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Archive for the ‘Asian’ Category

Thursday, July 15, 2010 @ 09:07 AM
Jan

I don’t get to read as much as I’d like these days – blogs being the exception, of course.  However, I’m slowly but surely making my way through Good Calories, Bad Calories by Gary Taubes (there’s a picture of a piece of toast topped with a pat of butter on the cover; I love it) and have read the introductions to The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved and Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal.  So while I’m appalled at the history behind how we’ve been convinced following a government-sanctioned diet is the right thing to do and alternately delighted by the thought that “eating well has become an act of civil disobedience” I am struggling with what to write about for my next Fight Back Friday post.  Do I continue with the ills of vegetable oils and segue into healthy animal fats, or do I jump into the fray that is the debate over raw milk?

I’m open to suggestions.

In the meantime, I give you this recipe for Beef and Green Bean Stir Fry.  Normally, my stir fries are of the “grab a bunch of stuff, hurl it in a pan and pray” variety; not so this one.  This one, in fact, is a huge pain in the tookus to prepare, but it is oh, so very good that it’s worth it (even if I only make it two or three times a year).  Based on a recipe by Barbara Fisher at her now-abandoned blog Tigers & Strawberries, it employs a method called “dry frying” which confuses me, because there’s nothing “dry” about it.  Dry frying involves frying thin strips of beef in “a moderate amount of oil” (or in my case, rendered beef tallow) for an extended period, cooking most of the moisture out of it – perhaps that’s why it’s referred to as dry?

Beats me – all I know is that the method of cooking gives a marvelous chewy texture and absolutely wonderful, well, beefy flavor.  Add to that some fresh green beans that are cooked in the beef-flavored fat for an extended period, leaving them with a wonderfully soft texture in contrast to the chewy beef, the addition of fresh ginger and other vegetables cut into matchstick-size pieces thrown in at the last minute and a spicy, savory “sauce” and you have what I consider to be the best darn stir-fry I’ve ever tasted.

The original recipe (Barbara is a professional chef, btw) calls for Sichuan chili bean paste, which I don’t normally keep on hand so I used red curry paste, which I always have on hand; she also uses Sichuan peppercorns and fresh chili peppers, something else I didn’t have when I made this last night, so I used dried pepper flakes and regular black peppercorns.  I throw in different vegetables, depending on what I have in the kitchen, although carrots and fresh ginger are a must as far as I’m concerned; last night I seeded and cut a lone yellow summer squash into little matchstick-sized pieces and slivered a good-size shallot because that’s what I had on hand.

You can, of course, serve this over steamed rice – I’ve tossed in cooked rice noodles before – but it is just fine on it’s own.

Note:  Shao Hsing wine is a Chinese cooking wine; you can find it in most Asian markets.  Barbara also warns to be cautious of flare-ups from drops of oil igniting or that the wine may catch fire while adding it to the wok but I’ve never had that happen.  Which is kind of disappointing.  It could be that I’m just not doing it right.

Beef and Green Been Stir Fry

Serves 4 to 6

1 lb. top round or flank steak cut into slices, then into thin strips

1/3 cup melted tallow, lard or vegetable oil

2/3 pound green beans, trimmed and cut into 2″ pieces

1/4 cup Shao Hsing wine or dry sherry

2 tablespoons red curry paste

pinch of salt

1 large shallot, peeled and slivered

1 two-inch piece of ginger, peeled and slivered

4 cloves of garlic, minced

1/4 teaspoon dried pepper flakes (optional)

2 carrots, peeled and cut into matchstick-size pieces

1 yellow summer squash, seeded and cut into matchstick-size pieces

1 tablespoon black peppercorns, crushed

1 tablespoon soy sauce

Heat your wok or large, heavy skillet over high heat until it until it begins to smoke. Add your fat or oil and heat for about a minute; add the beef.  Cook, stirring continuously, for about ten minutes; the fat/oil will become cloudy with the moisture from the beef.  Keep cooking until the moisture evaporates and the fat/oil becomes clear again and the meat sizzles and browns.

Remove the beef with a slotted spoon and set aside on a plate.

Add the green beans and cook, stirring continuously, until they are wrinkled and browned and becoming soft.  Add the beef back to the wok or skillet, and stir to combine.  Drizzle wine carefully around outer edge of wok or skillet, and stir. (It’s at this point that Barbara warns that the wine may catch fire; she says this is fine, just be prepared for it and stay out of the way of the flames – they should die down fairly quickly as the alcohol burns off.)

Add the curry paste and stir it into the beef/green bean mixture until it becomes nice and fragrant.  Add the salt, shallot, ginger, garlic and pepper flakes; stir fry, tossing it all about vigorously inside the wok or skillet. Add the carrots and squash and stir fry about another minute longer. Add soy sauce and peppercorns and stir fry for another minute.  Turn out onto a platter and serve (with steamed rice, if desired) immediately.

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Beef and Green Bean Stir Fry on Foodista

Thursday, May 13, 2010 @ 07:05 AM
Jan

No pictures of the Cincinnati Zoo yet – I’m still processing them.  So you get a recipe.

