can pile
the stir-fries on some rice and have enough sauce for the rice, add some
water and whisk in some corn-starch or arrowroot. (Flour isn't as good
because you have to use more and it tastes floury). Sometimes the honey
will mix in better if you heat the mixture before pouring it on your
stir-fries. I usually fry up the veggies and meat, pour on the sauce,
cover, and turn off the heat and let the sauce cook in for a minute or two.
|
13.3 | | PARSEC::PESENTI | | Mon Aug 13 1984 08:06 | 38 |
| Here is a tasty veggie stir fry that doesn't take too long to prepare and is a
visual delight at the table. The longer you let the chili peppers cook, the
hotter the dish will be. The pan should be as hot as you can make it. Don't
add the garlic until after the broccoli, or else the very hot oil will burn
the garlic and leave the disk tasting bitter.
Spicy Broccoli Stir Fry:
3/4 cu veggie or peanut oil
10 whole dried 1" chili peppers
1 medium head of broccoli
5 cloves of garlic
2 peppers, red and/or yellow
6 scallions
1/2 lb small mushroom
1/4 cu light soy
Advance preparation:
Cut up the broccoli so that each piece has a small floret and a long, slender
stem. Thinly slice the garlic. Slice the peppers lengthwise into 1/4 inch
pieces. Cut the scallions (greens and white) into 2 inch pieces.
Stir-fry:
Place a wok on a burner on the highest setting until drops of water sizzle.
Then add oil and swirl it to coat the wok. Immediately, add the chili peppers
and stand ready with the broccoli. When the chili peppers turn dark brown
(don't breathe the fumes), add all of the broccoli. Toss the broccoli to coat
it with oil. When the broccoli turns bright green, add the garlic, toss, and
add the peppers. Toss for 1 minute, add the scallions and mushrooms. Toss to
coat the entire mixture with oil. Remove the wok from the heat, add the soy
and toss again. Cover the wok to let the vegetables steam for no more than 5
minutes, less depending on your crunch preference. Serve immediately over
rice or as a vegetable side dish. Serves 5-10. Can be drained and reheated
in a microwave or wok. The chili peppers should be removed before serving or
by individuals before eating.
- JP
|
13.4 | Wok like an egyptian... | AKA::TAUBENFELD | Almighty SET | Mon Aug 03 1987 14:58 | 12 |
| re electric woks
I have one and am NOT pleased. On occasion the teflon (or whatever
it is) coating on the wok peels off, leaving metal pieces in my
food. It happened once a few months ago, stopped, and then started
again the other night. Guess it's time to chuck it.
I know the gas ones are better, but I have an electric stove. Can
you put a wok on an electric burner and get good results?
Sharon
|
13.5 | Wok works fair on electric range | MUGSY::GLANTZ | Mike | Tue Aug 04 1987 09:15 | 10 |
| We've used a wok on an electric range with moderately good results. I
think all woks must come with the metal ring which supports them. If
you place it with the large diameter at the top, the wok will sit as
close to the burner as is possible. Use the highest heat setting on
the largest burner that the ring will fit over without touching the
burner itself. Even so, it doesn't come back up to cooking temperature
after putting the food in as fast as on a gas burner. I still find a
top quality frying pan works better on an electric range.
- Mike
|
13.6 | | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Tue Aug 04 1987 11:38 | 17 |
| We don't buy ANYTHING with a coating, teflon or silverstone or
anything, for just this reason. Either it peels off, or they
find out that it's cancer causing. I'll stick with my uncoated
pots and cast iron skillets!
Woks don't do too great over electric stoves, but they *are*
usable. The problem, I think, is that you can't get the concentrated
heat in the middle. Also, you don't have the ability to get quick
results when you change the heat setting, so you can't turn it up
for a moment to thicken the sauce, etc. We didn't have natural
gas lines on our street, so we got the propane folks to put in
a pair of tanks just for the stove. Works fine, though the heat
is a little different than natural gas - I can't remember if it's
cooler or hotter. The stove was adjustable for either fuel source,
which the propane company did for us.
