Wednesday 3 October 2012

Char Siew Noodles

My kids have been missing their Ah-Mah's char siew. My mum-in-law gave me the recipe, but I have not found the time to put it together.

Fortunately, we live in Boston, and not a small town in the deep south, so char siew is quite readily available.

During my weekly Chinese grocery run, I will pop by the char siew shop (http://m.yelp.com/biz/best-bar-b-q-restaurant-boston) to pick up a box of char siew and roast pork.

We sometimes have it with rice and vegetables. But for a change (and given my recent fascination with noodles), I recently tried making char siew noodles. All one needs to do is mix the noodles up with some sesame oil, soya sauce and a little of the sauce that comes with the meat. The adults got some sambal belachan mixed in as well.

Not as good as what you would find in the hawker centers back home, but good enough for us!

Monday 1 October 2012

Oodles of Noodles!

Fried noodles is an awfully easy dish to prepare, and the kids can't get enough of it. You can use any type of noodles, from bee hoon to yellow noodles and even pasta.

I fry it with lots of onions, garlic and add two or three eggs, followed by whatever meat and vegetables I have in the refrigerator. There is usually some soya sauce and oyster sauce involved. The kids' lurve it when I use leftover char-siew and roast pork. Mmmm...

Unlike fried rice, which you want dry, I find that fried noodles generally do not taste good when too dry. I therefore use stock as a base for my noodles. The noodles will then absorb all the yummy flavours and end up a little moist. So in fact, the noodles are stewed rather than fried.

I used yellow noodles for this pot and cooked more than enough for the older kids to bring to school the next day.

Friday 3 August 2012

Fried Rice Paradise

My first attempt at cooking fried rice was at home econs class in Secondary One. I didn't pay much attention. The only thing I remember was that we had to slice chillies for garnish. I don't remember how my fried rice tasted. Probably not very good, despite the lovely garnish, or I would have attempted it again.

My second attempt was not until my first year at University. I was missing home badly, and Oxford was unusually cold that winter. I was craving fried rice, even though it was not one of my favourite dishes.

I didn't have a recipe and of course had clean forgotten my hone econs lesson. In those days (gosh I am sounding old!), the internet was primitive and one couldn't just look up the recipe online. I was not yet experienced in cooking, but I thought, "How hard can it be? It's just frying some rice in a wok with eggs, mixed veg and Chinese sausage right?" of course, I screwed it up. I added the eggs last (why? I don't know.) and the fried rice ended up a soggy mess. I was upset and never tried it again. But went on to cook many other different and probably more complicated dishes.

Until.

Seven years later, I discovered that my husband, a non-cook, could whip up a mean dish of fried rice!! The only other dish he "cooks" is a bagel sandwich with bacon. I enjoyed his fried rice tremendously and was happy to let him take the lead on his dish. But in time, I realized that it wasn't that hard a dish to cook. I observed him, read some recipes, and finally cooked a decent version of fried rice.

Now, I cook it regularly. My kids love it, and I find that it is the perfect dish to cook when I have too many scraps of food in the fridge. It keeps really well, so I can have leftovers for lunch the next day. And it takes little effort, oh except for the turning and breaking up of the cold rice. Once in awhile, I enjoy making complicated delicate dishes, but now that I am managing the household on my own, I have no time for complicated. And I find that there is an inverse relationship between how complicated a dish is to make, and how well kids take to it.

I don't have a fixed recipe. But it generally includes onions, garlic, eggs (which always go in before the rice) scraps of leftover meat (ham, sausages, luncheon meat, roast chicken etc.), scraps of veg left that need to be cooked coz they are losing their freshness/are not enough to make one meal (or frozen mixed veg) and leftover cold rice. I will add soya sauce (light and dark) and/or oyster sauce and sesame oil. The type of sauce and amount will depend on the ingredients and my mood. I never have chili as a garnish.

So we have fried rice once a week. I have a version of cha-pa-lang pasta that I make on another night (also keeps well for lunch). So that's at least four meals accounted for!

Monday 23 July 2012

Ribs!

It's been a month since we moved to Massachusetts, and while I've been cooking lots (it's expensive to eat out!), I haven't really felt anywhere close to being a domestic goddess! Cooking has become a chore that I squeeze in between other chores.

How very sad!

But today, I rekindled that love affair. A friend from home (let's call him T) has been in town, and we invited him home for dinner. I really didn't think he wanted to have stir-fry or pasta and I wasn't going I try steaming lobsters! It seemed like perfect opportunity test out Sweet Baby Ray's famous BBQ sauce (http://www.sweetbabyrays.com/) on some finger-lickin ribs!

It was my first time, and I would normally never try out a new recipe when cooking for a guest. But T is also a foodie and enjoys cooking, so he gave me some tips and I felt confident enough to try it out.

It was actually really simple. I cooked it mainly in the slow-cooker (soaking in 1 bottle of Hickory smoked and brown sugar BBQ sauce plus shopped onions), and finished it off under the broiler. It was really good! Very yummy. If I had more time to let it cook in the slow-cooker (5-6 hours), it would have been even better.

I used a mixture of baby back ribs and boneless ribs. The boneless ribs were not as nice owing to a relative lack of fat.

I have several more bottles of sauce and will definitely be trying this out again. I figure I could do char-siew the same way.

And now that I have started using the slow cooker, I am tempted to try out other slow cooker recipes such as chicken stew. The domestic goddess wannabe is fighting her way back!