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Category : Chinese

Vietnamese Black Pepper Steak

Over the weekend, I made a variation of the classic Chinese black pepper steak with a Vietnamese twist, i.e I used fish sauce.  Fish sauce is rather offensive to the olfactory for the uninitiated.   Saying it has a “fishy smell” is probably an understatement.

But as we all know, things that smell bad often taste good.  If you grow up with these foods, or have a good experience with them, people often come to associate these smelly foods with positive feelings and experiences.  Hence the widespread consumption of various fermented foods (cheeses, tofu, sorghum etc…)

Fish sauce is fermented fish.  The juice is then concentrated.   But the sauce makes a great dipping sauce (particularly with some rice noodles, broken rice and/ or egg rolls).  It is also great as a flavor additive for all your cooking.  I recommend trying it out, but I’d probably start with a small bottle and use diluted amounts at first.

Feeds 4

Prep Time: 10 minute

Total Time: 25 minutes

Ingredients:

  1. 3 stalks green onions, chopped
  2. 1/2 onion, diced
  3. 2 cloves garlic, minced
  4. 1 green bell pepper, diced
  5. 1/2 top round, bottom round, or chuck steak, sliced into strips
  6. 2 cups mung beans
  7. 1 tsp black pepper
  8. 1 tsp cayenne pepper
  9. 1 tbsp soy sauce
  10. 1 tbsp fish sauce
  11. 2 tbsp vegetable oil
  12. salt to taste

Directions:

  1. Marinate meat with garlic, onion, black pepper, cayenne, soy sauce and fish sauce for 20 minutes.
  2. On high heat, heat oil and add marinated mixture when oil is hot. .  Sear the meat.  Add bell peppers.

  1. Cook until mung beans soften.  Add salt to taste
  2. Serve with a nice side of rice.  I made some saffron rice in the picture above
  3. Voila… simple quick, not at all fishy and delicious

2 Comments

Taiwanese Dry Noodles with A- Choy

Chinese noodle soup, in all its wondrous forms, is such a popular dish that dry noodles rarely get their due (other than chow mein).  But to me, the dry noodle dish can be superior to the wet variety, particularly if you are not a fan of soup broth or if it’s too hot for a steaming bowl of soup.

This is a recipe for a simple dry noodle dish.  Since the toppings provide the flavor, the “sauce” for the toppings needs to be overwhelming during the cooking process. In other words, when you taste your cooking, the flavors should be quite strong.  This ensures that you get a nice even flavor rather than a dull diluted flavor, because the noodles won’t be cooking in any sauce of their own. Once the toppings mix with the noodles, you’ll have a flavorful meal!
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Chinese Tea Eggs

These fragrant and flavorful hardboiled eggs are a traditional Chinese treat.   They can be found at the local 7-11 at every corner in Taiwan, and yes, they are safe to eat.  The recipe calls for black tea leaves, 5-spice powder (star anise, cinnamon, fennel, cloves and Szechuan peppercorns), and soysauce.  Nowadays, though, you can just buy a bag of “tea egg” spices and throw in a pot with a dozen or so eggs.  Mm – delicious and easy!  If you’ve never had one, I highly recommend you try this recipe.

There are two ways of doing cooking tea eggs.  The traditional way is to boil the eggs first, then lightly crack the shells.  Small cracks let the spice mixture seep in and create marbling.  The spiced fluid marinates the eggs inside the shells and after about 20 minutes, the eggs can be removed with the fluid and refrigerated with the liquid for 2 days.

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Chinese style Ginger Lamb with Chives

After a night of hotpot (a grand community sharing event which usually involves lots of meats, seafoods, vegetables, dipping sauces and of course, a hot pot), we had some leftover sliced lamb.  So, I decided to clean out the fridge and make this delightful Chinese style ginger lamb with chives.  Thin lamb slices are really the star of the show.

I love lamb.  I truly believe it is an underrated meat.  Some people can’t stand its unique flavor and smell, but for me, that’s really it’s most endearing characteristic.

A quick tip that I picked up from my mom – lamb marinates better with red wine.

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7 Comments

MaPo Tofu

This is a repost of an old recipe, for the sole reason that a) I love this dish and b) my photography has gotten way better over time.  I posted this dish back in November when no one read this blog, I didn’t know what I was doing, and I was still shooting with 3 megapixels.  In hindsight, the combination of an old camera and tasty food may be a bit like the Hubble Space Telescope – put into space over a decade ago, but somehow keeps on delivering.

