It’s not Christmas, but still. In one of the other cooking post comments, several of the Glibertariat complained that their stir-fries were just not… right. And most of the stir-fries I’ve gotten outside of heavily Chinese areas have been somewhere on the line segment between mediocre and really shitty. And that includes 95% of Chinese restaurants run and staffed by Chinese, but located in white, Hispanic, or black neighborhoods- they’re giving the people what they want (in the case of Jews, pork and shellfish- that was the code word for forbidden meats, “Chinese food”).
So sit back and I will attempt to make a Guide for the Perplexed. I clearly am not Chinese, or of Chinese origins, but I have decent cooking chops, traveled a lot over there, lived in Asian immigrant communities, and am not bashful about asking questions to chefs when I taste something really good, and that has reduced my level of ignorance. The word “Chinese” will be used a lot here, because that’s my personal epicenter for stir-fry cooking. But really, there’s a whole lot of other Asian cuisines that do these same sorts of things, so think Thai, Vietnamese, Laotian, or what-have-you, the principles are the same. Shit, you can even appropriate Chinese methods to prepare Italian-style food; that’s why America is great. Likewise, though I’m a vegetarian, what I’m talking about here is generic and applicable to the protein of your choice. If you prefer dead pig to seitan, you’re still making shitty stir-fries, and I’m still going to save your ass despite that offense to Yahweh.
We regularly fuck up stir-fries. Stir-frying is just a technique, widely applicable and flexible, and we still fuck them up. Here’s a partial list of the things that are most commonly wrong:
- Too soggy. Everything in the dish is more like an Irish stew.
- Singed ingredients that are raw in the middle.
- Uneven cooking, so you get a combo of vegetables that are mushy and raw.
- Gloppy. There’s a weird sauce-fetish that I think derives from old school American Chinese take-outs. The ingredients are drowned in a thick gooey brown or white sauce. And the sauces’ flavors tend to dominate the dish as well.
- Sweet. And the worst offender is the sugar-fetish.
In order to help you avoid the common traps, I’ve got a couple of recipe-ish things here, but what I really want to harp on is some stupidly simple methods which come up again and again. While I’m at it, I’ll also beat you up about the shitty equipment you use. I hope that one or another of my random pieces of brain lint give you an easy fix so you’ll stop making shitty stir-fries.
Step One: Ingredients
The rule of thumb for good Chinese cooking is 60-30-10. 60% of your time should be seeking and obtaining good ingredients, 30% of your time doing preps, and 10% or less actually cooking.
By “good ingredients,” I don’t mean “exotic ingredients,” but rather quality stuff whose flavors and textures don’t need obscuring. The Chinese have been great about adapting their cuisine to local ingredients and freely appropriating. Yeah, it’s fun to use things like Szechuan pickled radish or fermented black beans, but that won’t make your shitty stir-fry less shitty. It will just be shitty but now exotically shitty. Here’s a crazy idea: buy great green beans or peppers or bean sprouts or mushrooms or chicken/beef/pork/seafood and don’t worry as much about the spices and condiments. Now you have a shot at a decent dish, even if you’re fresh out of huangdou jiang.
If you use canned bean sprouts or green beans or asparagus, I will personally come over and explain your porn history to your spouse and children.
The only real necessities peculiar to Chinese stir-fry cooking are soy sauce (have both dark and light on hand), toasted sesame oil, and Shaoxing cooking wine. Use a high smoke-point oil like peanut. All else is negotiable; I keep a variety of pastes, spices, and vinegars handy for specialty dishes, but my everyday stir fries do fine without ’em. Whatever you do, avoid the brand name generic “stir fry sauces.” Read the ingredients; most of them lead off with water and sugar. There will be other forms of sugar listed as well. And xantham gum for extra gloppiness. That stuff is a sure path to shittiness. Unless you like shitty, in which case, go get some deep dish with pineapple and spare the rest of us.
MSG frankly is rather common and not the devil that excess sugar is. Use it wisely and sparingly, but don’t reflexively avoid it.
Step Two: Tools
Since prep should be an outsize part of your time investment, it goes without saying that you need really good sharp knives to make the work go smoothly and quickly. I have a rather, um, eclectic collection. My default knife for stir-fry prep is a cheap Chinese cleaver. It says “stainless” on it and it isn’t. Which is OK, it takes a nice edge, but needs honing every ten minutes or so. Which is also OK because I bought it about 40 years ago for $8 at a Chinese grocery, given it a lot of hard use over the decades, and it’s still doin’ its thing. So while a $300 Shun is a delightful thing, it’s not really a necessity- I didn’t see many of them used in great kitchens in China.
