T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3256.1 | Hot oil | CHIEFF::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Oct 08 1991 13:59 | 5 |
| Hot oil or chile oil can be used as a condiment at the table. It only
takes a few drops to spice up a dish. You can find it in the oriental
food sections of the supermarket or make your own by heating oil and
adding dried chiles. Cook the chiles for 5 minutes or so, then allow
to cool and transfer to a container for storage.
|
3256.2 | | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Oct 08 1991 16:35 | 4 |
| Joyce Chen carries a brand of chili oil that is made with sesame oil. It is
red, and is called SATE OIL. It is the HOTTEST hot oil I've ever bought or
made. It comes in a tall thin plastic bottle, and how the stuff manages not
to dissolve the plastic is beyond me...
|
3256.3 | Chili puree | ISLNDS::AREANO | Never a dull moment | Tue Oct 08 1991 17:10 | 5 |
| Many specialty stores also carry a "Chile Puree with Garlic" that is
great! Looks like a course red relish. Great on chicken, seafood,
burgers, rice, veggies, etc.
Paul
|
3256.4 | Remove "hers" and cook to blend flavors in "yours" | TNPUBS::STEINHART | | Wed Oct 09 1991 09:23 | 25 |
| Rather than adding the sauce at the table (unless you just need to
sprinkle on some chili oil), I would recommend removing your daughter's
portion from the wok and then creating the sauce with the food
remaining in the wok, for your portion. By cooking the sauce with the
food, the flavors blend better. This will also let your daughter's
portion cool a little, which she probably likes anyway, while your
portion is cooking.
You may want to make a basic, bland sauce while the whole recipe is in
the wok, then remove her's and spice the remainder. A basic, bland
Chinese-style sauce would require: In a jar shake 1/2 cup cold water
and 1 teaspoon cornstarch, with soy sauce to taste (plus ginger and a
dash of sherry for traditional Cantonese flavor, and green onions
cooked in the dish). Pour cornstarch/water/flavoring mixture over
contents of wok, stir well, simmer to thicken.
I'm familiar with this type of problem. My husband doesn't like
onions. I pre-cook the onions, remove them with a slotted spoon, cook
the rest of the stir-fry, remove his portion, and mix the onions into
my portion which I cook briefly before serving.
It's an easy problem to solve, compared with "his" and "hers" stews or
soups.
Laura
|
3256.5 | mongolian fire oil | EVMS::YACKEL | | Wed Oct 30 1991 15:41 | 6 |
|
I typically use " Mongolian Fire Oil " when I stir fry. It's not as hot
as it sounds and you can find it at Shaws. It is best to your favorite
cooking oil and add the mongolian fire oil to it while cooking.
Dan
|
3256.6 | Make ANYTHING taste Mongolian | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Thu Oct 31 1991 09:27 | 3 |
| Hi, Dan! I use this stuff from time to time too. However, note that
it has a very strong flavor. If you use enough, it doesn't matter what
kind of food you put it on. It all tastes the same!
|
3256.7 | Argo Corn Starch Stir-Fry Sauce? | CUPMK::BONDE | | Wed May 26 1993 12:58 | 13 |
| Does anyone happen to have the recipe for stir-fry sauce from the back
of the Argo Corn Starch box? I just finished a box and threw it away
without thinking; the new box doesn't have the recipe, of course.
There's no consumer hotline 800 number available, so I can't call the
company to get the recipe.
The recipe produced a reasonably good stir-fry sauce, and didn't
require much in the way of prep time (probably the real reason I like it).
If your brand of cornstarch is Argo, could you please check the back of
the box to see if yours has the stir fry sauce recipe on the back?
Thanks in advance -- Sue
|
3256.8 | Did you find it? | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Tue Aug 22 1995 13:11 | 4 |
| re: .7
Did you ever retrieve this recipe? How does it compare to some of
the stir fry sauces on the market now?
|
3256.9 | Nope, never recovered the original | PAMSRC::XHOST::BONDE | | Tue Aug 22 1995 13:44 | 22 |
| RE: .8
No, I never did find the original recipe. I devised my own based on my
memory of the original. The proportions might be slightly off, but
it's very close.
How does it stack up against bottled sauces? Well, it ends up being a
tradeoff. I don't use bottled sauces because they're way too salty for
my tastes. I can control the amount of salt better with my own recipe.
