Monday, 19 January 2015

The Delight of Cooking! Duck, Chinese style!

    Guide to Cook Chinese Duck! 

    1 duck 

    140g caster sugar 

    1 tbsp of oyster sauce 

    2 tbsp of soy sauce 

    bunch spring onions, roughly chopped 

    sliced ginger, or garlic 

    2 tbsp malt syrup or honey 

    3 tbsp red wine


    Directions
    Wash the ducks inside and out with cold water, Mix together 'season' with sugar, soy sauce, oyster sauce, ginger, spring onions and pinches of salt, then use this to fill the cavities. Leave to marinate for 30mins!

    In a small bowl, mix the syrup and 2 tbsp of the vinegar. Smear the syrup mixture over the ducks, then place them in a large plastic container and put in the fridge overnight, uncovered.

    Cooking
    To cook, heat oven to 220C fan/ gas 7. Fan, Halogen ovens are good for roasting the duck. Put a little water in the bottom of a large roasting tin, place the ducks on a rack over the top and cover with foil. Roast for about 45 mins. Take off the foil and roast for another 45 mins – the duck must be well done, there is no such thing as a rare Chinese roast duck!


Sunday, 7 December 2014

How to cook Chinese Roast Pork

Recipe for Chinese Roast Pork!!

Oyster Sauce Marinade

4 tablespoons fresh ginger

1 shallot, chopped

6 cloves garlic

1/2 cup oyster sauce

1/4 cup hoisin sauce

2 tablespoons tomato paste

DIRECTIONS

For the marinade: Put the ginger, shallots, and garlic into a blender, and puree.
Transfer the mixture to a bowl, and add the oyster sauce, hoisin sauce, and tomato paste, and stir to incorporate.
For the pork: Put the trimmed tenderloins into a baking dish, and pour over half of the marinade, turning to coat. Cover the dish withplastic wrap, then place the pork in the refrigerator, and let it marinate for a minimum of 30 minutes to a maximum of 24 hours.
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.
Heat the vegetable oil in a large, ovenproof saute pan over medium-high heat. Remove the pork tenderloins from the marinade and searon all sides in the hot pan. Baste the pork with the remaining marinade throughout the cooking process.
Slide the pan into the preheated oven, and cook until the pork is cooked through, approximately 20 minutes. Allow the meat to rest for 15 minutes before serving.
Per serving: Calories 313; Total Fat 10.5 grams; Saturated Fat 3 grams; Protein 47 grams; Total Carbohydrate 4 grams; Sugar: 1 gram; Fiber 0 grams; Cholesterol 148 milligrams; Sodium 430 milligrams;

Monday, 17 November 2014

Chinese Food Information!


Chinese food is one of the most popular types of cuisine in the world. What is your favourite dish? Sweet and sour chicken, Hoisin Duck, Kung Pow Chicken or Dim Sung?


Here we detail the most popular and lesser known dishes from China. From recipes to restaurant recommendations, the history of their creation and their cultural significance. Each region of China have their own style of cuisine, some of which are well known in other parts of the world, some of which are not as yet.

The act of eating Chinese food is also different from that of other cultures i.e. eating with chopsticks,  and this is what many people around the world enjoy about the experience of eating Chinese food, coupled with the many alluring, unique aromas of the food, along with its distinctive, exotic tastes.

The unique ambience of a Chinese restaurant also plays a massive part in many people's experience with Chinese food. Classical Chinese music and traditional decor all contribute. Lighting is important, bringing out the vibrancy of the food, with its vivid palette of colours.

Chinese food is popular for a reason, here we detail why!

Thursday, 13 November 2014

Chinese Main Courses


Part 2 of Main Courses:


Ginger Beef

Slivers of beef are marinated in ginger juice, battered and fried.  Sometimes it is deep fried twice to make it more crispy. The authentic chinese version of the meal is drier and not as sweet as the one served in many restaurants in the west.

Kung Pao Chicken 

This famous dish is made from dicing chicken breast and deep frying it, with roasted peanuts.  A ginger and chilli sauce accompanies it. 


Lemon Chicken 

This dish is made from diced, deep-fried battered chicken, in a lemon sauce.
Lo Mein. This dish is made from tossed noodles in sauce.  Unlike Chow Mein , these noodles are tossed and cooked together with the stir fry mix.


Crispy Skin Duck (Xang Su Ya)

Steamed duck with a deep-fried skin.


