Sunday, 20 October 2013

Garlic Sprouts, Green Beans with Ground Pork

Wow!  Another post so soon?!  This positive active lifestyle I am leading is truly impacting positively to other areas of my life :) and it feels great! Accomplishments, no matter how small or big, keeps you going.  What is important to you? Keep that within your focus, work hard and your accomplishments & rewards will come:)

Since the weather is getting cooler here in Toronto, warm nutritious meals are needed to pack my lunch.  No more salad for me until spring 2014 comes along!  This also means I have to be more creative, remain cost efficient to cook up nutritious & yummy meals that will last for several meals.

There is a new asian grocer that popped up near my neighbourhood and I am absolutely loving it.  It's got everything I need and the best part is, its fresh and clean at very reasonable prices. So you can imagine the turn over of produce is pretty high. :) This week, green beans and garlic sprouts were plentiful.  Perfect for a stir-fry.

So let's get cookin'!

3hrs prior to cooking, marinate 1/2 pound ground pork with 1tbsp each of dark soya sauce & light soya sauce, 1/4 tsp white pepper, salt and 1/2 tsp sugar.  Mix, cover with saran wrap and leave in the fridge.

Rinse the green beans under cold water several times.  Remove the tips.
To cut corners, instead of removing the tips with your fingers, simply shovel beans to align and chop off the tips.  Set aside on a plate.

Rinse the garlic sprouts.  Looks quite similar to the green beans eh?  Except, once cooked, the flavour of roasted garlic pulls through and adds a great flavouring to the dish.

Feel free to add a tomato too.  The tomato will provide natural juices to the dish.  Chop garlic sprouts to 1inch in length.  Slice tomato in small wedges and set aside on the plate.


Mince 3 cloves of garlic.


You will notice I have 3 dried chili's.  This is optional.

Heat up your pan or wok to medium high.  Coat with approx. 3 tbsp of olive oil and add the chili's. The heat will enhance the natural oil from the chili's.  Heat for 1min.  Add half of the minced garlic.

Allow to cook for another 30secs until the oil is fragrant.  Throw in the green beans and toss.  Cook for 1-2 mins.  Green beans need longer cooking time than garlic sprouts. :) Next, add in the garlic sprouts and toss.  Sprinkle salt on vegetables and pour approximately 1tbsp of chinese cooking wine.   Toss!  Be careful of the oil splashes!


Throw in the tomatoes 2mins after the sprouts have joined the party.  Toss again.  Sprinkle in a bit of white pepper.  Toss again!


 Cook this for at least 3mins.  Tomatoes will begin to shrink and the juices will nicely coat eat bean and sprout.  Empty cooked vegetables onto a clean plate.  Return pan to stove, heat is constant on medium high.  Coat pan with more oil and add the remaining minced garlic and cook for 30 secs.


Cook the marinated ground pork.


Mince the pork to small bits in the pan. Add 1 tbsp of chinese cooking wine. Toss & cook through until golden brown.  About 6 -7 mins.


Throw in the cooked vegetables!


Toss together.  Cook for another 1-2 mins and turn off the heat.

To maintain flavour and crispness of the beans and garlic sprouts, it is best to cook separately from meat :)

Enjoy!  Best eaten with a bowl of rice.  :) Happy lunch for the next few days!

Saturday, 19 October 2013

Chinese Soup: Pork with Papaya & Turnip

Ahhhhhh smell the crisp cool air! Gone were the summer days, sweat filled, sun kissed scent on our skin.  Summer dresses & flip flops take a back seat.  Scarves & cozy sweaters begin to colour our dressers & closet.  My beloved ceramic pot now holds a permanent space on the stove.

The crisp chilly air that now surrounds us, creeps through underneath window sills requires some major defense.  Food.  Comfort food to be more specific.  Soups & Stews.  Food that warms up our system and keeps the old man winter at bay.  It's around this time, that I welcome & embrace my ethnicity.  I wrap myself cozy with my favorite chinese cartoons PJs and robe, protect my toes with my very dependable cozy 'kuma kuma' slippers.  Ahh.... I am happy.  All cozied up with my fleece friends:)

It's also right about this time, I make chinese soup once every week until old man winter disappears.  Culturally, a bowl of clear soup is served with every meal.  It's been said, by drinking this clear flavoured soup everyday, it will keep your body system cleansed & strong, maintain youthful skin making you forever young and beautiful.