But it seems that when you remove most of the salt from a Chinese
stir-fry sauce (by using low-salt tamari and low-sodium broth), you
reduce the intensity of flavor as well.
I do use the recipe every time I stir-fry--it's a good, basic sauce. I
noodle around with the ingredients a bit, trying different things to
boost the flavor without adding more tamari/soy. F'rinstance, I've
found that beef broth makes the sauce more flavorful than chicken
broth. But I haven't had that "Eureka!" moment yet, though... :^)
I'll try to remember to bring in the recipe and post it.
Sue
|
3256.10 | Looking for good Chinese Stir Fry sauces | MPGS::HEALEY | Karen Healey, VIIS Group, SHR3 | Wed Aug 23 1995 11:40 | 23 |
|
I've always had a problem creating a good chinese stir fry sauce.
I like the hot and spicy myself but whatever I make just does not
come out like I can get in the chinese restaurants. Many times,
its too hot and you can't really taste the food. Other times, its
too salty, or not salty enough.
I really like chicken with garlic sauce but I've tried everything
and just cannot recreate it. I'm beginning to think part of my
problem is that I don't use fresh garlic. I use the stuff in a jar
and I think it must not taste the same.
Anybody have any good stir fry sauces they can post here? Spicy,
of course!
I make a pretty good Kung Pao chicken from this notes file last
night... I modified it so as not to deep fry the chicken and peanuts.
Again, it was too salty, but I think it might be because I used
salted, not unsalted peanuts and didn't reduce the salt elsewhere
to compensate.
Karen
|
3256.11 | chicken or pork/garlic sauce | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Wed Aug 23 1995 12:44 | 2 |
| .10 Karen, have you seen the recipe in 368.78? I haven't tried it,
but it sounds good.
|
3256.12 | | GEMGRP::gemnt3.zko.dec.com::winalski | PLIT happens... | Wed Aug 23 1995 13:55 | 10 |
| RE: .10
Ideally, the peanuts for Kung Pao should be raw and unsalted. It's
hard to find raw peanuts in conventional grocery stores, but most
oriental markets carry them. If you have to use pre-roasted peanuts,
I would go with unsalted, dry-roasted nuts. Otherwise, as you
discovered, the dish comes out too salty, and it's hard to
compensate for that.
--PSW
|
3256.13 | | MPGS::HEALEY | Karen Healey, VIIS Group, SHR3 | Wed Aug 23 1995 14:03 | 12 |
| re: .11
Thanks... how did you happen to find that!
re: .12
Yeah, I know... I just happened to have these on hand.
You sound like you cook a Chinese... got any good sauces
to share?
Karen
|
3256.14 | garlic sauce | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Wed Aug 23 1995 15:10 | 7 |
| >> <<< Note 3256.13 by MPGS::HEALEY "Karen Healey, VIIS Group, SHR3" >>>
>> Thanks... how did you happen to find that!
looked up "garlic" in the directory note (5). found it was
note 368. did a dir 368.*. et voila.
|
3256.15 | I make this with chicken and no water chestnuts | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Wed Aug 23 1995 15:11 | 89 |
| The actual translation for this dish is, "Pork in the Style of Fish," which
simply means that the sauce was originally used for fish dishes. I found 3
versions that were basically the same. I am posting the one from, "Mrs.
Chiang's Szechwan Cookbook," Ellen Schrecker, Harper and Row.
"... Mrs. Chiang's version of this famous disk features an equally unusual
interplay of textures. She gets it by adding fresh water chestnuts and tree
ears to the pork shreds and chopped ginger and garlic. The combination lets you
experience crunchy, gelatinous, fibrous, and soft textures all in one mouthful.
Do not use canned water chestnuts in this dish. If fresh ones are unavailable,
leave them out. The texture me be less intriguing, but the taste will be
authentic. It will also be hot. Some Szechwanese dishes are more fiery than
others; this is one of them. It can be toned down somewhat by reducing the
amount of hot pepper flakes in oil. Don't omit them though; "yuxiang rousi"
should be hot.