One that made Beloved say, “You can make this ALL the time!”

I love Thai curries – they are tasty and super simple to make.  So, I found myself with four tilapia loins (I prefer the loins, they are meatier and not quite as fragile as fillets), a can of coconut milk and several cans of Thai curry pastes the other night – and it was curry for dinner!

I know I promised that I wouldn’t throw a lot of recipes at you that required special ingredients, so while I used coconut oil in this dish, you can use vegetable or olive oil; clarified butter would work well, too.  You’ll still get plenty of coconut flavor from the coconut milk (use “light” coconut milk  if you must, but the dish won’t be quite as rich as I like).

Serve it over steamed jasmine rice, or do what I did – grate half a head of cauliflower and steam it, covered, in the microwave with a couple of tablespoons of water for 7 or 8 minutes.  It was an interesting and tasty base for this wonderfully spicy dish.

Coconut Curry Fish

Coconut Curry Fish

serves 3 – 4

4 tilapia loins, about 4 oz. each, or other mild white fish

salt and pepper

1/2 yellow onion, thinly sliced

2 cloves garlic, minced

1/3 red bell pepper, cut into thin strips

1/3 green bell pepper, cut into thin strips

1/4 cup coconut oil or vegetable oil, divided

1 to 2 tablespoons red curry paste, depending on how spicy you want it

1 can coconut milk

1 cup chicken or fish broth

1 tablespoon fish sauce

2 teaspoons sugar or Splenda

Season the tilapia with salt and pepper.

Heat a large, deep skillet over high heat until nearly smoking; add 3 tablespoons of the coconut or vegetable oil.  Fry the fish until nearly cooked through, about 2 – 3 minutes on each side.  Remove from the skillet and set aside.

Discard the pan juices that have accumulated in the skillet and return it to the heat; add the remaining tablespoon of oil.  Reduce the heat to medium low, add the onions to the skillet and cook until they begin to soften, about 3 or 4 minutes.  Add the garlic and peppers, and cook for another 2 or 3 minutes, or until the peppers are tender-crisp.  Remove the vegetables from the skillet and reserve with the fish.

Increase the heat slightly and add the curry paste to the skillet; fry, stirring constantly, for about 30 seconds or until it becomes fragrant.  Add the chicken or fish broth, coconut milk, fish sauce and sugar or Splenda,  stirring well after each addition.  Return the fish and vegetables to the skillet, spooning the curry sauce over it, and heat for another 2 – 3 minutes, until the fish is cooked through and flakes easily with a fork.

Serve immediately in wide, shallow bowls.

Thursday, August 27, 2009 @ 04:08 PM
Jan

tuna_tropical_salsaI have been so busy that it was 3:30 before I realized I hadn’t posted anything today; I guess it doesn’t hurt that I worked until midnight last night and was up by 4 a.m. this morning working some more.  Which is as good an explanation as any for why I haven’t commented on any blogs today (stupid life, interfering with my fun).  Then I had a moment of panic because I couldn’t recall what I had planned to post today – until I remembered that it is Travel Tip Thursday over at Pseudo’s place.

I don’t have anything travel related today, not that I can just whip up and throw out there, but I do have an interesting recipe.  Psuedo’s post is about Roy’s Restaurants – Roy Yamaguchi is a world-renowned chef who has almost single-handedly defined Hawaiian/Asian/Fusion cuisine.  I could be exaggerating, but I don’t think so.  He has a restaurant on every major island and for Beloved and I, no trip to Hawaii is complete without a visit to Roy’s.

This recipe was inspired by Roy’s classic appetizer, Blackened Ahi with Soy Mustard Sauce (Ahi is, of course, that deeply red tuna that is so good as sashimi).  It’s a superb dish, but I really like mangoes, so I accompany it with a sweet and spicy salsa.  The tuna is best quickly seared, and served very rare.

Blackened Ahi with Mango Salsa

serves 2

2 sashimi-grade Ahi filets, about 4 – 5 oz. each

Blackening Seasoning:

1 1/2 tablespoons paprika

1/2 tablespoon ground cayenne pepper

1/2 tablespoon pure red chile powder

1/4 tablespoon freshly ground white pepper

Mango Salsa

1 ripe mango, peeled, seeded and diced

1 tablespoon sugar

1/3 cup finely diced red onion

1 – 2 jalapeno peppers, seeded and minced

1 tablespoon fresh lime juice

1/3 cup fresh cilantro, finely chopped

In a medium, non-reactive bowl, sprinkle the sugar over the mango; stir well and refrigerate for 30 minutes to an hour.  Stir in the onion, jalapenos and lime juice; cover and refrigerate for at least one additional hour, to allow the flavors to blend.  Stir in the cilantro just before serving.

Mix all of the blackening spices together on a plate, and dredge the ahi on all sides.  Heat a lightly oiled cast iron skillet until nearly smoking and sear the tuna over high heat until desired doneness (about 15 – 30 seconds per side for rare; about 1 minute each side for medium-rare).

To serve, thinly slice and arrange the tuna on two plates; garnish each serving with about 1/4 cup of the salsa.  Serve immediately.