My second-most used knife for stir-fry prep is also a cheapie, this one a 10″ Victorinox. It feels good in the hand, sharpens easily, and has held up well since we got it a few years back. Costs less than a couple of movie tickets and popcorn.
Third most used knife is also a Victorinox, a 3.25″ paring knife, and cheaper than a slice of pizza and a Coke. Great for fine trimming (like the stems of tomatoes or the eyes of pineapple). I think these knives are Swiss, despite the lack of noticeable holes.
And obviously, you want your knives sharp. There’s folks among the Glibertariat who are masters of getting the finest possible edge. I am not one of them, so I cheat and use one of these, a Chef’s Choice Asian sharpener. It gives a good enough edge that I have no problem getting paper-thin slices of garlic or cutting through the skins of over-ripe tomatoes, and it’s so fast and easy, I can sharpen mid-prep without losing much time.
OK, next we bring the heat. Do you have a trendy wok, nicely ceramic non-stick coated and heavy stainless-aluminum clad construction? Toss the fucker, it’s a piece of shit. Ditto the abomination of cast iron woks. Donate them to a homeless turtle shelter or something, they’ll do more good there than on your stove. Know what you need? Something cheap, thin, and unlaminated steel. The kind of piece of shit you get for $20 at the Chinese grocery. Unlike nonstick, you can get these smokin’ hot. Unlike laminated or cast iron, you can get them smokin’ hot very rapidly. And when you turn down the heat, they cool very rapidly, so all in all, the shitty steel woks give you much better temperature control.
Shape is important. Round bottoms are the best BUT you have to have the right kind of cooking surface for that- I have a wok stand from Thailand which is superb, putting out approximately the same amount of heat as the engine from a Saturn V booster stage. I can get the wok to literally red heat in 20 seconds. It is absolutely the best stir-fry cooking I’ve ever done, with the food taking on a subtly smoky “wok hei” aroma and the food cooking in record time. THIS is the right way to do things. I shit you not, wok hei is the difference between indifference and real difference.
Unfortunately, there’s a catch- you either need a professional ventilator hood or you have to cook outside. And our outside cooking has been limited recently because of a heavy mosquito season. After our first frost, I’ll be able to do this again.
Lacking a wok stand like that, don’t even THINK about using a round-bottom pan on a flat cooktop, even with a wok ring, unless you have something like a 100,000 BTU burner. With normal stoves, you will have really shitty heat and that means really shitty, soggy, badly-cooked stir-fries without even a trace of wok hei. Find a thin steel shitty wok with a flat bottom. Not optimum, but you can at least turn out some half-decent product. Here’s mine:
Whichever you use, you want it well-seasoned and to maintain that seasoning. It’s the best non-stick surface you can get. I’ve got about 20 years of season on this wok, and as you’ll see below, I can fry difficult foods like eggs with no sticking.
You also need another utensil for the process- a steel spatula or wok turner. I don’t have one, so I get by with a big steel spoon (seen in the videos below). It works, but I’m a shitty person for not getting the right tool. Don’t be like me. Don’t be a shitty person. Get the right tool.
Techniques:
Did I mention heat? You want the ability to get that wok screaming hot, and the courage and attention to use it properly, which means not getting distracted and letting food burn, and most importantly… mis en place. You want EVERY ingredient to be prepped, chopped, measured, and handy. If you don’t make at least ten dirty little bowls and dishes for you ingredients, you’re doing it wrong and that’s why your stir fries suck. God invented dishwashers and orphans- make use of them.
Second, precooking. Most stir-fries use ingredients from their raw state, added sequentially. And that’s another reason most stir-fries are shitty. To get the best and most even degree of doneness with disparate ingredients, you need to precook (slightly undercooking) each of the major ingredients in advance, then bringing them together at the end. Typically, the protein will be cooked first, removed, then set aside. Various additives can be either parboiled and refreshed (i.e., dunked into an ice bath after boiling) or stir fried separately to get each one to the optimum cooking point. Then the actual building of the stir-fry commences by cooking aromatics (garlic, ginger, scallions, and the like), then adding the cooked ingredients and seasonings/sauces to reheat and finish.
I can’t overemphasize the latter point: stir-fry should be done in discrete stages which are brought together at the end. For years, my stir-fries were shitty because of misguided ideas about trying to time the sequence so that the ingredients were added on top of one another in the right order and would magically cook properly. This is an especially bad idea because not only does the timing become terribly critical and can’t be adjusted on the fly to accommodate variations in ingredients, but you also lose control of the cooking temperature- the first ingredients put in the wok will insure that later ingredients cook at a lower temp and with higher surrounding moisture. That is not generally a good thing.