Dou Ban Yu

This is fish in a spicy sauce with ginger and garlic.  Trout, carp, and sea bass can be used.


Dry Garlic Spareribs


These are pork ribs that are simmered twice.  The second simmering takes place in a sauce of garlic, mustard and brown sugar.


Fried Rice

There are many variants of fried rice, served with the different meats available on the menu.  The rice, now cold (having been previously cooked) is fried with scrambled eggs and vegetables.


General Tsao's Chicken 

According to wikipedia, this dish is "named after General Tso Tsung-tang, or Zuo Zongtang, a Qing dynasty general and statesman, although there is no recorded connection to him. The real roots of the dish lie in the post-1949 exodus of chefs to the United States."

Chicken breast is diced and covered in cornstarch before it is deep fried in a sauce combining hoisin, soy and chilli pepper.

Monday, 10 November 2014

Chinese Food Menu - Chicken and Beef Dishes

Today in our series on the Chinese Food Menu, we take you to the main dishes usually on offer in Chinese restaurants!  We will do this in two parts as there are many dishes available and we want to keep this easily digestable for our readers!

Beggar's Chicken


Inline image 1Stuffed chicken is wrapped in dough and baked.

Cheng Du Chicken (Chili Chicken Cubes)

Diced chicken breasts are marinated and deep-fried; the sauce is made from hot bean sauce, freshly ground Szechuan pepper, vinegar and sugar. 




Chow Mein (Fried noodles)



In this dish the noodles and vegetables are stir-fried separately, then mixed together at the end of the cooking procedure.  The noodles can be soft or crispy depending on how long they are fried in oil.  It can be made with either thick or thin noodles.  A gravy is either added to the noodles while they are being stir-fried or at the final stage of cooking. Chicken, shrimp or pork are used as the meat.  


Ants Climbing Trees (Ants Creeping on Trees, Ants Climbing a Hill, Ma Yi Shang Shu)


This is a spicy Szechuan dish: marinated pork is cooked in a spicy sauce and served on cellophane (bean thread) noodles.

Bang Bang Ji (Hot Chicken Salad) 


Chicken breasts with hot chili oil are cut into small pieces and served on a sheet of green bean paste. 

Beef in Oyster Sauce





Beef is thinly sliced and then marinated with several ingredients that usually include sherry, soy sauce, cornstarch and sometimes sugar. The beef is stir-fried or deep-fried and then oyster sauce is added. 


Beef with Broccoli


Marinated beef is stir-fried and mixed with stir-fried vegetables - then covered with a thick brown sauce that may also include oyster sauce.

Friday, 7 November 2014

Chinese Food Menu

Chinese Food Menu
Yesterday we told you about the starters on many menus in Chinese restaurants, in order to help the unitiated among you.  Today we are moving to the next section of a menu before people attempt to decide on their main course: Soup!




Hot and Sour Soup




There are many regional variations of this soup are found throughout China.  All of theses contain bean curd, Chinese black mushrooms and usually pork, but the remaining ingredients can vary. 

Wonton Soup



The word Wonton translates as "swallowing a cloud" and in this soup the floating Wontons do resemble tiny clouds.  They are filled with a mixture of meat (usually pork) and seasoning and are boiled, and then added to the stock. 

Egg Drop Soup


 
A Chinese classic: flavoured chicken broth or stock topped with threads of egg. It usually comes with a green onion garnish, and sometimes green peas are added to the stock.

Wednesday, 5 November 2014

Chinese Food Menu


Understanding the menu in a chinese restaurant / takeaway

Many people become confused in Chinese restaurants if they are not experienced with the cuisine on offer. They are slightly intimidated by the exotic names and mix of ingredients making up the dishes. So to help the inexperienced, we have decided to explain what is often on the menu!  Today we will start (excuse the pun) with Starters!
  


Deep Fried Wontons
  

Wonton wrappers are filled with ground pork and a variety of vegetables and seasonings before they are deep-fried.  







Crab Rangoon


This starter has become very popular in some parts of the USA, although it is not an authentic Chinese dish.  The wontons are stuffed with crab, cream cheese and scallions and deep-fried.      
 
These are very popular in the west even though they are not eaten in China. Egg rolls are a larger version of Spring rolls.  They are normally filled with barbecued pork or shrimp - vegetables can include cabbage, celery, suey choy, and/or bean sprouts.

Spring Roll

A lighter, more delicate version of egg rolls, made with a flour and water wrapping (no egg), deep-fried