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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Hi folks,
I was planning to make Paper-wrapped Chicken for dinner, but today has been rather chaotic--I find things in the park a lot, like a wine bottle from 1760 and pipe bowls from 1590, that sort of thing, so I found, of all things, a modern human jawbone today, and have been rather occupied with showing the police where I found it and so forth. Could be from an old graveyard that used to be about a mile from that park--but could be someone who disappeared 60 years ago or 5 years ago, could be anything. Anyway, I now have 45 minutes to whip something up for dinner. Not a problem--stir-fry it is! But I was rather in the mood for the subtle five-spice aspect of Paper-wrapped chicken. So, while I look recipes up online, I'll also check back here every few minutes to see if anyone has posted a suggestion for something I can make. Any suggestions/recipes that come in too late for tonight will be greedily consumed in the near future! I have been cooking complex, simple, intricate, and plain Chinese fare for many years, so don't hesitate to post things that need a bit of know-how or odd ingredients like water chestnut flour or yellow lump sugar. Thanks, Katrina |
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Well, this recipe's for udon vegetable salad, but it's fast and great.
1/4 cup peanut butter 1/3 cup rice vineger or cider vinegar 1/4 cup soy sauce 1/3 cup dark sesame oil 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 jalapeno, seeded and minced 1/2 t five-spice powder 1/4 cup chopped fresh basil Whisk all together. Cook maybe 6 or 8 oz. of noodles -- udon, fettucine, whatever. Prep a pound of mixed vegetables: boil some asparagus or green beans, grate some carrots, dice some red peppers. Heck, toss in leftover chicken or anything. Mix all together, toss with dressing. Fast, healthy, delicious. (You can leave out the basil, and substitute chili oil for the jalapeno.) |
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"White Monkey" wrote in message ... Hi folks, I was planning to make Paper-wrapped Chicken for dinner, but today has been rather chaotic--I find things in the park a lot, like a wine bottle from 1760 and pipe bowls from 1590, that sort of thing, so I found, of all things, a modern human jawbone today, and have been rather occupied with showing the police where I found it and so forth. Could be from an old graveyard that used to be about a mile from that park--but could be someone who disappeared 60 years ago or 5 years ago, could be anything. Anyway, I now have 45 minutes to whip something up for dinner. Not a problem--stir-fry it is! But I was rather in the mood for the subtle five-spice aspect of Paper-wrapped chicken. So, while I look recipes up online, I'll also check back here every few minutes to see if anyone has posted a suggestion for something I can make. Any suggestions/recipes that come in too late for tonight will be greedily consumed in the near future! I have been cooking complex, simple, intricate, and plain Chinese fare for many years, so don't hesitate to post things that need a bit of know-how or odd ingredients like water chestnut flour or yellow lump sugar. Thanks, Katrina What park are you referring to? I know, Jurassic right? :-) -- Lefty Life is for learning The worst I ever had was wonderful |
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What park are you referring to? I know, Jurassic right? :-)
-- Lefty Here in the Netherlands, the parks were mostly built onto boggy ground, necessitating the bringing-in of lots of dirt from elsewhere. The dirt around here was dug up in Delft and Gouda from the grounds around the pottery districts, thus all the pottery fragments. The pipes were smoked almost continually by farmers an sailors and there's almost nowhere in the Netherlands they aren't an extremely common find. And the edge of one pf these parks was just rebuilt, and is still an expanse of sea-bottom sand, which is where I dfound the 18th Century wine bottle. I'm always popping in for the local archeology center's monthly day when the public bring in things like this to have them identified, dated, etc. --Katrina |
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1/4 cup peanut butter
1/3 cup rice vineger or cider vinegar 1/4 cup soy sauce 1/3 cup dark sesame oil 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 jalapeno, seeded and minced 1/2 t five-spice powder 1/4 cup chopped fresh basil Whisk all together. Cook maybe 6 or 8 oz. of noodles -- udon, fettucine, whatever. Prep a pound of mixed vegetables: boil some asparagus or green beans, grate some carrots, dice some red peppers. Heck, toss in leftover chicken or anything. Mix all together, toss with dressing. Fast, healthy, delicious. (You can leave out the basil, and substitute chili oil for the jalapeno.) Thanks, that sounds good! I happen to have a large package of fresh udon noodles right now. They're my toddler's Absolutely Favorite Thing in the Whole World. Oh, except for these little hard Italian bread thingies with olive oil, parsley, and garlic (they're great for the teething). --Katrina |
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White Monkey wrote:
I have been cooking complex, simple, intricate, and plain Chinese fare for many years, so don't hesitate to post things that need a bit of know-how or odd ingredients like water chestnut flour or yellow lump sugar. Thanks, Katrina I know I am a bit late here, and this is not too complicated, but we like this "coating" for stir-fry chicken: 2.5ml ground turmeric 2.5ml ground ginger 5ml salt 5ml ground black pepper 10ml ground cumin 15ml ground coriander 15ml caster sugar Mix all this in a bowl and then use it to coat your chicken pieces. We usually use 3 or 4 boneless chicken breast pieces, cut into cubes. You are very welcome to add anything else you fancy - but this is nice as a base. Stir-fry with veggies of your choice. -- Cheers Chatty Cathy |
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