Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Oyster Sauce Beef with Broccoli (蠔油西蘭花牛肉, Hou4 Jau4 Sai1 Laan4 Faa1 Ngau4 Juk6)

Copyright © 2014 Douglas R. Wong. All rights reserved.
This dish is a Chinese-American standard, with the basic ingredients being beef, broccoli, and oyster sauce. The oyster sauce gives the dish its signature taste and can be the only element used in the sauce. You can buy broccoli florets instead of a whole broccoli head. I use the microwave to pre-cook the broccoli before stir frying to reduce the cooking time. Microwaved broccoli is wet, which helps with the heat transfer and browning (you’ll still have to add some liquid to help the cooking), so the stir frying will go much quicker.
Enjoy!

Monday, January 13, 2014

Bak Kut Teh (Pork Bone Soup) (肉骨茶, Juk6 Gwat1 Caa4)

Copyright © 2014 Douglas R. Wong, all rights reserved.
This recipe was updated on 30 Jun 2015. Some instructions and ingredient quantities were changed.
I had this dish at my local Singapore/Malaysian restaurant. It was so good, I wanted to make it myself, and so I went to my local Asian market and found a prepared packet of spices to make this dish. As I read the recipes on the Internet for this dish, I realized that there is no one way and just about any ingredient can be used to make this dish. The package of spices I bought is actually made in Taiwan, so I’ll have to try other brands in the future and contrast the taste of the soups.
The literal translation of the Chinese name for this dish is meat bone tea. There’s no tea involved in making this dish and is commonly made with pork spareribs. I also saw recipes using cut-up chicken, which I would like to try using in the future. A whole rack of spareribs would be too much, so fortunately my supermarket sells portions of a rack which weigh about 2 lbs. (1 kg.). You need clean and parboil the cut up pork before cooking it in the soup so that the finished broth is clear.
Enjoy!

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Shrimp with Crab Sauce (Haai5 Zap1 Haa1, 蟹汁蝦)

Copyright © 2014 Douglas R. Wong. All rights reserved.
Shrimp in Lobster Sauce is a standard dish that you’ll find at Cantonese restaurants. Since I was fresh out of lobster, I substituted Dungeness crab in its place. You make this dish backwards. By that I mean for most stir fry dishes, the meat is cooked first, then the vegetables, and finally the sauce. Since this dish only requires the vegetables to be stir fried, the baby bok choy gets cooked first, then the sauce, and finally the meat. The shrimp is cooked by the heat of the sauce, so a thick sauce is made using the crab and eggs after the vegetables are cooked. The sauce can be made using chicken stock, but since I had lobster stock, I used that. The lobster stock was made using the Lobster Noodles (Lung4 Haa1 Min6, 龍蝦麵) recipe.
Enjoy!

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Lobster Noodles (龍蝦麵, Lung4 Haa1 Min6)

Copyright © 2014 Douglas R. Wong. All rights reserved.
Happy New Year! For the first dish of the New Year, here’s a lobster noodle dish. The traditional recipe puts the cooked lobster pieces with the shell over a bed of cooked noodles using a chicken stock based sauce. This recipe is differs from the traditional in three major techniques, the first being stir frying the ingredients like a chow mein dish, the second being using shelled lobster meat, and the third being a sauce made from lobster stock to further emphasize the lobster flavor. The stock is made by boiling the lobster shells after removing the meat. Any lobster stock not used in this recipe can be used in other dishes.
I found that using kitchen shears is the best way to remove the meat from the lobster shells, especially the small legs that contain that hard to get at lobster meat. If a whole lobster is too much of a challenge, you can substitute lobster tails. Since I’d rather eat lobster without having to pick out the shells, I remove the meat from the shells before cooking. The cooked lobster shells provide a deep red color to the traditional dish, but I’d rather eat the lobster than look at it.
Enjoy!
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