--Louise
|
13.7 | It seems to work for some cooks | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Aug 04 1987 13:53 | 12 |
| A friend of mine who REALLY did a lot of oriental cooking (more
than we do, even -- nearly every night) LOVED his electric stove
and had trouble cooking on my gas stove. He had two small woks
which had flat bottoms in the center (I think these are actually
authentic enough, and are used in northern China), so that the center
touched the electric burner. I prefer my "normal" wok, which is
much larger, but sometimes it is still impossible to achieve a high enough
temperature for something like "flash-fried" lamb -- especially
in the winter (I suppose because the furnace and water heater are
using gas) -- you need a special stove with real wok burners (I
know someone who actually bought a single-burner wok stove, which
runs off a propane tank, for this reason).
|
13.8 | Jenn-Air electric stove attachment | JULIE::CORENZWIT | authenticated impersonator | Wed Aug 05 1987 09:04 | 8 |
| Jenn-Air sells a wok with a replacement electric burner coil which
curves to fit the wok bottom pretty snugly. Seems to develop the
high heat at the center pretty well, but of course, there's still
the problem of slow adjustment of heat level. Also struck me as
being a bit on the expensive side, but I don't remember the price
right now.
Julie
|
13.9 | source for flat bottomed woks | SKYLRK::WILDE | Analysis, Mr. Spock? | Wed Aug 05 1987 14:57 | 10 |
| Williams-sonoma gourmet cooking store catalog carries the flat
bottomed woks. They work on electric better than the regular
ones. To change heat fast, lift wok off burner for a few
seconds while temp resets, hassle as it is, I find it works
pretty well. The wok comes with a long wooden handle for easy
movement.
W-S is based in San Francisco, I think, and could probably be
located through information (415) area code. I'm sure they'll
be happy to send catalog.
|
13.10 | Williams-Sonoma phone | CSCMA::L_HUGHES | | Wed Aug 05 1987 16:12 | 12 |
| Thanks so much for the information on Williams-Sonoma!
I'm moving to a house that has an electric stove and I'm
really bummed. I cook chineese fairly often on a propane
gas stove. I've cooked on electric stoves and thought it
was just ok.
Williams-Sonoma's phone number is 415-982-0295
They are sending me the current catalogue which does have
the flat bottom wok in it. The price is $22.
Linda
|
13.11 | Turn the ring over! | NYOB::KOLANKOWSKI | | Wed Aug 05 1987 17:15 | 8 |
| I used my WOK on an electric stove while in college, and the trick
to it seemed to be inverting the heating ring. Which ever way they
tell you to use it on a gas stove, turn it the other way. By doing
this, the heat is evenly distributed throughout the wok, and cooking
is not a problem. Gas is still the best way, however.
Aline
|
13.12 | A few comments... | PARSEC::PESENTI | Support Fundamentally Oral Bill | Wed Aug 05 1987 18:47 | 23 |
| A couple of points:
To get the best results on an electric stove, DON'T use the ring at all. Just
balance the wok in the center of the coil when you aren't holding it. It's
easier than it sounds, and pretty stable (although I wouldn't deep fry this
way).
On a gas stove, many stoves have a set screw adjustment that you can make your
self. To find the screw, remove the knob (with the burner lit). The knob
shaft is usually a hollow tube shaped like a C. Inside this tube is the set
screw. Insert a small screwdriver, and turn (one way turns the flame down,
the other turns it up). Adjust the screw for a high flame on the one burner
where you use the wok. Then NEVER use this burner for low heat cooking. (The
normal adjustment is to set the burner on low, and turn down the flame until
it's as low as it can get without blowing out. This is a great setting for
sauces, etc, but not stir fries and sautees.)
Lastly, there is a Williams Sonoma in Boston in Copley whatever. However, if
you really want to go overboard, Jordan Marsh carries the Caphalon wok for
about $150 or so.
- JP
|
13.13 | I think I'll buy the 1-burner wok stove | MUGSY::GLANTZ | Mike | Thu Aug 06 1987 05:01 | 33 |
| Re: < Note 13.12 by PARSEC::PESENTI "Support Fundamentally Oral Bill" >
-< A few comments... >-
>To get the best results on an electric stove, DON'T use the ring at all.
