T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
275.1 | | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jun 16 1986 13:49 | 5 |
| I don't recall ever having had hot and sour soup that had either
a dark, beefy broth or (worse yet) a gravy-like one, but there are
lots of recipes for it; it is sort of "garbage soup", almost anything
might be found in it. I'll look up a couple of my recipes and type
them in later.
|
275.2 | here's one recipe... | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Tue Jun 17 1986 10:04 | 48 |
| Ingredients:
1/2 lb lean pork or roast prok, shredded
1 small can bamboo shoots, shredded
1 oz tiger lily (golden needles) (about 3/4 c or more)
1/2 c woodears (1/2 oz)
1 oz black mushrooms
2 large fresh beancurds, cut in cubes
1 large can chicken broth (use College Inn)
1 egg, beaten
1 t salt
1-2 T dark soy sauce
1 t sugar
1/4 t MSG (I never use this, but you can)
2 T white vinegar or to taste
1 t black pepper or more to taste
2 t sesame oil, or more
1 t hot chile oil
3 T cornstarch mixed with 1/4 c cold water
Soak the tiger lily and woodears in hot water for an hour. Also
soak the black mushrooms.
Combine the chicken broth and all the ingredients down to the egg
in a large pot. Bring to a quick boil and simmer for 10 minutes.
Add: salt, dark soy sauce, sugar, MSG, and cornstarch mixture.
Turn off heat and add beaten egg, slowly, in a circular motion above
the pot.
Stir well.
Add vinegar and black pepper.
Remove from heat and add sesame oil to taste.
Add chile oil and mix well.
This serves 4-10 depending on how much soup they eat. You can make
it ahead of time and fesh it - stop the recipe before adding the
vinegar, etc., and add those ingredients just before serving.
I probably have a couple of dozen recipes for hot and sour soup,
but this is the one I usually make and is fairly typical. I'll
look up a couple of others when I get a chance so you can see if
one of them is what you are looking for. I don't recall any of
them having a beef broth base (though sometimes you see pork broth),
but the broth will be dark because of the dark soy sauce.
|
275.3 | sweet & sour my way... | IOSG::DAVEY | | Thu Jun 19 1986 10:37 | 24 |
| Don't know about a sweet & sour soup, but my version of sweet &
sour sauce contains the following (in quantities that vary according
to taste):
Honey - tablespoon or more
Cider vinegar - tablespoon or more
Soy sauce - a dash
Arrowroot (to thicken) - teaspoon or more
Pineapple chunks - as many as you want
Gently heat the honey with a bit of vinegar, add more vinegar as
necessary until the honey goes runny. Throw in the pineapple chunks,
leave to simmer for a short while, taste and adjust sweetness/sourness
with honey/vinegar. When the goo you're left with tastes all right,
add a little soy sauce, to make the sauce taste/look darker. Stir
a teaspoon or more of arrowroot in a cup with a dribble of water,
and add to the simmering sauce. Add more arrowroot if you want
to thicken the sauce some more.
Your sauce should then be ready. I then add some ready-cooked
vegetables, stir, and serve. For soup I should imagine you add some
water as well.
John.
|
275.4 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Mon Jul 14 1986 13:50 | 14 |
| RE: .0
Is the problem with the recipe you have with the consistency of the soup
being too thick, or with the color of the soup being wrong?
Consistency problems can be fixed by varying the amount of cornstarch used,
or by eliminating it entirely.
Beef broth should never be used in hot and sour soup (flavor is too assertive).
The color can be changed by adding soy sauce, or by using Chinkiang malt
vinegar (which is a dark brown color) instead of cider vinegar or rice
vingear.
--PSW
|
275.5 | Note #139 | USMRW1::RSCHAVONE | | Tue Jul 15 1986 09:49 | 4 |
| There is a recipe for sweet & sour soup that uses beef broth at
note # 139.
Ray
|
275.7 | It's all in the salt | KESTRL::CLOUSER | Always trying to do something annoying | Tue Nov 04 1986 17:21 | 14 |
| > The basic problem had more to do with color than consistency.
> The tips contained in these answers will undoubtedly help to solve
> this problem.
Sorry for the late reply; couldn't resist throwing in my 2� worth... I recently
made hot and sour soup, from a recipe much like Charlotte posted in .2, and made
the same observation that you did: the color was much lighter than that soup I
was used to, though my soup tasted every bit as good as the restaurant variety.
A few days later I had a bowl of the latter, and the difference in color bacame
clear: They must use easily two or three times the amount of soy sauce. (This
must also account for the fact that I've never been able to get fried rice as
dark, either.)
/john
|
275.8 | dark brown color is from molasses soy | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Nov 05 1986 12:41 | 5 |
| Restaurant fried rice usually has molasses soy (=thick soy) in it;
that is why it is so brown. Also why it is too salty! I have seen
hot and sour soup recipes that call for it, also, so if you can
handle the sodium (not on my diet) and like it that way, go ahead
and use it.
|
275.9 | ..rice color... | OLIVER::MEDVECKY | | Thu Nov 06 1986 07:52 | 5 |
| ..as for color in fried rice, we have had excellent results by adding
a little gravy master to the frying pan...try it, youll see the
difference...with no salt taste
Rick
|
275.10 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Thu Nov 06 1986 17:41 | 4 |
| Either gravy master or blackstrap molasses will do in a pinch in place of
thick soy sauce.
--PSW
|
275.11 | Two recipes in one | FOUNDR::DODIER | Single Income, Clan'o Kids | Wed Oct 25 1995 11:53 | 11 |
| Although an old note, I came across something of interest. The
recipe in 2319.7 (Adobe Chicken) produces a stock which is about as
close as I've ever tasted to a home made chinese hot & sour soup.
I thought the Adobe Chicken was excellent on it's own merits. There
is an abundant amount of sauce from this recipe. You could remove a lot
of it for a soup stock and still have plenty for the meal. All you'd
have to do is add your meat, vegetables, and possibly some hot chili
peppers to this and you'd have a prety good hot & sour soup.
Ray
|
275.12 | | SCAS01::SODERSTROM | Bring on the Competition | Wed Oct 25 1995 15:13 | 7 |
| .11
I also tried this recipe. A lot of sauce left over. I think, if you
take the cover off, you will get less. I'll try this next time.
|