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| Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods. |
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Howdy, I've Googled till my fingers were bleeding, but... I can't seem to find useful information about the authentic process for making traditional Chinese hand pulled wheat noodles (other than the fact that it supposedly takes years of training to learn how to make them.) I may not devote years to it, but would like to learn more about making the dough, and the technique itself. Might you know, or have a source to suggest? Sincere thanks, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
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Kenneth wrote on Sat, 28 Jan 2006 22:06:58 -0500:
K I've Googled till my fingers were bleeding, but... K I can't seem to find useful information about the authentic K process for making traditional Chinese hand pulled wheat K noodles (other than the fact that it supposedly takes years K of training to learn how to make them.) K I may not devote years to it, but would like to learn more K about making the dough, and the technique itself. K Might you know, or have a source to suggest? I can't help you learn the process but I saw it done several times many years ago in a Vietnamese restuarant. The cook used to come out from the kitchen and stretch the dough back and forward until he had the noodles thin enough. He always got immense applause and, as you say, it looks like it would take years to learn. I suspect you and I would end up covered with the paste! James Silverton. |
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can't help you learn the process but I saw it done several
times many years ago in a Vietnamese restuarant. The cook used to come out from the kitchen and stretch the dough back and forward until he had the noodles thin enough. He always got immense applause and, as you say, it looks like it would take years to learn. I suspect you and I would end up covered with ?the paste! The principle of making hand pulled noodles is to make a dough and allow it to rest for enough time.to make it extensible. Its basically a simple formulations with flour, water and little salt. I had watched a Chinese chef do it in front of me, and even taught me how to do it , but I I admit you can be deluded in thinking its easy to do but indeed it really needs considerable practice to be good at it. The principle is easy to understand but deftness and dexterity takes time to cultivate. to be successful in making thousand strands of thin noodles . Once I get the dough slightly thin it tends to break down, and I don't have enough sensitivity and patience nor the right timing to pull it to the required thinness. Once the dough is ready for making into noodles, it is kneaded briskly and when a cohesive dough is formed it is dusted with flour ,it is then pulled into a cylinder then folded to form two ropes of dough . Generous dusting flour is placed to prevent the two pieces of dough from sticking to each other. The two pieces of dough is then twisted and folded then stretched to form four strands of dough The process of dusting , pulling twisting and folding is repeated until thin strands of dough is formed. Mathematically it look like this... 1 x2=2 x2=4 x2 =8 x2=16 x2=32 x2=64 x2=128 x2= 256 x2=512 x2=1024 etc As the chef works very fast you just see in TV show that is done quickly but its not...Its a step by step process done in rapid succession. And the dough should be really extensible to the final thin strands attainable . |
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