Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Mussels in Champagne sauce (Pinot Grigio)

 二人份量 (for 2 ppl)


青口1.5公斤 - 1.5kg of mussels

蒜四瓣 - 4 cloves of garlic (sliced)

紅蔥頭一個 - 1 shallot (diced)

茴香一個 - 1 bulb of fennel slice

番荽10克 - 10g of parsley

煙燻火腿80克 - 80g of Speck (or smoked bacon)

香檳兩杯 - 2 cups of champagne

牛油20克 - 20g of butter


Wash and clean mussels. Pull out the beard

Medium heat. Heat up pan and then add oil. Heat oil in pan for a bit. Add chopped garlic and shallots and saute for 2 mins.

Next  add the bacon and cook for 2 minutes.

Then add the fennel and saute for another minute.

Add in the 2 cups of wine and let cook for 2 mins to let alcohol evaporate.

Add 20g of butter and stir well.

Then add in mussels. Stir mussels and cover and cook for at least 4 minutes.

One last stir of the mussels to make sure all are open. Then add parsley, stir. Done


Mussels in White Wine Paprika Cream Sauce


材料(4人份):

活青口  1kg

洋蔥(切粒)  半隻

紅蔥頭(切片)  5粒

忌廉 (whipping cream)  200 毫升

燻紅椒粉  1茶匙

白酒  100 毫升

勺草  少許 (伴襯用)


Ingredients(serves 4):

live mussels  1kg

Dice onion  1/2 pcs

slice shallots  5 pcs

whipping cream 200ml

smoked paprika 1tsp

white wine 100ml

dill some

In low heat, saute shallot and onions for 3 mins. 

Add 100 ml of white wine. Cover and cook 5 mins. 

Add mussels and stir. Cover and cook for 2 mins under medium heat.

Add 200 ml of whipping cream.

Add 1 teaspoon of smoked paprika.

Cover and cook 2-3 mins until mussels all open.





Chicken breast - http://oniyomeryori.blogspot.com/

Chicken breast:

1. Marinate Chicken breast with a little salt, pepper, and 1 teaspoon smoked paprika for 10 mins.

2. Place chicken in a small pot, put enough water to cover 1/3 of chicken breast. Bring water to a boil, put lid on and lower fire to small for 5 mins. Then turn off fire and leave covered for 5 mins. Remove and rest before cutting.


做法:雞胸以少量水先煮後焗,夠嫩滑。

1)雞胸以少量鹽、胡椒粉及1茶匙燻紅椒粉醃10分鐘。
2)小鍋加入蓋過雞胸肉1/3的水和雞胸,水滾起後轉小火加蓋煮5分鐘,再焗5分鐘,放涼後切片

Kra Paw Moo - Thai basil pork

http://oniyomeryori.blogspot.com/2020/03/kra-paw-moo.html


打拋肉碎煎蛋 (Kra Paw‭ ‬Moo)《附食譜》


我的 No 1 最愛泰菜,泰國人的 comfort food, 香辣惹味,撈飯一流!打拋是指 Kra Paw, 一種泰國的羅勒,叫 Holy Basil,跟一般泰式羅勒和台灣九層塔不同,走指天椒就是無辣版,小孩都食到。


材料(2人份):
免治豬肉 ‭ 300克
蒜蓉 ‭ ‬½ 湯匙
指天椒或鳥眼辣椒 ‭ ‬1-2隻
打拋‭(‬Holy Basil‭)‬ ‭ ‬約30片

調味料:
魚露 ‭1湯匙
生抽 ‭1茶匙
老抽 ‭2茶匙
蠔油 ‭2茶匙
糖‭ ‬ ‭ ‬ ‭ ‬2茶匙

製法:
1)中火預熱炒鍋30秒,下油預熱1分鐘,下蒜蓉、指天椒或鳥眼辣,炒香約30秒
2)下免治豬肉和所有調味料,大火快炒約4分鐘
3)熄火,加入打拋拌勻上碟

4‭) ‬ 煎鍋加油,中大火煎蛋,泰式做法是用大量的油,來炸太陽蛋

對泰菜有興趣,可以找我的《泰美味鬼煮意》來看,60道簡單美味的泰菜,自己煮無難度。



小貼士:
1. 可用雞肉代替豬肉
2. 打拋不用炒,否則受熱過久會變色,影響賣相和味道
3. 怕辣可以把指天椒去籽,或以不辣的大椒代替
4. 無打拋,用一般羅勒也可,只是風味略有不同

打拋肉碎煎蛋飯 (Kra Paw Moo Kai Dao)

幾個小技巧,一點都不難。
1. 炒鑊要夠熱,鑊不能太小,水份蒸發得快,才不會越炒越水
2. 夠熱才快熟,鎖住肉汁,避免炒太久,肉汁流失
3. 先以小碗拌勻調味汁,快手炒勻,肉碎才不會黏成一團,炒不散
4. 一個字,快,快,快,好快有得食!