The other advantage of the cook-shit-separately is that distinctive flavors and textures will remain distinct and not all blend together in a mish-mash. This is why German or British cooking is shitty and Chinese cooking is great. And why you need to spend time getting great ingredients.
Two Examples:
These are sort-of-recipes, but each illustrates points made before. Neither is “authentic,” but they each use mostly non-exotic ingredients and (when cooked right) show off the quality of the main ingredients. And each is linked to a video showing most of the process; the videos are pretty shitty because we didn’t have time to block out the shots or to do editing/voice-over, but future ones will be better.
Because of the aforementioned mosquitoes, I had to use my kitchen stove and the flat-bottom wok, so the heat was somewhat inadequate. But still, they turned out delicious.
Stir Fry Green Beans
This is loosely based on a classic Szechuan dish and is an example of a dry stir-fry. The Szechuan version uses pickled radish and Szechuan peppercorns, so feel free to exotify it if that’s your desire. Traditionally, the precooking is done by deep-frying in coolish (300 degree F) oil instead of the water-blanching that I do, and yard-long beans are used. Again, feel free- the important thing is to have the beans pre-cooked before the stir-frying commences.
1 lb fresh green beans, ends trimmed
1/4 cup raw peanuts
2-3 cloves garlic, sliced thin
5 or 6 dried red chiles
2-3 white parts of scallions, chopped
1 tsp Korean red pepper paste (gochujang); can substitute garlic-red-chile paste or chile-black-bean paste
1 tsp light (not lite!) soy sauce
oil to cook
Drop green beans into a pot of rapidly boiling salted water. Boil for 3-4 minutes or until the beans are about half-done. A few beans may need to be sacrificed to determine this; cook’s privilege. Drain and toss into an ice water bath, then after they cool completely, remove from the bath and drain. Set aside.
Mix the pepper paste and soy sauce together. Set aside.
Heat the wok until it’s smoking, then add in one or two tablespoons of oil. Toss in the sliced garlic and toss it around until it gets aromatic and starts coloring a little bit, 15 seconds or so. Remove the garlic from the wok. Add the dried chiles and stir around until they start to brown, then remove and set aside. Add the peanuts, and stir around until they start to color, 15 seconds or so. Remove the peanuts and set aside. Optionally, you can lightly crush or chop them after cooking for a finer texture.
Seeing a pattern?
Now it’s time to bring everything together. Add the chopped scallions, stir for a few seconds, then add the green beans. Stir-fry until the green beans are starting to show some black spots, a minute or two. Add the pepper paste/soy sauce mixture and a little extra soy sauce if you think it’s needed. Stir for a few seconds, then add the sliced garlic, the dried chiles, and the peanuts. Stir to combine, then remove to a serving bowl and eat up.
Tomato and Eggs
This is a standard Cantonese dish, seen in every university cafeteria in the province, and a home-cooking favorite. It’s stupid-simple and delicious. As with many standard dishes, every family makes it a little differently and will swear everyone else is doing it wrong. By contrast with the last dish, this one is very saucy, but the sauce comes mostly from the water in the tomatoes and is amazingly flavorful.
5 eggs, beaten
4 scallions, white and green parts separated and chopped
5 medium or 6 small tomatoes, cut into wedges
2 tbs ketchup
2 tbs soy sauce
1 tsp sugar (omit if your tomatoes are really good)
1 tbs shaoxing cooking wine
1/2 tsp toasted sesame oil
1/2 tsp white pepper (or more to taste)
1 tbs minced ginger
1 small onion or large shallot, slivered
1 tsp cornstarch dissolved in 2 tbs water
oil to cook
Mix together the ketchup, soy sauce, sugar, shaoxing, sesame oil, and white pepper, set aside. Heat the wok until it’s smoking, then add a couple tablespoons of oil and swirl around. Pour in the eggs. Let them fluff up a bit, then stir them around for a minute or so until done- they should be set but not browned. I like my eggs a bit loose, SP prefers them somewhere in the middle of the Mohs scale. Your choice. Scoop them out of the wok, chop them a bit with your spatula or spoon, and set aside. Wipe out any leftover egg.
Put a bit more oil in the wok. Add in the ginger and stir it for a few seconds. Lower the heat a bit, then add the whites of the scallion and the onion. Stir for a minute until they are fragrant and softened slightly, then bring the heat back up and toss in the tomatoes. Stir-fry for a minute or so until the tomatoes are heated through, then push them to the side of the wok. Add in the ketchup mixture and bring that up to a boil. Then stir everything together, stir in about half of the green parts of the scallions, and add the eggs. Stir, then add in about half of the cornstarch slurry (make sure the slurry is stirred before you pour it in) and cook until the sauce thickens. If you want it thicker, add more cornstarch.
