| Stir-Fried Tofu & Bok Choy |
This blog is dedicated to Mum, my greatest mentor. It is a compilation of simple recipes - Bengali, Indian, Burmese and Continental, among others. All of these recipes have been tested in my kitchen. Most use everyday ingredients found at your local market, but some use specialty ingredients available at Asian and/or Indian markets. Comments are welcome and members are invited to send in any recipes they would like to share.
Showing posts with label Oyster Sauce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oyster Sauce. Show all posts
Sunday, September 02, 2018
Stir-Fried Tofu & Bok Choy
Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Surimi in Black Bean Sauce
| Surimi in Black Bean Sauce |
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| Louis Kemp Crab Delights |
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| Lee Kum Kee Chili Black Bean Sauce |
For Chinese dishes, I like using Lee Kum Kee sauces. For this recipe, I mixed their Chili Black Bean Sauce with Premium Oyster Sauce and Mirin or rice wine for the sauce. Both the sauces are salted, so no extra salt was required. A sliced onion, minced tomatoes, some sliced garlic and oil combined with the sauce mixture and crab delights were microwaved for 5 minutes, stirred and microwaved for another 2 minutes. This was served over steaming, hot rice for a sumptuous dinner. The leftovers were heated in a skillet the next day for breakfast, a little oil drizzled around the edges and fried with beaten eggs that were left undisturbed to cook without stirring and served garnished with green onions over toast. That's two meals for the price of one package of crab delights.
Monday, June 27, 2016
Eggplant & Pork in Oyster Sauce
| Eggplant & Pork in Oyster Sauce |
Chinese and Thai restaurants have a form of this recipe on their menus. My problem is that they always seem to over-salt the dish, so I prefer to replicate it at home so I can control the amount of salt that is added. In fact, no salt was added in this recipe because the different sauces are salty to begin with. Adjust the salt at the end of the cooking cycle to suit your taste.
A trick to break down the ground pork with little effort is to hand-mix it with 1/2 tsp. salt and 2 Tbsp. oil and set aside for 15 minutes. The oil acts to separate the nodules of ground meat which makes it easier to brown.
Friday, April 10, 2015
Fresh Spring Rolls with Minced Chicken Cooked in Hoisin Sauce
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| Fresh Spring Rolls |
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| Fresh Spring Roll Ingredients |
Ingredients: (makes 4 rolls)
1/2 lb. (8 oz.) ground chicken
4 Tbsp. vegetable oil
1 onion, minced
1 can water chestnuts, minced
1 tsp. garlic paste
2 Tbsp. hoisin sauce
1 tsp. oyster sauce
1 tsp. dark sesame oil
2 stalks green onions
4 sheets dried rice paper
1 cup cold water
4 Romaine lettuce leaves, trimmed to smaller than size of rice paper
1/2 cup sweet chili sauce for dipping
Directions:
- Stir-fry the minced chicken & onions in hot vegetable oil until chicken is no longer pink.
- Add garlic paste, hoisin and oyster sauces, and water chestnuts, and stir-fry for 2 minutes.
- Stir in sesame oil and sprinkle green onions over the chicken.
- Remove from heat and bring to room temperature.
- Pour cold water into a flat dish and line a plate with a paper towel.
- Slide a rice paper into the water, wetting both sides of the rice paper.
- Blot each side of the rice paper on the paper towel, making sure to handle the rice paper gently so it doesn't tear.
- Lay a lettuce leaf on the softened rice paper along with 1 Tbsp. chicken.
- Roll two opposite sides of rice paper (left & right sides) over the filling and begin rolling tightly from bottom to top.
- Repeat steps 6 to 9 with other three sheets of rice paper.
- Serve with sweet chili sauce.
For a visual tutorial on how to make fresh spring rolls, watch this video posted on YouTube by Sav Le of EatNowCryLater.
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