Three ginger chicken drumstick rice - 三薑雞脾焗

 

材料(2-3人份):
雞脾   2隻
米  1.5杯(米量杯)

醃雞脾調味料:
沙薑粉  1/2湯匙
南薑粉  1/2湯匙 
黃薑粉  1茶匙
魚露  1/2湯匙
花雕酒  1湯匙

米飯調味料:
沙薑粉  1茶匙
南薑粉  1茶匙 
黃薑粉  1茶匙
魚露  1/2湯匙
花雕酒  1湯匙

製法:
1) 雞脾拌勻「醃雞調味料」,醃1小時

2) 「米飯調味料」勻和水,至1.5杯滿 (米量杯),米和調味水加進鍋內,中大火煮至水滾,攪拌3-4次,約3分鐘,轉小火加蓋煮2分鐘


3) 鋪上雞脾,加蓋,中火煮3分鐘,轉細火煮15分鐘,熄火焗5分鐘



小貼士:
1) 雞脾較大難熟,要多點時間煮
2)今次不想要飯焦,轉細火後,保持電爐2度就足夠


Red Wine braised oxtail - 紅酒蕃茄燉牛尾

http://oniyomeryori.blogspot.com/2013/05/blog-post_4.html

 聖誕好煮意:紅酒蕃茄燉牛尾 (附食譜)



紅酒蕃茄燉牛尾也是一個不錯的派對佳餚, 可前一天做好,吃時加熱,過夜更入味,肉質更軟稔,今次也是第一天煮了2小時,第二天再煮2小時,好吃得不得了~ 牛尾其實不難煮,要的只是時間,材料也不算難買,香草也可以用乾的,牛湯也可以用湯粒,價錢比較親民也不怕用剩浪費,紅酒剩了也可以入雪櫃再慢慢用。


來了曼谷後,這是第二次吃牛尾,一來牛尾不常看到,有的話樣子也非常 Sorry, 實在買不下手,前幾天看到這肉質鮮嫩的澳洲牛尾,雖然800g 要 hkd200,比較貴,但實在太想太想吃了~  實情也真的非常好吃,不用半小時已吃光了,剩下的汁也不捨得倒掉,留起來煮意粉。

這是茄味較濃的版本,紅酒量不多,味道較鮮甜,大人小孩也會喜歡呢。此食譜用來煮牛肉、牛腩、牛肋條、牛面肉也可以。紅酒不一定只煮牛,不吃牛,煮雞也可以,叫做「Coq au Vin」、煮豬肋骨也一樣可以,但燉煮時間要再調節。

 

材料(二人份):
牛尾     800g
洋蔥     1 個
甘荀     2條
蕃茄     3隻
啡蘑菇     12粒
百厘香     3條(或1湯匙乾的)
迷迭香     3條 (或1湯匙乾的)
紅酒   100ml
切粒罐裝蕃茄     1罐

調味:
香葉     2片
茄膏     3湯匙
牛湯粒     1粒  
水     100ml
鹽及胡椒    少許


製法:
1) 凍水落牛尾,至水滾取出牛尾,以水洗淨(凍水落牛尾更能迫出雜質,連會引至尿酸過高的 Purine 也會迫出,比出水更健康,看到浮面的污物麻)



2) 甘荀蕃茄切大件, 洋蔥切粗條


3)鍋子燒滾100ml水,煮溶牛湯粒,加入牛尾、紅酒、罐裝蕃茄、洋蔥、甘荀、蕃茄、 香葉、茄膏、原條百厘香及迷迭香,拌勻,滾起後加蓋轉小火煮2.5小時,熄火焗半小時,如水份蒸發太快,便加水

4)平底鑊下牛油及蒜蓉、炒香啡蘑菇,約3分鐘,加入大鍋中,滾起後加蓋轉小火煮15分鐘


5)   最後隔去多餘油份,以鹽及胡椒來調味便成

6) 如果湯汁比較稀,可逐少加入麵粉拌勻,令湯汁濃稠

壓力煲製法:1)步驟(1)同上2) 壓力煲燒滾100ml水, 煮溶牛湯粒,加入牛尾、紅酒、罐裝蕃茄、洋蔥、甘荀、蕃茄、 香葉、蕃膏、原條百厘香及迷迭香,倒入紅酒,拌勻,蒸汽噴出後, 轉小火煲45分鐘((相等於3小時)3)  跟隨步驟(5)至(8)