Turn out into a serving bowl and sprinkle with the remaining chopped green parts of the scallions. Serve over rice.
Apparently it’s almost exclusive to Indonesia, but have you ever tried using Sweet Soy Sauce? Works very well for some dishes, but not very well for most others. I’ve got very mixed feelings about it, but my folks always have a bottle on hand (normally available at Asian Grocery stores – but probably just the ABC export version from Indonesia).
Yes, I have a bottle of Pantai brand. It’s really useful in certain situations, just like you say. Marinades for Indonesian or Hakka, for example.
Ketchap Manis… Can’t go wrong with that..
Shit, put it on white rice, and it makes it taste like something succulent!
I maintain that it is not possible to create a decently-authentic peanut sauce without the use of ketjap manis (Conimex brand is fine). Fight Me.
“kecap manis” or “sweet catsup” is the Bahasa name for sweet soy-sauce.
Hence my use of the term ketjap manis.
I worked with an Indonesian dude who traveled with that stuff. He put that on everything, and I mean everything. He may have put it on ice cream.
Pussy? When I was doing my tour of Asia, I tried it and liked it…
You make me want to watch Eat Drink Man Woman again.
Is it wrong that I’m eating Buffalo wings as I read this?
I’m eating panzanella and watching Joe Flacco have a good day. And having 49er schadenfreude.
The Redskins can body-slam Rodgers, not a penalty. The minute the Packers get a sack, it’s a personal foul.
Go SKINS!..
They lose against Indy and beat the Packers… go figure
You’re welcome.
I just finished an enormous bratwurst with saurkraut, mustard and a Bitburger pils. So, no.
These euphemisms.
I’m not having any of those problems listed.
It could be the fact that I’m not attempting to stir-fry.
Understandable. There’s, like, salt and spices and shit.
Well, I don’t have a wok, or a suitable heat source (ceramic cooktop).
Why are you putting shit in your food?
Dust to dust, ashes to ashes.
The truth is, I don’t stir-fry, because it requires me to stand by the stove while the cooking is going on. Once prep is done, I want to set a timer and walk away.
Wow, those are great food photos. They make the food look extra delicious. 😉
Where could OMWC possibly found somebody with those skillz?
Two question OMWC. First, what is your preferred oil for stir fry? Second, what do you use to sharpen your knives?
Preferred oil is peanut, but I can get by with any high smoke point oil that’s relatively neutral. As for knife sharpening…
Sam’s Club. All of your kitchen knife needs for a few bucks. Get a diamond block for next to nothing at a tool store. Good handles, excellent stainless steel, holds an edge really well if your mother doesnt come to stay for a few days (Aaarggh!). Or your children who shove them into the holder with all of the other cutlery. Or your wife that doesnt understand about sharp knives and the nature of good steel. You know what? How about if everyone just doesnt touch my damned knives? How about that? Don’t touch them. Don’t use them. Stay away from them.
https://www.samsclub.com/sams/7-santoku-knife-di-2-pk/prod5250043.ip?xid=plp_product_1_8
https://www.samsclub.com/sams/bakers-chefs-cook-s-knives-2-pk/prod5250044.ip?xid=plp_product_1_9
https://www.samsclub.com/sams/bakers-chefs-boning-knives-2-pk/prod5250046.ip?xid=plp_product_1_5
How about if everyone just doesn’t touch my damned knives? How about that? Don’t touch them. Don’t use them. Stay away from them.
Your jib, sir. I like the cut of it.
Yeah, I have that same knife. Bought it from GFS. Bought some for my kids as well. Nice knives.
Thanks.
He mentioned peanut and sesame oils in the article.
Sesame is a finishing oil, not for cooking. Peanut is best, vegetable oil works just fine.
Toasted sesame oil is for seasoning, not frying. It will not be happy at high temperature.
I have found that adding a little sesame oil to the peanut oil when cooking can be quite tasty and for some reason the sesame oil doesnt smoke. You are the organic chemist…any idea how that works?
I’m a physical-analytical chemist, but I do the same thing with olive oil and butter.
Ah. There is one I haven’t tried.
Yet.
I brown the protein ahead of time but other than that, I still layer ingredients as I go. I would blanch beans ahead of time. A smoking hot wok is a must. Just as important is not overloading the wok and cooling it down during the cooking process. Having all ingredients prepped and in place is critical.
And don’t wash your wok with soap and water! Hot water only and wipe it dry. My wok is about 30 years old, black as OMWC’s heart, and when I wipe it out after a hot water wash, there is no residue left over.