PREPARATION
3 medium pork chops Remove all the fat and bone from the pork and slice
(for a yield of 3/4 it into very thin shreds, 2 inches long and 1/8
pound meat, approx.) inch thick, or about the size and shape of a wooden
matchstick. (It is always easier to cut meat into very
fine slices if you first put it in the freezer for
about 10 minutes, until it is slightly stiff, but
not frozen.)
4 scallions Clean the scallions; then cut them (both green part
and white) into shreds about the same size as the pork.
(pork) Take half of the scallion shreds and put them in a bowl
1/4 teaspoon salt with pork shreds. Add the salt, sesame oil, and ground
1 teaspoon sesame oil roasted Szechwan peppercorns to the meat and scallions.
roasted Szechwan
peppercorns
1/8 cup dried tree ears Put the tree ears in a small bowl, pour boiling water
1 cup boiling water over them, and let them soak for at least 10 minutes.
1-1/2 inch piece ginger Peel the ginger and the garlic and mince them together
4 cloves garlic very fine, until they almost reach the consistency of
farina.
5 water chestnuts Cut off the dark outside part of the water chestnuts
(optional) and chop them into tiny pieces the size of a match
head. (The water chestnuts should not be minced quite
as fine as the ginger and garlic.)
(tree ears) Before you drain the tree ears, make sure that they
have become soft and slightly gelatinous, Then rinse
them thoroughly and pick them over carefully to remove
any impurities, such as little pieces of wood, that
may still be embedded in them. Slice the tree ears into
shreds approximately the same size as the pork and
scallion shreds.
1 teaspoon cornstarch Combine the cornstarch and water, then add to the pork
1 teaspoon water mixture and stir thoroughly.
COOKING
3 tablespoons peanut Heat your wok or pan over a fairly high flame for
oil for 15 seconds, then pour in the oil. It will be
hot enough to cook with when the first tiny bubbles
form and a few small wisps of smoke appear.
(garlic, ginger) When the oil is ready, quickly add the ginger, garlic,
1-1/2 teaspoons hot hot pepper paste, hot pepper flakes in oil, tree ears,
pepper paste water chestnuts, scallions, sugar, and, finally the meat
1-1/2 teaspoons hot mixture. As you throw in the various ingredients,
pepper flakes in oil agitate them around in the bottom of the pan with your
(tree ears, water cooking shovel or spoon so that the little pieces of
chestnuts, and ginger, garlic, and water chestnuts cook without
scallions) burning. Then stir-fry everything together, using your
1/2 teaspoon granulated shovel or spoon in a scooping motion to toss the
sugar ingredients around in the pan so all are equally exposed
(pork and marinade) to the hot oil. If the mixture seems too dry and is
1 Tablespoon water, is sticking to the pan, add a little water to it.
approximately Continue to stir-fry the pork shreds until they are
(optional) thoroughly cooked; they will have stiffened and turned
pale. This whole process should take only about 3-1/2
minutes.
1/4 teaspoon rice wine Add the vinegar and mix thoroughly; then taste for
vinegar. salt and serve immediately.
Salt to taste
|
3256.16 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Wed Aug 23 1995 15:15 | 4 |
|
.15 um.... yeah, that's the one in 368.78. why repost it?
ah well - sigh. ;>
|
3256.17 | | GEMGRP::gemnt3.zko.dec.com::winalski | PLIT happens... | Fri Aug 25 1995 14:21 | 8 |
| RE: .13
Yes, I cook Chinese quite a bit. I don't have any sauce recipes to
share per se. In Chinese cooking, sauces aren't really a separate
entity. They get created along the way as an integral part of the
dish.
--PSW
|
3256.18 | | NEWVAX::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Fri Aug 25 1995 14:33 | 14 |
| re: .13
I also cook a lot of Chinese food and agree with Paul, sauces generally
aren't made ahead of time, but happen as part of the cooking. I'd
recommend that you endeavor to find a good cookbook or two on the subject.
My first Chinese cookbook (and still one of my favorites) as "The Good
Food of Szechwan" by Robert Delfs. I highly recommend it if you can find
it (and if you like hot Chinese food, of course). Szechwan is one of the
easier Chinese cuisines to start with, as the dishes tend to be relatively
simple. Delf lays out his recipes in a simple uncomplicated way that
doesn't overwhelm the beginner. Also, I kind of liked the Brechtian pun
in the title. :-)
-Hal
|