小貼士:
1)用焗爐來炆也行,以140度焗3小時 ,加入啡蘑菇後再入焗爐焗15分鐘
2)這個可以早一天或一早整好,吃時再加熱,牛肉過夜會更入味
3)加西芹(4﹣5條)也可,不過我不吃西芹,所以沒加
4) 不用牛湯粒,用牛濃湯也可以,但要試味,牌子不同,濃淡不一
5) 如果牛尾比較大件,如我今次用的,便要再多煮30分鐘至1小時
6) 爐頭火力不同,鍋具特性有別,請視份量、實際情況和鍋具特性,調效火力和加減烹煮時間

Japanese Gyudon - 製吉野家牛肉飯




 

材料(2人份):

火鍋肥牛   400g

洋蔥(切條)  1隻

牛油   20g

蔥花  隨意


調味料:

日本醬油  1湯匙

味醂  1湯匙

鰹魚汁/冷麵汁   1湯匙 (或 鰹魚粉 5g)

砂糖 1湯匙

水  1湯匙


製法:

1)中火煮溶牛油,炒香洋蔥,約1分鐘

2) 加入所有調味料拌勻,加蓋,小火煮6分鐘

3) 加入牛肉,以筷子弄散,讓每一片都能均勻受熱,加蓋,小火煮3分鐘

4) 大碗盛白飯,放上牛肉和汁,灑點蔥花即成


Saturday, February 19, 2022

Miso Salmon

 Miso Salmon

6-8 oz salmon fillets ( 1 inch thick)

1/4 cup miso paste

1/4 cup rice vinegar

1/4 cup sake

2 tablespoon light brown sugar

2 tablespoon sugar

1 tablespoon soy sauce

1 teaspoon freshly grated ginger

1/2 cup panko bread crumbs

Preheat oven to 400 degrees

In shallow dish, combine miso, rice vinegar, sake, light brown sugar, sugar, soy sauce and ginger to create marinade. Place salmon skin up into dish and marinade for at least 30 minutes and up to 2 hours.

Remove salmon and shake off excess marinade. Place fish meat up on baking fish or roasting pan lined with aluminum foil and bake for about 10-12 minutes. Toast bread crumbs in non-stick pan for about 2 minutes till golden brown and then sprinkle on top of salmon for about 2 minutes before fish is done. In small saucepan, warm the leftover marinade into a condensed sauce and drizzle on or around your salmon.

TIPS: If you don't want to bother with toasting the bread crumbs, you can sprinkle it on top of the salmon and then place your salmon under the broiler until the bread crumbs are golden brown.

MANY MISO: There are a variety of miso, ranging from white (or mild) to red (medium) or dark. The white miso is sweeter and holds less punch in cooking. Medium or red miso is the most versatile for cooking. Dark miso is stronger and is often used for soups or stews. My personal preference is to buy a blend of the white and red. The blend I have has a nice caramel color whose taste holds up well in marinade but isn't overpowering. 


Bun Thit Nuong (Rice Vermicelli with BBQ Pork)

 Bun Thit Nuong (1 serving)

Thit Nuong (BBQ pork)

1/4 lb pork shoulder (sliced thin)

2 gloves garlic (diced)

1/2 tbsp oyster sauce 

1 tbsp sugar

1 tbsp sake (Chinese rice wine preferably)

1 tbsp fish sauce

1 tbsp oil

1/4 tsp five spice or less

freshly ground pepper


Bun ( vermicelli noodles)

Rice noodle

fresh mint

cilantro

lettuce

bean sprouts

chopped peanuts 


Nuoc Mam (fish sauce)

Nuoc mam can be made ahead and stored in the fridge for over a month.

1/2 cup fish sauce

1/2 sugar

1 cup hot water

1-2 thai chili

2 cloves crushed garlic

1 slice of lime (add mote if you want)



Saturday, February 5, 2022

生炒糯米飯 - Stir fried glutinous rice

 高纖生炒糯米飯參考食譜】



材料:

糯米 2杯 

高纖增值版:紅米、糙米、小米、三色藜麥(Optional)

臘腸 2條

乾瑤柱,蝦米,蝦乾 各半碗·

冬菇 3-4隻(大)

芫茜,蔥 適量

紅蔥頭 2粒

蒜頭 1至2瓣

蛋 兩隻

鹽 少許

糖 少許

米酒 少許


調味:

上湯(浸冬菇/海味水,加鹽/鹽麴,糖,調味,可隨口味加少許胡椒粉)

生抽

少許米酒 (個人喜好,可不加)


