Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Beef Curry Hong Kong Noodles (咖哩牛肉炒雲吞麵, Gaa3 Lei1 Ngau4 Juk6 Caau2 Wan4 Tan1 Min6)

Copyright © 2012 Douglas R. Wong, all rights reserved.
 
This recipe was updated on 19 Oct 2014. Some instructions and ingredient quantities were changed, and metric measurements added.
This dish uses Hong Kong style noodles together with Madras curry powder in a stir fry. Hong Kong noodles are thin egg noodles and the literal translation in Cantonese is wonton noodles. While there aren’t any wontons in this dish, these noodles are typically used together with wonton in a soup broth, hence their name, and that leads to no end of confusion if you use the literal translation. So you’ll find dishes named in English referring to thin egg noodles, Hong Kong style noodles, and even vermicelli (whose use isn’t quite correct). Needless to say, the noodles are just really thin and are really good in a stir fry.
Enjoy!

Monday, December 3, 2012

Roast Pork and Oyster Stir Fry (燒肉炒蠔, Sui1 Juk6 Caau2 Hou4)

Copyright © 2012 Douglas R. Wong, all rights reserved.
This recipe was updated on 05 Aug 2015. Some instructions and ingredient quantities were changed, and metric measurements added.
This dish is usually prepared in a clay pot, but since I don’t have one, I adapted this dish to use stir frying. The clay pot version is one of my favorites to order at a restaurant, so I was looking forward to making a stir fried version at home. The dish contains some of my favorite ingredients – roast pork (especially the crispy skin) and oysters.
Unless you’re a master at roasting whole pigs, you’ll probably (like me) go to your local Asian delicatessen where you can buy just 1-2 pounds of roast pork. Have the butcher cut the roast pork into pieces and you’ll also get one small container of a soy based dipping sauce with your order. The dipping sauce is slightly sweet, so it goes well with the roast pork. Any leftover roast pork not used in the dish can be used for other dishes (assuming you don’t eat the rest of the roast pork all by itself). I was lucky enough to get the roast pork while it was still hot, right after roasting, at the delicatessen. It was still so hot, that the butcher burned his fingers when he cut the first roast pork piece from the pig for me!
Enjoy!
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