I used to pinch-hit at a reasonably authentic Chinese restaurant back when I was a teenager (no, I’m not Chinese IRL — I had a Chinese friend who had the same day and year of birth as I did, so his parents [who owned the restaurant] took me under their wing, one thing led to another, and sometimes when I was hanging around in their place drinking coffee and shooting the breeze with their son, if they got really busy in the resto they’d ask me to help out in the kitchen and/or schlep stuff to tables).
I got to use The Wok From Hell. The better part of three feet across, on a burner that put out 150,000 BTU. To clean it, they simply tossed water in it, turned the burners up to 11 and used a bamboo whisk to swirl the boiling water around, washing the insides of the wok. The water was then swirled out into a catchment built into one side of this massive burner apparatus and then drained into the waste system. That was a skill in itself and one I never mastered. Did I mention that the wok was fixed in place and could not be tilted? Yeah.
Boiling water and the raging fires of Hell were all they ever used to clean the wok.
150,000btus is why the majority of us can’t duplicate restaurant quality Chinese.
“Raging Fires of Hell” would be a good name for a Ska band.
I was working out what “Hell Wok” would work as.
Chinese Black Sabbath cover band.
I will not stand for my white trash culture being appropriated by yellow commies.
That wok stand in my photo is 100,000. Trust me, it’ll do.
I have one just like it. I use it to melt lead for bullet casting.
I have no idea what BTUs my burner is.
It works perfectly well for steaming crab so I am satisfied with it.
It will suffice with green beans as well.
In my case there’s also the lack of ventilation or an outside.
So… I shouldn’t be using a can of Easy Off?
One of these days I’m going to describe the process behind producing loyal sidekick Rat’s Heartstopper Bacon Bacon Bacon Cheese Bacon Cheeseburger with Bacon. We only eat it during hunting season, but it’s worth looking forward to all year.
Why are you diluting the awesomeness of this hot sandwich you describe by putting a burger in it?
We use burger patties with cheese and bacon blended in.
But does the cheese have bacon in it?
Is there cheese that doesn’t have bacon in it?
Counterpoint – can you really be a vegetarian and a libertarian?
This whole site is probably just a Soros astroturf operation.
I mean, I already know half of you are Tulpa.
And the other half are also Tulpa.
Fine, I’ll say it:
“It’s Tulpae all the way down.”
Although there is no requirement for a big tent for a party of so few, the fact that no two libertarians can agree about any fucking thing means a big tent is necessary so everyone can retire to one section of it without being in arm’s reach of someone they are a heartbeat or two away from killing. Of course a libertarian can be a vegetarian, and the meat-eaters can be thankful for the reduced competition. Other than the vegan or two on this site, who are certainly eyed suspiciously by all other vegans, no they cannot be libertarians because they are so fucking annoying with pushing their gustatory morality on anyone within earshot (which I suppose is another reason for the big tent for the few people).
“Here’s a crazy idea…”
In my early 20’s someone said something that made the light come on for me with regards to cooking: Use good quality ingredients and you cant really screw it up. Good in = good out. Otherwise you are just polishing a turd.
The French are looking down their noses at you and muttering, “that is not cooking, that is shopping…”.
And I completely concur with your sentiment.
You’d be surprised.
+1 well-done fillet mignon
And catsup?
Absolutely. Fried potatoes can be improved by ketchup, but it’s amazing how many things you can wildly fuck up by using ketchup on ’em.
Love the wok stand. I have an old propane stand burner around here somewhere I need to dig out. I just stuffed a toasted Italian sausage sandwich in my face and now I want stir fry. Thanks for the tips OMWC. And fuck Baltimore.
I just stuffed a toasted Italian sausage sandwich in my face
Those euphemisms.
And hey, the Ravens spotted the donkeys two TDs, so you can’t complain.
Horrible game. Denver killed themselves with penalties. Crabtree is awesome though and it is always fun watching that guy play. And that Ravens LB (can’t think of his name) they could not stop that fucker either.
Suggs. Future HoF, first ballot. Dude is 36 and still playing at a top level.
Clay Matthews set a record today. 3 straight games with roughing the quarterback penalty. Apparently you can’t tackle a quarterback in today’s NFL. You can only drag them down.
A Cowboys defender got flagged for one of those BS penalties. I mean, if you’ve got full momentum and can’t see whether or not the QB has thrown the ball, what can you possibly do?
Against the QB its a penalty. Against anybody else it would be a text book tackle.
And the NFL wonders why people aren’t watching any more.
Your boy got his makeup call, so it’s all good.
Oh, no – PLEASE don’t mistake me for a Cowboy fan. ANYTHING but that!