I did try this, and it worked better, but the balancing act wasn't too
easy, and my arm got real tired. Also, it was annoying having one hand
tied up on keeping the thing in place. Maybe the problem was my burner -
we have those solid flat "european" style burners, which all electric
ranges here (france) come with.
On that subject, by the way, we've had this stove for 4 years now, and I
see no advantage whatsoever over the old coil burners. Not only that,
but they have a whole bunch of disadvantages, such as:
o They change temperature more slowly.
o They're harder, not easier, to clean, because spilled food bakes rock
solid on the edges (the literature says don't let stuff drip on them,
but that's impossible).
o They pit badly after a few years use, which looks ugly, makes them
even harder to clean, and they don't work as well, since they don't
contact the bottom of the pan as well.
o You have to use stove polish on them every few months to make them
look nice, reduce pitting, and improve heat transfer.
o You can't easily replace them (which you'd like to do when they get
badly pitted, even though the marketing literature says you never have
to).
I've seen them advertised in magazines like Gourmet, with all the slick
marketing hype and the word "europe" sprinkled all over. I have no idea
why they're "standard" in Europe, but I see no benefit, and would
certainly avoid them in the States, where I presume they cost more than
coil burners.
|
13.14 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Sun Aug 09 1987 19:10 | 25 |
| RE: "European" style burners
I imagine that these are patterned after the solid, flat cooking surfaces
found on wood stoves. They are preferable in one sense in that they
distribute heat more evenly across the bottom of the pan.
RE: electric woks and woks on electric stoves
Preference for gas or electric stoves seems pretty much a matter of personal
taste and what you're used to. My own preference, especially for wok
cookery, is gas, because of the instantly-responding heat control you get.
Nonetheless, electric stoves work just fine for wok cookery. I set the
wok directly on the heating element, using no wok ring. This works well
for stir-frying. For steaming, boiling, or deep frying, I'd use a wok
ring to avoid dangerous disasters.
My own preference for steaming and deep-frying is to use a teflon-coated
electric wok--the kind that stand alone with their own heating element.
The teflon coating is good when steaming (prevents rusting of the wok).
The thermostat on heating element is nice for deep frying, as you don't
have to worry about the temperature getting out of range. However, I don't
recommend electric woks for stir-frying. They don't get hot enough.
--PSW
|
13.15 | Wok rings | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Aug 10 1987 16:18 | 19 |
| I use the sort of wok ring that is supposed to be used for electric
stoves on my gas stove because it keeps the wok steadier - you still
have to be careful if there is a lot of liquid or something inside
though. That is, I use one that is a short cylinder with parallel
sides. I also have one that is supposed to be used for gas stoves,
which tapers towards the top (seems to hold the wok at about the
same distance from the gas flames, though) so much that my wok doesn't
balance very well on it - I use a big wok (big enough that you can't
use other stove burners safely when it is in use - a small teakettle
will fit on the diagonally-opposite burner, but that's about it).
I'll have to try this trick of adjusting the flame for the burner
I usually use. I have taken the knobs off several times for cleaning,
but never noticed that there is any obvious adjustment under one
- I think I may have to open the top of the stove and remove the
drip plate that fits under where the knobs go, which will make it
bit hard to see what the effect is on the flame - maybe I can then
put the stovetop together without that plate, if there is anything
under there to adjust, and see.
|
13.16 | chinese cooking in electric frying pan | ODIXIE::RADOYCIS | | Tue Nov 03 1992 10:50 | 5 |
| the electric skillet has to be extremely hot, do not have any water
on the vegies, and try sesame oil instead. I am told that is what they
use in Chinese restaurants, also, a little sake is mixed in with the
soy sauce when you go to the Japanese steak house places.
|
13.17 | | ADSERV::PW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Tue Nov 03 1992 16:13 | 8 |
| RE: .16
Sesame oil burns easily and so it isn't usually used as a frying oil. Use
peanut oil for the stir-frying, and just put a few drops of sesame oil on the
food at the final toss just before serving, to provide that nice flavor and
aroma.
--PSW
|