步驟:

✅糯米洗淨浸三至四小時,瀝乾備用

✅粗糧米先浸一小時再以蒸爐蒸熟或用電飯煲煮熟備用 

✅雞蛋打好加鹽打勻,下鑊煎成蛋餅備用

✅臘腸/或其他臘味先飛一飛水,過一過油 瀝乾切粒備用

✅乾瑤柱,蝦米,蝦乾,冬菇等洗淨浸軟切粒備用

✅蔥頭芫茜頭切粒備用

✅蔥段芫茜切粒撕少塊備用

✅平底鑊不需落油先炒香臘味,再加其他材料如乾瑤柱,蝦米,蝦乾,冬菇炒香,可讚少少酒加添香味,盛起備用

✅原鑊加少許油加糯米炒香,再不斷逐少逐少加入上湯,炒香炒勻炒乾,再加湯,不斷重覆步驟至糯米飯9成熟透

✅加入粗糧米炒勻

✅加芫茜及蔥頭小粒及少許上湯冚蓋蒸熟多幾分鐘至糯米飯完全熟透 (務必一邊炒一邊觀察糯米飯成形情況)

✅揭蓋,加入調味,臘味,蔥段,芫茜,蛋絲炒勻可上碟



Friday, February 4, 2022

甜蜜蜜芋圓 - sweet potato balls

甜蜜蜜芋圓



材料: 芋頭 taro 蕃薯 sweet potato 紫色蕃薯 purple sweet potato 南瓜 japanese pumpkin 木薯粉 Tapioca Starch 水 water 原糖 sugar 步驟:
💜蕃薯南瓜等去皮洗淨印乾,切成細件或粒粒,明火或蒸爐100度蒸15分鐘。
💜蒸好趁熱將蕃薯等壓成蓉,可加適量糖調味,逐少加入木薯粉,搓成粉糰,如面團太乾可逐少加少少水,搓成不黏手麵團即可。
💜可於桌面上撒少許木薯粉防黏,將粉糰分割為六份,用手搓滾成長條形,用刮板切成理想大小,可用手搓成芋圓亦可。
💜將適量木薯粉放入一大碗內,將已整理形狀的芋圓放入碗內滾動一下至均勻黏上粉(防黏),再用篩篩走多餘粉就可以入密實袋或食物盒,放於冰格儲存。


Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Lâu (Shrimp Hot Pot) - Diep Tran

“My sister Điệp makes this beautiful soup on holidays like Tết, the Lunar New Year,” Cuong Pham, founder of cult- and chef-favorite Red Boat Fish Sauce writes in his cookbook of the same name, recently published by Harpers Collins. The lâu (or shrimp hot pot) combines a hearty dose of pork stock, shrimp paste stuffed into mushroom caps, and a variety of fresh vegetables for a dish that conveys abundance and celebration. “It truly is a soup you make on special occasions for loved family and friends,” Pham adds.



 Lâu (Shrimp Hot Pot)

Ingredients

3 tablespoons kosher salt

2 teaspoons baking soda

1 pound whole shrimp, peeled, deveined, and thoroughly dried with a paper towel

1 teaspoon Red Boat Fish Sauce

1 teaspoon granulated sugar

1 tablespoon minced garlic

3 eggs

Vegetable oil or butter, for greasing the pan

6 to 8 shiitake mushrooms, caps only

2 large carrots

1½ quarts Pork Stock

¼ head of a large cauliflower or ½ head of a small cauliflower, cut into florets

½ small napa cabbage, chopped

2 cups yu choy, bok choy, pea tendrils, or other leafy green, chopped into approximately 2-inch-long pieces

½ cup pork cracklings, broken into bite-size pieces

Directions

Make the shrimp paste

1. In a medium mixing bowl, dissolve the salt and baking soda in 2 cups water. Add the shrimp and let it sit in the brine in the refrigerator for 15 to 30 minutes. Drain the shrimp, then dry between paper towels.

2. Add the shrimp, fish sauce, sugar, and garlic to a food processor. Process the shrimp to a smooth paste. Transfer the shrimp paste to a mixing bowl and marinate in the refrigerator for 2 to 3 hours.

Make and fill the omelets and mushrooms

3. Crack the eggs into a bowl and beat well.

4. Heat a teaspoon of oil in an 8-inch sauté pan set over low heat. When the oil shimmers, ladle ¼ cup beaten egg into the pan. Gently tilt the pan to distribute the eggs into an even, thin omelet. Let the eggs cook undisturbed until set, about 1 minute. Turn the omelet onto a plate or cutting board. Repeat with the remainder of the beaten eggs.