I just call it like I see it.
Aaron Rodgers was tackled worse, and no flag.
Mrs trshmnstr sold my cheap flat bottomed wok. Not completely unrelatedly, my stir fries suffer from most of the issues mentioned in this article.
I use a large cast iron skillet, might take a bit longer to get up to heat but the cooking is just like what I saw in the second video, except my eggs don’t stick at all. Great looking food, love the videos (although they loaded really slow, which could be on my end.) You’ll need to add in some witty banter if you want to be the libertarian Chef John.
I think he could really liven it up with some ice cream truck music. For the children.
People used to fight to get to have a dinner cooked by Spud and me. Not because of the food (which I’ll modestly claim was excellent), but because of the creative invective. I have to think of what I can do as a solo act.
Those are nice side dishes. Where’s the entree?
Seriously, those green beans look tasty.
I love a good stir-fry; I made one last night with pork, onions, carrots, celery, peanuts, peppers, and water chestnuts. I’m in Ohio – not known for amazingly authentic Chinese cuisine – so if I want something that’s not soggy vegetables boiled in goopy sauce, I have to make it myself.
I’ve frequently thought about getting an outdoor gas burner for stir-frying so I could get it blazing hot without worrying about smoke. Right now, I just do it inside and open all the windows. Fuck it.
I’ve found that a well-seasoned wok is also great for making ratatouille.
With “Raging Fires of Hell” in mind from upthread .
“Round bottoms are the best.” Agreed.
😉
https://archive.is/bVc1v/940f0999ffab45d1793bbe093ee64be81205548f
https://archive.is/bVc1v/8c6f16bf4fbb8fd1aaa6a721b0ee373022a246f2
https://archive.is/bVc1v/dfc548681668cd05dc0f6ed51774c62c3bc54ee8
https://archive.is/bVc1v/a05dd92653bad8ca82b1b26970cec037606bef46
Damn
I knew it was just a matter of time before you hit my weak spot. Despite my cynical nature…
Dammit.
Happy to help.
Several years ago I bought an inexpensive set of ceramic knives. I use them almost every day and they are still sharp.
Ghost knives? They’re undetectable!
Puritans ruin everything. Irony?
https://www.nbc4i.com/news/u-s-world/online-retailer-pulls-sexy-handmaid-s-tale-halloween-costume-amid-social-media-backlash/1468520877
It wasn’t much of a backlash, and I’m surprised Yandy pulled it.
https://www.yandy.com/Yandy-Sexy-OpEd-Anonymous-Costume.php
AlmightyJB’s Egg Foo Yung
2 Eggs
4 Egg Whites (in addition to the 2 Eggs above)
½ cup Mung Bean Sprouts (chopped) – can used canned if you cannot find fresh
½ cup Fresh Mushrooms (chopped) – can used canned if you have on hand
2 Green Onions chopped (+ green trim chopped for garnish)
1/3 cup Water Chestnuts (chopped) – canned
2 Tbls Soy Sauce, divided
2 Tbls Canola Oil
2 Tbls Sesame Oil, divided
1 cup Chicken Broth
1 Tbls Corn Starch
Salt & Pepper to taste
8oz Skirt Steak* (sliced thin for stir frying – or if you prefer to grill meat, slice after grilling)
2 Servings White Rice
Asian spice blend or Chinese 5 Spice or whatever you like (optional)
Makes 2 Servings (2 Patties per Serving)**
*Could substitute any Stir-Fry type Beef (Flank, London Broil, Round Top Steak, or for really lean beef option Eye of Round; could also substitute Pork, Chicken, Shrimp, etc., or omit meat for Vegetarian).
**This is a good two servings, could cut to one patty each and ½ the rice for lighter meal easy.
Start cooking rice per package instructions. Dry the meat thoroughly. Season thinly sliced meat with salt & pepper to taste (could also use other Asian spices/blend if you would like). In 1 Tbls of sesame oil, cook the meat until done as you like, remove meat from pan and wipe out pan to use for next step (if grilling instead, season meat and then grill, let meat rest 5 minutes then slice into thin strips and mix with the tbls of sesame oil). In the other Tbls sesame Oil, stir-fry sprouts, mushrooms, green onions, water chestnuts (season veggies while cooking). Remove from pan, let meat and veggies cool slightly. Mix the eggs and egg whites thoroughly in a bowl. Stir into this bowl the cooled down meat and veggies as well as 1 Tbls of Soy Sauce. (The meat and veggies do not have to cool all the way; you just want them to not be so hot that they start cooking the eggs when you add them to the bowl.) Heat 2 Tbls of Canola Oil in pan on medium-low temperature. Using measuring cup, put ½ cup portions of Egg Foo Yung mixture into oil to make patties (may have to just make two patties at a time depending on size of pan, do not crowd the pan too much). As egg starts to harden a little, fold up edges over the mixture to form a patty. Just fold up over the edges towards the middle, it will look more like a patty after you flip it. Cook 2 minutes at medium-low, flip patty over and cook two minutes more on other side. Patties should be a nice golden brown when done. Place patties on a plate as done. (keep warm in the oven, on low if you are cooking more patties). Use this same pan to make the sauce.