Friday, July 24, 2009 @ 05:07 AM
Jan

Thai Green CurryI have a new reader who, when seeing the picture of the cheese bread I posted Wednesday, asked me, “Do you post recipes?”

I’ve been known to.

Then I got another comment from a long-time reader asking for a good curry recipe.  I emailed her back and said, “Indian or Thai?”

She responded with a resounding, “Either one!”

Oh, well – y’all are just going to play right into my chubby little hands, aren’t you?

So, you’re getting a – gasp! – recipe for Thai Green Curry.

I absolutely love Asian food.  You could stick me in an area where the only food available is Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Vietnamese, Korean and Cambodian and I’d be perfectly happy.  One of the biggest disappointments of moving to Podunk is that there are so few quality Asian restaurants anywhere near where we live and no good Thai restaurants at all, so I’ve had to learn to cook it myself.

I am very, very fond of spicy Thai curries.  Green curries are typically the hottest, followed by red and yellow curries – if you’re not a “hot head” go for a red or yellow curry paste and be judicious when adding it to the recipe.  If you like it spicy, go with the green curry paste and add the full two tablespoons.

This is also a very basic recipe – I typically use chicken when cooking it, but you can opt for a firm fish, shrimp, beef or tofu for a vegetarian/vegan dish.  There are no vegetables in this particular recipe because it is basic, so feel free to add whatever you like – it’s particularly good with fresh red and green bell peppers, or thinly sliced carrots and crisp, fresh green beans.  And serve it with lots and lots of jasmine rice to soak up the delicious sauce.

Yum, yum.

Thai Green Curry

serves 8

1 – 2 tablespoons peanut oil

2 pounds uncooked boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cubed into bite-size pieces

1 cup thinly sliced onion

1 to 2 tablespoons Thai green curry paste

1 14-ounce can unsweetened coconut milk

1 cup low-sodium chicken broth

3 tablespoons Thai fish sauce (nam pla)

2 teaspoons sugar

1 cup diced plum tomatoes

1 cup chopped green onions (about 8 small)

Chopped fresh cilantro

Lime wedges

Heat peanut oil in heavy large skillet or wok over medium-high heat. Add chicken and stir-fry until it starts to lose it’s pink, 3 or 4 minutes.  Add sliced onion; stir-fry until soft and beginning to brown, about another 4 minutes.

Add any other vegetables and stir-fry until tender crisp, 2 – 4 minutes depending on the vegetables.

Reduce heat to medium. Add curry paste; stir until fragrant, about 1 minute. Add coconut milk, chicken broth, fish sauce, and sugar; bring to boil.

Remove from heat and transfer curry to large shallow bowl. Garnish with tomatoes, green onions and cilantro. Serve, passing lime wedges separately.

And have a lovely weekend, y’all.

Friday, July 17, 2009 @ 08:07 AM
Jan

Asian Lettuce WrapsOh, lookie here – a recipe.  I haven’t posted a recipe all week.

Have I ever mentioned that I love the lettuce wraps at P. F. Chang’s?

I love the lettuce wraps at P. F. Chang’s.

This recipe is my attempt to make them at home.  It’s based on a recipe in a cookbook I have for 15 minute meals, so it’s quick and easy to make, and if you use extra-lean ground turkey – the kind that’s 99% fat free – it’s a lot healthier than the restaurant dish in terms of calories and grams of fat.  Also, if you’re worried about the sugar, you can substitute Splenda® with marvelous results.  Don’t use Equal® or aspartame – it simply doesn’t hold up well to heat.

I’ve also substituted the ground chicken with cooked, leftover chicken and only stir-fry it enough to heat it through before adding the vegetables and sauce – it’s an even quicker dish this way.

This is a really good summer-time recipe, and is one of Miss Jacki’s favorites.  And it more than makes up for the fact that there is no P. F. Chang’s in Podunk.

Asian Lettuce Wraps

serves 2 to 3 as a main course or 4 to 6 as an appetizer

8 ounce can water chestnuts, drained

1 cup sliced mushrooms

5 green onions, white and pale green parts, cut into 2 or 3 pieces each

6 peeled baby carrots

3 tablespoons soy sauce

2 tablespoons sugar

3 cloves garlic, crushed

1 ½ teaspoons rice vinegar

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

1 pound ground chicken

Iceburg lettuce, leaves separated into “cup” sized pieces

Place the water chestnuts, mushrooms, green onions and carrots into food processor with the S-blade in place.  Pulse just enough to chop everything to a medium consistency.

Combine soy sauce, sugar, garlic and rice vinegar.  Set aside.

Heat the oil in a large skillet over high heat.  Add the chicken and stir-fry, breaking it up as it cooks.  When about half of the pink is gone from the chicken, add the chopped vegetables and stir-fry everything together for a few more minutes.  When the chicken is cooked through, stir in the soy sauce mixture and let everything cook for a couple of more minutes, until the liquid evaporates just a little and the sauce coats the chicken and vegetables.

Wrap spoonfuls of the meat mixture in lettuce leaves and eat them by hand.

And have a lovely weekend, y’all.