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Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts

Friday, 27 April 2012

More Cooking and Eating...

Kung Pao Pork
Recently I have been experimenting with cooking Asian dishes- nice, tasty, authentic dishes. It is so hard to get good Asian food out here so I have to resort to making my own. Every time I go to Perth I overdose on Chinese and Japanese- but it is so worth it...

This dish of Kung Pao pork is inspired by Ming Tsai's recipe from the TV show 'Simply Ming'. He has great recipes which are very easy for the home cook. Kung Pao sauce is traditionally a very hot sauce but you can adjust the chili content- I like it hot! The recipe for the sauce can be used with any meats and here I have used pork belly (mmm piggy), it makes about 2 cups which I keep ready in a jar in the fridge for future meals.


Kung Pao Sauce



  • 3 tablespoons fresh crushed garlic
  • 2 tablespoon minced ginger
  • 2 tablespoons sambal oelek
  • 1 cup dark soy sauce
  • 3 tablespoons sugar
  • 1/2 cup rice vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon cornstarch with 1 tablespoon water to thicken if necessary

Method

For the Kung Pao Sauce:

  1. In a wok or saute pan coated lightly with oil over high heat, add garlic and ginger and saute for 1 minute, just to soften. Add sambal, taking care not to inhale the chili, and saute until well-blended. Add soy sauce to deglaze, then add sugar and rice vinegar. Bring to a boil and slowly whisk in cornflour mixture to thicken. Check for flavor and season if necessary. Keep warm to use in recipes or cool to room temperature, store in an air-tight jar and place in the fridge.

I also have doubled this recipe to keep more in the fridge and I haven't had to add all of the cornflour as it has already been thick enough.
Make sure to always taste as you may need to make some minor adjustments. Use your instincts and be creative!

For the Kung Pao Pork:

 

Stir-fry chunks of pork belly coated in cornflour on high heat until just cooked, then remove from wok. Add any other veggies and quickly stir fry- I used spring onion, carrot, and capsicum- then return pork to wok with a couple of tablespoons of the sauce and heat through. You can also mix through some unsalted roasted peanuts at the end if you like. Serve with rice!

Tip of the day folks: For a nice rice mould like I have done above, wet small bowl first before adding rice and tipping on to plate. Most impressive for little effort...

Saturday, 26 November 2011

Action in the Kitchen

One of the great things about living on the farm is being able to have fresh ingredients and produce on hand that you can go out and catch or pick. In recent years we have established a  raised veggie patch made from old tanks that produced the best tomato crop last year! We also have chooks, our own lamb, and yabbies. Hence the yabby pizza is born......

YABBY PIZZA
Really the easiest thing in the world to make but tastes so good.
Yabbies- boiled for 7 minutes
Get your slaves to do the hard work
Ingredients
  • We used tortillas as the pizza base or Lebanese bread
  • tomato passata 
  • mozzarella cheese
  • cooked yabbies
  • Tabasco for the adults
  • any other toppings you may like eg: fetta, capsicum, mushrooms, spinach
  Spread passata over base, add toppings and mozzarella and bake in hottest pre-heated oven until cheese is melted and base is slightly crisp. I like to keep the toppings fairly simple so you can still taste the yabbies.

Little A's yabby pizza 
WARNING: Men can eat at least 5 of these thin pizzas so make lots.

Chow down!