For the sauce, put 1 Tbls of cornstarch in a clean bowl. Stir in 1 cup chicken stock, 1 Tbls of soy sauce, and pepper to taste. Increase heat in pan to medium high. Pour in sauce mixture and stir with spoon until thickens. Can double this if you really like gravy like my wife.
Put rice on plate, patties on rice or on side if you prefer, pour sauce over patties. Garnish patties with green onion trimmings.
“Start cooking rice per package instructions”
That’s not very libertarian.
“Recipe? Instructions? Fuck you, I don’t care what you do. Do whatever you want, just got off my lawn”?
Or “how dare you not (have your orphans) raise and harvest rice for yourself?” ?
Yeah, we have the 8″ Victorinox Chef’s knife and love it as well. Have used for years.
Tiger Woods for the first time in five years. Chants of USA! USA! USA! surrounded the green. I’m not a Tiger fan, per se – not a hater – but I enjoyed that scene very much.
Yeah. Pretty cool.
I just don’t care. It’s golf. And I find it bizarre the hold Tiger Woods seems to have on people who otherwise aren’t interested in golf but for some reason cheer for him.
I’ll take a stab at explaining it.
Sloopy will remind everyone tomorrow morning that the two greatest golfers are Bobby Jones and Jack Nicklaus. Bobby Jones’ last tournament win was almost 90 years ago. Jack Nicklaus’ last came in 1986. Even Sloopy will concede that Tiger is in the same area code as those guys, and getting to witness greatness of that caliber, regardless of the sport, is a very big deal. Many people enjoyed the careers of Babe Ruth and Michael Jordan in just the same way; I had a very good friend back in the day who was a big Jordan fan. He and I played together a lot and he was a good player – but he more or less stopped caring about hoops when Jordan retired for good.
I’m not the “in awe of greatness” type myself. I find it grating when I just want to enjoy a match and one of the greats waltzes in and steals all the thunder.
Eldrick the Slut.
I’ve had chili simmering on the stove since the Packer game started. It will taste good when I finally get hungry. (side note, this is the first time I didn’t have to work for a Packer game in 2 years and that was the game they played? Glad I could drink during the game)
Why do you hate your knives?
By the way, in case you were wondering, your wok stand says “T. B.”.
Yeah, I’ve read about the proper way to sharpen knives. No shortcuts! You must suffer for your knives.
I find knife sharpening to be quite relaxing, actually.
right up there with cleaning a pistol and polishing wingtips * pleasant sigh *
You and I are of a kind. In a different reality, I could have called you friend.
* sputtering * but, but: this is my reality! * runs sobbing from room *
Nah. Buffing wheel. Jeweler’s rouge. Easy-peasy.
I read that and it literally gave me cancer. Ass cancer.
I got to know The Aquabats watching their show with my nephew, but their music is pretty good to.
Did what I should have done at last renewal, kicked Liberty Mutual’s subsidiary to the curb.
I am watching ghost busters 2. It is highly underrated
Annie Potts. Would.
I adopted TN, but it’s the weak sister of the very hot South.
Annie is about it from Nashville. Kelly Cash from Memphis (Arkansas blood). That’s about it.
Since it’s still Sunday afternoon (mostly):
Obligatory .
Check out the Drudge front page. Looks like Brett K is done, son
You mean with this story unraveling and the democrats looking like political hacks they resorted to another woman lying so they can keep dragging this out and block a vote? Fuck this shit. This country is under attack by people that have decided they would rather burn everything down than admit they lost an election.
^This^
It’s weird that they haven’t voted already. It would not change one single vote or move any popularity needle a single point.
#believeher, except those lying skanks that took down Al Franken. (BTW, I did not find the accusations against Franken (I hate the man) to be something a person should have to resign over (not that I’m saying sexual assault shouldn’t be punished, but ‘he jokingly grabbed my boob while I was asleep’ or ‘he touched my butt when I was standing next to him aren’t exactly assault))
My guess: something typical/normal happened years ago and she’s being paid to blow it up into something worse.