The translation of this dish is great – “pockmarked grandma” tofu – apparently named for the adventurous Szechuan discoverer of this dish.  Ma Po Tofu is usually very spicy, and the sauce is reddish from the spice.  Or, you can buy the spicy version of the Dou ban jiang (Chinese fermented beans), as I did here.

Anyhow, here is the recipe once again, but more tasty looking, and still just as delicious!

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6 Comments

Mung Bean Sprouts Stir Fry

There probably isn’t an easier dish to make than a quick Mung Bean stir fry.  It’s a great recipe to whip together when you suddenly realize your table is piled high with meats but no vegetables.  Alternatively, you may be thinking, what is this mung bean stuff they keep adding to my Pho or Pad Thai?

Good question!  Mung bean sprouts are found in pretty much all sorts of Asian food.  They can be stir fried in Chinese dishes, or used as fillings in Vietnamese spring rolls.  They are a major ingredient in a variety of Malaysian cuisine.  And in Korean food, slightly cooked mung bean sprouts are used as a side dish with other assorted kimchi.

Here is one very quick way of making Mung Bean Sprouts.

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9 Comments

Chinese Braised Ribs

This past weekend, I bought several racks of ribs in anticipation of BBQ and smoking.   After all, few things beat slow-cooked smoked ribs.  Unfortunately, my glorious plans fell through and I was stuck with ribs but no plans.   Although people claim that they can make great oven ribs, I still find it hard to go head-to-head with smoked wood and charcoal.  Why settle for second best?   Instead, I decided to take this recipe in a completely different direction: the braised rib.

If you’ve ever had a bad rack of ribs, you know that overcooked or undercooked ribs are very tough to eat.  (If you’re at a friend’s BBQ, you’re probably telling the host how great the ribs are, but stealthily reaching for the hamburger or brisket.)  The reason for this toughness is that ribs are fatty and full of connective tissue – they’re designed for a slow cooking process.  Given enough time, the heat and moisture breaks down the collagen into something amazingly delicious.  Whenever I hear the phrase “so tender the meat falls off the bone, I think of well-cooked ribs.

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Ginger Beef w/ Broccoli

Ginger Beef is a Chinese take out favorite.  Part of what makes the dish delicious is that the meat is often crispy, delicious and deep fried.  Unfortunately, deep-fried meat means that you need lots of oil.  No wonder people often complain that Chinese food is greasy!  As much as I enjoy a good ginger beef, eating it on a regular basis is not sustainable for my arteries and my waistline.  Thus, I set out to create a healthier version of Ginger Beef here.

I used the same tangy sauce that is typical of ginger beef, but added a few more carrots and the bed of broccoli to help increase the health factor of this dish.  This recipe makes use of both my tenderizing and blanching methods.  In hindsight, I used too few red pepper flakes.  I recommend that you use more flakes.  Even better, go with fresh peppers for a bolder flavor.

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5 Comments

Water Spinach (Ong Choy/ Kong Xin Cai) and Ground Pork


Water Spinach, known as Ong Choy or Kong Xin Cai, is a semi-aquatic tropical plant that grows 2-3 meters high.  It has long hollow stems and roots and leafy greens.   The hollow stems allow the plant to float in water.  Translated literally, the Mandarin name means “Empty Heart Vegetable,” an homage to the unusual hollowness of the plant.  Although most parts of the plants are edible, the leaves are usually separated from the roots as they require different cooking times.

Because of its hollowness, Water Spinach also has some unusual folklore.  When I was growing up, I remember my dad telling me an intricate love story that culminated in tragedy and tears (as so many love stories do).  I don’t remember all the details, as the last thing an 8-year-old boy wants to do is listen to his father’s stories, but at the end of the tale, the unlucky hero cried tears of a broken heart.  The Empty Heart Vegetable sprung up where his tears fell.  Quite poetic!  I wish I had listened better now.

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8 Comments

Black Pepper Chicken & Broccoli

Like many chefs, I like to think that I’m original and creative.  At the same time, I think it’s important to be honest and recognize that a lot of cooking is derivative.  Here at DailyChef, I try to show many variations of common themes.  This dish derives much of its inspiration from my recipe for Black Pepper Steak and for Broccoli Beef.  It also uses a core way of cooking broccoli that I talked about in another entry – blanching.

Blanching broccoli helps to maintain a slightly crisper broccoli while having the added benefit of not overcooking the chicken.  In addition, it prevents you from having to reduce your sauce too much in order to cook the broccoli.

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