Generally, some sort of animal parts; mainly bones, dried chinese herbs and vegetables are simmered for 2-3hrs to extract all the flavours, leaving a very nutritious & aromatic clear soup to consume.  It is important to note, the dried chinese herbs I use are very friendly and will compliment well with just any chinese soup you make.  I lack ancient knowledge in such complicated healing properties chinese herbs hold.  So please forgive me, I hold only the basic knowledge to my own ethnicity.

In the mean time, I can only offer you humble recipes of the soups that will grace my kitchen. While I would normally tell you to replace whatever ingredients you prefer verses what I have listed, I wouldn't recommend it so much with chinese soups.  A single change of an ingredient will alter the flavour of the soup.  So let's just stick with it eh?

My typical chinese dried herbs consist of the following for this soup.  Click on the links to read more about the medicinal benefits of each herb.
1.  Dried, pitted Longan fruit : 3-4 piece
2.  Dried goji - approx. 1tbsp full
3.  Dried red dates : 3 piece
4.  Dried honey dates : 1 - 2 piece
4.  Dried white fungus : 1 flower
5.  Sliced dried white almond : approx 1tvsp full
6.  Dried shitake mushroom : 2 piece - for depth in flavour

You can purchase these at any chinese grocer or dried herbal specialty stores.
Place all dried herbs in a bowl and rinse a couple of times.  The white fungus will balloon, doubling its size.  Be sure to run water through the flower, rinsing out any unwanted dirt.


Once rinsed, set aside.

For this soup, I used pork neck bones, approx. 1/2 pound.  To prepare this, pre-boil the bones in a hot bath of water to remove any unwanted impurities.



See all the fatty foam on top? Pre-boiling the neck bones will remove these impurities and provide the soup and clean broth base.

Boil the bones for 4-5mins then dump in sink.  Clean the pot well with soap and refill with cold water halfway.  Return to stove and turn heat to medium high.  Rinse each piece of bone well under cold running water and set in a bowl.  And just because I had a roasted pork bone from a chinese BBQ shop in the freezer, I decided to add this to the pile of bones. This will really enhance the broth. :)  These roasted yummilious bones are usually sold dirt cheap and many use it for soups and congee for the flavour.


Once meat is rinsed, throw it in the pot of water along with the cleaned herbs.  Cover and allow to bring to just below boiling point then quickly lower heat to super low and allow to simmer for at least 1hr with the lid.


While the broth simmers, lets prepare the papaya and turnip.

Use the elephant papaya.  When purchasing, look for a not so riped papaya, with very minimal bruising on surface.  Papaya should be more green than orange looking.  Rinse, cut in half and scoop out the seeds in the middle.  Slice off the skin and cube to 1 1/2 inch pieces.  Set aside in a bowl.

Choose a good size turnip, a little less than forearm's length is good.  Rinse and peel skin with a peeler.  Discard ends and slice turnip length in 1/2 inch pieces.


Once the broth has been simmering for at least an hour, throw in papaya and turnip.  Cover again and allow to simmer for 2hrs.  No need to bring the heat on high when you add the vegetables as this will ruin the complexity flavouring of the soup.  Simply add in the vegetables and let the constant low simmering heat penetrate and extract the flavours in the soup slowly.  Your turnips will thank you for this method as it will not mush up.  It will maintain a soft but crispy like texture.  ;)



You will know your soup is done when the turnip takes on a slightly translucent appearance.  Turn off the heat.  Your broth will look quite concentrated in flavour,  A beautiful, dark clear broth, full of robust flavours married together over the last 3hrs.


See?! Clear but full of flavours! even my poor iphone camera picked up the colours quite well:)  I typically like drinking my soup with a spoon of rice.  But that's really personal preference. So enjoy the soup however you like!  With or without rice.  :)



My body feels quite cleansed after two bowls of this:)   Enjoy!

Monday, 14 October 2013

Tamagoyaki - Japanese omelette

Dinner parties in the comfort of your own home is my new favorite past time - minus the clean up afterwards of course!  To celebrate 2 of my friends birthday this month, I offered to cook an all out Japanese dinner:)  Unfortunately, not many pictures of the dishes were taken and the only evidence of last nights Japanese dinner was my version of "Tamago (egg) yaki - a Japanese omelette often found in bento lunch boxes all throughout Japan.

I had watched videos on how to make this special Tamagoyaki and hoped my first attempt of this dish was satisfying for my friendly taste testers.

Let's begin! 