5. Working with one omelet at a time, place about 3 tablespoons of the shrimp paste in the omelet’s center. Using a butter knife, spread the paste across the surface to create one thin, even layer, adding more shrimp paste if necessary. Tightly roll the omelet and set aside. Repeat with the remaining omelets.

6. Flip the mushroom caps over and spread about 1 tablespoon of the shrimp paste on the underside of each c ap.

7. Fill a pot fitted with a large steamer basket with about 2 inches of water and set over medium heat. When the water begins to boil, place the omelet rolls and mushroom caps in the steam basket, cover, and steam until the shrimp is completely cooked, about 10 minutes.

8. Remove the mushrooms and omelet rolls from the steamer basket, then carefully slice the omelets crosswise into ¼-inch pieces. Set aside.

Finish the soup

9. Discard the stem ends and tips of the carrots, then slice them lengthwise into ¼-inch-thick strips. Cut the strips into 1½-inch pieces.

Alternatively, create star-shaped slices: Working with one carrot at a time, hold a sharp knife at a 45-degree angle along the length of the carrot and make a cut about 1/8-inch deep. Angle the knife 45 degrees in the opposite direction of the first cut, and slice about 1/8 inch lengthwise down the carrot. Remove the resulting V-shaped wedge, then rotate the carrot 90 degrees and make the same two cuts. Repeat twice more around the carrot, then slice the carrot crosswise into ¼-inch pieces. Repeat for the second carrot. Set aside.

10. Heat the pork stock in a large pot set over medium heat. When the stock is at a strong simmer, add the carrots and cauliflower. Reduce the heat to low and gently simmer until the vegetables are tender, about 10 minutes.

11. Drop the napa leaves and leafy greens into the stock for 1 minute, or just long enough to warm them. Turn off the heat.

12. To serve, ladle the soup and vegetables into serving bowls. Top with the sliced omelet rolls, mushroom caps, and pork cracklings.


CRÈME BRÛLÉE - Roy Choi

 The crackle of the burned sugar, the creamy inside, vanilla beans speckled throughout, the feeling when scraping the inside of the ramekin after finishing most of it, the idea of sharing with friends at the table. I love crème brûlée, and the pandan leaf gives it an extra layer of sweet flavor. I hope this recipe makes you love again, too.

You’ll need a kitchen blowtorch to burn the sugar.

SERVES 4 TO 6

5 cups heavy cream

Seeds scraped from ½ vanilla bean

One 12-inch strip pandan leaf

1 cup sugar

14 egg yolks, beaten

Superfine sugar for sprinkling

Preheat the oven to 325°F.

Combine the cream, vanilla seeds, pandan leaf, and half the sugar in a pot. Bring the mixture to a slight boil, then lower the heat to simmer.

Combine the egg yolks and the other half of the sugar in a large bowl and beat thoroughly, for about 2 minutes.

Ladle by ladle, add the cream to the egg yolks, whisking constantly so the hot cream doesn’t cook the yolks (this process is tempering the cream). When everything is combined, add the mixture back to the pot and cook it over very low heat until it’s slightly thick and coats the back of a spoon. Make sure to keep it at low heat so as not to scramble the eggs.

Fill 4 to 6 ramekins with this mixture—crème anglaise—and place them in a large roasting pan filled with an inch or so of water. Place the pan in the oven and bake for 45 minutes.


When the ramekins are ready, remove them from the oven and from the water bath. Let them cool, then refrigerate for 2 hours.

Sprinkle the tops of the ramekins with sugar, then use the blowtorch to melt and burn the sugar until golden brown. Cool and allow the surface to harden.

ENJOY YOUR DESSERT.


HAINAN CHICKEN, KIND OF - Roy Choi

 Hainan chicken is a treasure in Southeast Asia, and people can get real territorial over the “right” way to make the dish. I’ll be first to tell you, though, that my version is more of a riff on the dish rather than the real thing. I think I got it right, kind of . . .

SERVES 4 TO 6

One 5-pound chicken

3 tablespoons kosher salt

1 cup chopped peeled fresh ginger

1 cup roughly chopped scallions

1 cup garlic cloves, peeled and smashed

1 tablespoon coriander seeds

1 cup roughly chopped fresh cilantro

1 lime, quartered

2 kaffir lime leaves

One 3-inch cinnamon stick

Splash of Maggi seasoning

Splash of dark soy sauce

GARNISH

Handful of chopped cilantro

Jar of chili garlic sauce for the table

Rinse and dry dry dry the chicken. Coat it with the salt all over and let it sit for a few minutes as you bring enough water to cover the chicken to a boil in a big pot.