Again…all these 11th hour accusers
The dude has been through 6 background checks, compliments of the FBI. Yet all this is suddenly coming to light.
Mmmmhmmmm.
You meant to say a new heroine is bravely coming forth to save us from dystopia.
Yes, yes. That’s it exactly.
Only the Democrats can save the United States. {eyeroll}
If all these tactics dont pan out for them in their attempt to stall the nomination, I really wouldnt put it past someone to arson the building. Or worse.
*confirmation, not nomination
He’s still done. Grassley is a fucking moron for letting it drag out this long.
Meanwhile, Ellison can quite publicly call his accuser a liar, and nobody bats an eye.
Grassley is holding up a fuckin SCOTUS hearing because of baseless allegations.
Agreed JB. Team red is not called the party of stupid without reason. At this point they should have realized what team blue’s game is and basically told them to go fuck goats.
Yeah, he’s done. The only hope I see for a more small-c court is if the November elections produce a more Republican Senate, and Trump then nominates a conservative female to the court.
I hope Kavanagh realises that he’s been screwed by the Rs as much as anything, and exits as gracefully as he can under the circumstances.
They’re doubling-down on the Roy Moore play, cause this one is getting more resistance than traction.
Unless he raped this chick with a dildo*, he’s getting confirmed.
*99% sure the dido is going to be an office prank of some sort.
I said they would find another woman.
“The woman at the center of the story, Deborah Ramirez, who is fifty-three, attended Yale with Kavanaugh, where she studied sociology and psychology. Later, she spent years working for an organization that supports victims of domestic violence. The New Yorker contacted Ramirez after learning of her possible involvement in an incident involving Kavanaugh. The allegation was conveyed to Democratic senators by a civil-rights lawyer. For Ramirez, the sudden attention has been unwelcome, and prompted difficult choices. She was at first hesitant to speak publicly, partly because her memories contained gaps because she had been drinking at the time of the alleged incident. In her initial conversations with The New Yorker, she was reluctant to characterize Kavanaugh’s role in the alleged incident with certainty. After six days of carefully assessing her memories and consulting with her attorney, Ramirez said that she felt confident enough of her recollections to say that she remembers Kavanaugh had exposed himself at a drunken dormitory party, thrust his penis in her face, and caused her to touch it without her consent as she pushed him away. Ramirez is now calling for the F.B.I. to investigate Kavanaugh’s role in the incident. “I would think an F.B.I. investigation would be warranted,” she said.”
OFFS!
?
Yeah. Fuck her (with the Doom cock). I believe her less than the first one.
Evil. These people are evil.
A pot of Pinto beans and Pork, simmering on the Stove, Cornbread on the way……..
HEY YUFUS!
Address please ?
I love a good homemade stir fry cuz fresh vegetables are better than restaurant stuff sitting in it’s sauce.
I currently have some properly prepped fish being cold smoked.
One speckled trout. One pompano and one Spanish Mackrel.
I also have 1 lb. of salmon belly meat which is deliciously fatter than the salmon fillets themselves and are the greatest hourderves ever.
My poor wife has to make do with just a piece of salmon fillet cooked on the pellet grill.
Just made some Osso Bucco with a nice saffron rice and a garden salad with an oil & vinegar dressing and my kid just ate most of it while I just had a bit. Nice Chianti to go with it, and half of the big bottle is now gone. Might as well kill the other half.
I’m looking forward to October. Z nation, The man in the high castle, and Stan against evil all come back.
Woohoo.
I’m looking forward to October as well but for different reasons.
Once the weather breaks the fish turn on trying to fatten up for the winter AND I don’t sweat my ass off at 10 o’clock in the morning just walking to the truck.
The oldest finally started wearing a bike helmet (has always hated hats and sunglasses since he was born).
So hooked up the bike trailer and rode to a bar downtown with a huge lawn for him to run around in. The wife and the baby drove over. Was only a 3 miler but being out of shape and dragging the trailer definitely made it a work out.
Fun afternoon. Would do again
One crank at a time…it gets easier.
True. Uphills and stoplights suck though
What did the kid have to drink?
He’ll Grab any bottle or glass left unattended. So far we’ve caught him before he’s been able to drink any wine beer or soda
So vodka and scotch are OK. :-p
As long as its not my drink
Long beans with chili-garlic sambal.
It’s almost a meal.
Ribeyes on the grill, with mushroom pan gravy, faux mashed potatoes, and lima beans (for Jugsy).
Ive been carb-deficient all day so I can get faded on a mess of Millwaukee’s Diet Beast, and pray that Brady loses another one. Wont likely happen, but hope springs eternal.
How did you make a pan gravy if you grilled the ribeyes?