Ingredients
2.  4 eggs
3.  1tbsp mirin
4.  1tsp of soya sauce
5.  pinch of salt
6.  6-7 leaves of arugula (optional) minced
7.  olive oil
Directions:

1. In a small bowl, place dashi stock, mirin, salt & soya souce.
2.  In another bowl, crack and whisk 4 eggs, add dashi stock mixture and minced arugula to egg mixture
3.  Since I do not have the square pan typically used to make the Tamago-yaki, I used my regular pan.  Turn heat to medium high and coat pan with a layer of olive oil using a paper towel.

4.  Once pan in hot, spoon in a thin layer of egg mixture.  Allow to cook and begin to roll one end of the egg omelette to the other end into a roll.  Coat more olive oil onto the pan and add another thin layer of egg mixture into the pan, allowing the mixture to seep underneath the roll.  Cook through and begin to roll egg omelette to one end to the other, creating a fatter egg roll.  Repeat process until all egg mixture is used.  Don't worry if your egg roll breaks or is not perfect, we will fix it! 

5.  Once egg roll omelette is complete, place it on at bamboo sushi mat and roll it into a rectangular shape.  Be careful! It's hot!.  Keep the egg roll in the bamboo mat until it cools down.  This will help shape the tamagoyaki into a desired shape.


6.  See?!  this is how it should look once cooled in the bamboo mat. :) 

7.  Next, cut in 1/2" in length and serve :) 


Bite into a piece of the Tamago-yaki, its superbly light and fluffy, bursting of flavour from the mirin and dashi stock.  This is what makes the Japanese Tamago-yaki so desirable and so different from any other omelette:) 

Enjoy!  I am happy to report my friends had enjoyed the imaginary trip to Japan through the different flavours and dishes I had to offer :) 




Thursday, 3 October 2013

Miso Fried Rice

My apologies ahead of time on this post!!! Miso fried rice? Really?  I know! Anyone can make this!.. Kinda similar to Kimchi fried rice! But replace the kimchi with miso instead!

Since my Okonomiyaki post, I've been crazy busy.  One of the main highlights happened 2 weeks ago, I had the opportunity to run with my team for the Sears Great Canadian Cancer Run.  There were a total of 17 people on the team, all who ran their best leg, to raise funds and awareness to Childhood Cancer.  Personally, I ran my best; 12.1km in 1hr  14 mnis.  The first 10k took me 1hr and 1min.  :D The feeling of accomplishment was exhilarating.  My first 12.1km! Next goal? A half marathon next year; 21.1km. :D  Kinda funny how when I came up with the title of this blog a year ago; the kitchen runner, I couldn't even run for 5mins without passing out!  :)  Here's to accomplishments!


Even with my busy schedule, I couldn't help but feel guilty about not posting a new recipe.  So today's recipe; Miso Fried Rice was purely accidental, hence the lack of step my step photos I usually have. Even though this is the first time I've experimented with the use of Miso paste on rice, this recipe is a no brainer.  Superbly simple, ready in 15 mins.  Please feel free to replace any of the ingredients with whatever you desire!

Miso Fried Rice
Ingredients - 2 cups of 2 -3  days old cooked rice. 1 clove of garlic - diced, 1/4 each corn kernels, cooked meat of your choice - diced (i used chinese char siu & red sausage), 2 eggs, green onion - diced

Sauce - 1tsp and a bit of miso paste, 1tbsp each of soya sauce, sriracha hot sauce, mirin (japanese rice wine)  2tbsp of dashi stock, 1stp brown sugar, a dash of white pepper.  Mix until miso paste is thoroughly dissolved.  

Directions -
1.  Coat pan with oil, turn heat to medium high, throw in diced garlic.
2.  Throw in corn once you begin to smell the garlic.  Toss
3.  Throw in diced meat and cook for 30 secs.  Your heat should remain medium high.
4.  Stir the sauce prior to adding to pan.  Allow to reduce to at least half the liquid has evaporated.
5.  Once the sauce has reduced to half its liquid, add your rice, crushing out the clumps of rice until loose.  Toss on high heat.
6.  After 2mins, create a hole in the middle of the pan, drizzle some olive oil and crack in 2 eggs.  Using a spatula, start fluffing the eggs until half cooked, then begin to fold in rice.  Mix. Throw in green onion.  Mix and turn off heat.  Presto! and you are done!!

Miso fried rice



Enjoy this simple dish!