Once boiling, add everything but the chicken to the pot. Bring it to a boil again, then add the chicken and reduce the heat to produce a low simmer.

Cook the chicken, uncovered, low and slow, until tender, about 1 hour.

Remove the chicken and soak it immediately in an ice-water bath. Chill the chicken until the meat is still warm but the skin is cold, then remove it (it’s okay if the chicken is a little wet from the ice bath). Strain the broth (you can use it to make rice if you wish).

Serve the chicken by itself or over rice with the cilantro and the chili garlic sauce.


SPAM BÁNH ME - Roy Choi

 SPAM BÁNH ME

The first time I ate a bánh mì sandwich was in Orange County’s Little Saigon back in high school, on my way to the Asian Garden Mall to pick up some Euro disco CDs. I went across the street from the mall to a little sandwich shop that was filled with people and a line out the door. I didn’t really know what I was getting into, but it seemed simple enough. Cheap, line, sandwich, wrapped in paper. How could I go wrong? My version pays respects to the traditional sandwich, pickled veggies and all, but with some Spam thrown in for something a little different.

MAKES 4 SANDWICHES

PICKLES

1 cup julienned daikon

1 cup julienned carrots

½ cup natural rice vinegar (not seasoned)

1½ teaspoons salt

1 tablespoon sugar

1 cup water

SANDWICHES

4 demibaguettes

½ cup mayonnaise

1 tablespoon Maggi seasoning

1 tablespoon Sriracha

Butter, softened

1 teaspoon vegetable oil

1 can Spam, cut into 8 thin steaks

Fresh cilantro sprigs

Fresh Thai basil or opal basil leaves

Fried shallots (store-bought)

Limes

Place the daikon and carrots in small bowl. Combine the vinegar, salt, sugar, and water in a small pot. Bring the mixture to a boil, then turn off the heat and let it cool until it’s warm. Pour over the daikon and carrots and let it sit for at least 30 minutes and up to 2 hours.

Cut the baguettes in half but keep them intact. In a small bowl, mix the mayonnaise with the Maggi seasoning and the Sriracha. Set aside.

Slather the cut sides of the baguettes with softened butter and toast them in your toaster oven or in a pan over low heat until they’re nice and crispy. Set aside.

Heat the oil in a skillet, add the Spam, and cook over medium heat until it’s golden brown in color. Transfer to paper towels and reserve.

Slather the buttered sides of the baguettes with the spicy mayonnaise. To build the sandwiches, place the Spam on the bottom half of each baguette, then top with the pickled daikon and carrots and add a layer of cilantro and basil. Top with the fried shallots and a squeeze of lime and close up the baguette.

CRUNCH!


COCONUT RICE - Roy Choi

 COCONUT RICE

Sometimes we get caught up with our ways and think that rice can be cooked only with water. But water is just a liquid medium. Try cooking rice with chicken stock or lobster stock or even coconut milk mixed with stock, as I do here. Make rice fun and different.

SERVES 4 TO 5

2½ cups jasmine rice

½ cup coconut milk

½ teaspoon kosher salt

2 tablespoons julienned peeled fresh ginger

2 cups water

3½ cups chicken stock

GARNISH

Limes

Papaya, chopped

Rinse the rice thoroughly, at least 5 times, until the water runs clear.

In a medium-size pot with a tight-fitting lid, combine the coconut milk, salt, ginger, water, and stock. Add the rice, bring to a boil, reduce the heat, and simmer, covered, for 12 to 15 minutes, until cooked. Fluff it up and serve with limes and fresh papaya.

YOU MAY NOT NEED


ANYTHING ELSE.

CHICKEN SATAY WITH PEANUT SAUCE - Roy Choi

 CHICKEN SATAY WITH PEANUT SAUCE

Chicken satay is usually bland and dry dry dry. But the true satays of the world, the ones you’ll find throughout the streets of Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand, come off the charcoal moist, smoky, and bursting with amazing flavor. This one’s an ode to the flavors and the work of those satay vendors.

SERVES 4 TO 6 AS AN APPETIZER

MARINADE

2 tablespoons fish sauce

2 tablespoons soy sauce

1 teaspoon ground cumin

2 shallots, minced

½ cup coconut milk

2 tablespoons pineapple juice

1 tablespoon condensed milk

1 tablespoon palm sugar

2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro

1 tablespoon cognac

1 tablespoon sambal oelek (chile paste)

2 tablespoons roasted sesame seeds

CHICKEN

Bamboo skewers soaked in water

1½ pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut into 8-to 12½-thick strips

Salt and freshly ground black pepper

PEANUT SAUCE

½ teaspoon chopped lemongrass

½ teaspoon chopped garlic

½ teaspoon chopped peeled fresh ginger

Splash of water

½ tablespoon vegetable oil

½ cup peanut butter

½ tablespoon soy sauce

½ cup coconut milk

½ tablespoon sugar

½ tablespoon sambal oelek (chile paste)

1 tablespoon fresh lime juice

GARNISH

Fresh cilantro

2 limes, quartered

Combine all the marinade ingredients in a blender and puree. Transfer the marinade to a flat-bottomed dish (like a casserole dish) large enough to hold the chicken.

Place the chicken in the marinade for at least 3 hours.

Meanwhile, prepare the peanut sauce. In a blender, combine the lemongrass, garlic, and ginger with a splash of water and puree to make a paste.

In a small pot, combine the paste with the oil, peanut butter, soy sauce, coconut milk, sugar, sambal oelek, and lime juice. Cook very gently over low heat, stirring constantly, for about 2 minutes. Turn off the heat and allow the sauce to cool.

Remove the chicken from the marinade and skewer. Heat a grill to medium-high heat. Season the chicken skewers with salt and pepper, then grill the skewers until the chicken is charred.

Serve with the peanut sauce, fresh cilantro, and lime wedges.


EGGPLANT CURRY OVER RICE - Roy Choi

I think eggplant is overlooked here in America. Sure, we do the whole Parmesan thing, but overall, not many people enjoy eggplant as much as I think we should. Maybe it’s because we think we gotta eat it by itself, the same way we eat carrots and broccoli and every other vegetable, as if we gotta eat that shit steamed, making funny faces in the name of health. Fuck that. Mix this eggplant up with some curry and fish sauce and coconut milk, serve it over some rice with hot sauce, and you’ll stop making that funny face.



SERVES 4 TO 6

CURRY PASTE

2 tablespoons minced shallots

2 Thai bird or serrano chiles, minced, (including stems and seeds)

1 lemongrass stalk, white part only, minced

2 tablespoons minced galangal

1 tablespoon minced peeled fresh ginger

2 kaffir lime leaves

2 teaspoons ground coriander

2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro

2 tablespoons minced garlic

2 tablespoons green curry paste

EGGPLANT

¼ cup vegetable oil

4 tablespoons water

One 14-ounce can coconut milk

6 Thai eggplants or 2 Japanese eggplants, cut into medium-size dice

Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Limes, halved

Combine all the ingredients for the curry paste in a blender and puree.

In a pan over medium heat, heat the oil and, when it’s smoking, sauté the curry paste for a few minutes. Thin it out with 4 tablespoons water, then add the coconut milk. The mixture will become a little soupy.

Add the diced eggplant and cook it all for another 5 minutes. Taste the curry and adjust for seasoning.

Serve over rice with a squeeze or two of fresh lime.


MUSHROOM QUESADILLA - Roy Choi

 MUSHROOM QUESADILLA

This was one of my hit dishes at the Embassy Suites, and to this day people trip out when they see it. They say, mushrooms in a quesadilla? And I say, yes, mushrooms in a quesadilla, foo; don’t trip, just try it. Then they try it and say, Wow! Mushrooms in a quesadilla!!

If you can, splurge on this one and get the fancy mushrooms. It’s not like you are gonna do yourself any favors by not going for it. If you’re not going to go for it, just don’t make it. If you splurge, that simple thing will change your life.

SERVES 4 TO 6

1 cup chanterelle mushrooms

1 cup blue foot mushrooms

1 cup hedgehog mushrooms

About 1 cup extra virgin olive oil

1½ teaspoons kosher salt

1½ teaspoons freshly ground black pepper

Four to six 10-inch flour tortillas

2 cups shredded cheddar cheese

SALSA

Salsa verde

GARNISHES (OPTIONAL)

Fresh white or black truffles

Lime, quartered

Trim and slice the mushrooms and toss them into a bowl with 4 tablespoons of the oil, the salt, and the pepper.

In a large sauté pan over high heat, add 6 tablespoons of the oil, and when it starts to smoke, add half the mushrooms or however many will fit in a single layer. Take your time and do it in stages if all of the mushrooms don’t fit—if you crowd the pan, the mushrooms will steam instead of caramelizing beautifully. When the mushrooms start to caramelize, after about 6 minutes, transfer them to a wire rack on a sheet pan; then repeat for the remaining mushrooms.

Wipe out the pan or use a griddle, and add just a dab of oil. Heat it just until it starts to smoke. Place a tortilla in the pan and smother it with cheese. Layer the mushrooms over the cheese and continue to cook until the cheese melts and/or the bottom of the tortilla gets crispy and golden brown.

Place another tortilla on top of the cheese and mushrooms and flip.

Add a touch more oil on the fresh tortilla, swirl it around the pan, and cook until crispy.

Remove. Cut. Smother with salsa. Add a squeeze of lime if you like.

Shave truffles.

Eat.


CAESAR SALAD - Roy Choi

 CAESAR SALAD

Yes, it’s everywhere, but this one is really good, I swear. Don’t omit the shaved Parmesan—the salad won’t taste complete until you add it at the end.

Leftover dressing will keep in your refrigerator for up to 5 days.

SERVES 8

DRESSING

3 tablespoons chopped garlic

2 tablespoons chopped anchovies

3 large egg yolks

¾ teaspoon dry mustard

1½ teaspoons freshly ground black pepper

1 cup plus 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil

½ cup fresh lemon juice

2 cups mayonnaise

2½ tablespoons Worcestershire sauce

2 tablespoons pureed onion

1 tablespoon water

Good pinch of salt

SALAD

8 romaine hearts, separated into leaves

2 cups shaved Parmesan cheese

1 lemon

Cracked black pepper

Combine all the dressing ingredients in a blender and puree.

Toss the romaine leaves with the dressing, coating with liberal intent.


Thịt Kho Trứng - Diep Tran

While a kho is often a weeknight dish that can be whipped up in less than 30 minutes, for the Tết season, you don’t want any old braise. You want a kho that’s worthy of the Lunar New Year table. That means springing for top-quality skin-on, center-cut pork belly, palm sugar and fresh young coconut. Skin-on pork contains plenty of collagen, which will break down during the gentle cooking process to add lusciousness to the caramelized savory gravy, making it perfect for ladling over copious amounts of fluffy new-crop white jasmine rice.


Ingredients:

Kosher salt

3 pounds center-cut pork belly, preferably skin on, cut into 3/4-inch cubes 

2 tablespoons minced garlic (about 8 cloves) 

2 tablespoons neutral oil, such as canola, vegetable or avocado oil 

1/2 small red onion, minced (about 4 ounces), plus 1 large red onion, halved 

1/3 cup palm sugar, roughly diced (about 2 ounces; see Cook's Note) 

1/3 cup premium fish sauce, such as Red Boat 

1 tablespoon ground black pepper 

4 Thai chiles, halved 

Water from 3 to 4 young coconuts (about 4 1/2 cups; see Cook's Note) 

6 Boiled Eggs, recipe follows 

Directions

Fill a 7-quart heavy-bottomed braising pot (like a Dutch oven) with 4 quarts of water. Add 3 tablespoons salt and bring the water to a boil over high heat. Prepare an ice bath.

Add the pork to the pot and bring the water back up to a boil. Boil for 5 minutes, skimming the foam that floats to the surface. 

Transfer the pork to the ice bath and let it soak until completely chilled, about 20 minutes. Remove the pork and wipe away any impurities using a paper towel. Drain the pork in a colander and set aside. 

Clean the pot used for the pork and return it to the stove. Add the garlic, oil and minced red onion to the cold pot, turn the heat to medium high and cook until aromatic, 5 to 7 minutes. Add the palm sugar and cook until it starts to caramelize, about 5 minutes. Continue cooking until the sugar turns a chestnut amber, another 3 to 5 minutes. 

Add the fish sauce and raise the heat to high. Bring the mixture to a bubble and cook for 2 minutes to cook out the raw flavor of the fish sauce slightly. Add the blanched pork, black pepper and chiles and toss to coat every piece of pork in the sauce.  

Add the coconut water, halved red onion and 2 cups of water. Bring the pot back to a boil, then reduce the heat to low. To achieve a braise with tender pork that doesn’t fall apart, cook the pork at a gentle simmer, where the surface of the braising liquid is trembling and only a few air bubbles break through. Simmer, uncovered, until the pork is tender and the braising liquid reduces and forms a stock that slightly clings to your spoon, 1 1/2 to 2 hours. 

Gently transfer the pork to a bowl. Strain the braising liquid through a fine-mesh sieve to create a flawless, silky-smooth stock. Discard the solids. 

Wash the pot and return it to the stove. Return the pork and braising liquid to the pot. Bring the braise to a boil, then turn off the heat. Nestle the Boiled Eggs in the braising liquid. Cover the pot and steep the eggs in the braising liquid off heat for 20 minutes.

Cook’s Note

As this is a dish for Lunar New Year, I’m specifying water from fresh young coconuts, but pre-packaged coconut water is a fine substitute. The palm sugar specified in this recipe is the Southeast Asian variety; the main producers are Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines.


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