shadesofmauve (
shadesofmauve) wrote2013-09-16 07:57 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Cooking Experiment Success!
First: From my mood when I posted a brief note this afternoon, compared with my mood now, I'm relearning that I really, really, really shouldn't rely on carbs during the day. The instanoodle from Uwajimaya was yummy, but not what I needed.
Second: I just finished cooking a dish from Fuschia Dunlop's Revolutionary Chinese Cooking: Recipes from Hunan Province, and I'm delighted. It's about time I used my wok as a proper wok. I'm only just realizing that I've been scared of cooking with high heat ever since the Three Firetrucks incident -- but damn it, it's my own house, and I don't have to call the fire department if I KNOW there isn't a fire. SO THERE.
I picked a recipe that looked relatively simple, both in preparation and ingredients, because I wanted to be able to taste the one ingredient I was totally unfamiliar with -- fermented black beans. They seem to be a bit sour and a lot umami. I had green bell peppers rather than Italian frying peppers, bacon rather than pork belly, and sherry rather than shaoxing wine, but those were all suggested substitutions. I may try it again when I have more time for shopping -- peppers and pork belly are easy to find. (Not so sure about the wine).

The dish isn't knock-your-socks off, but it's definitely tasty, nicely balanced between greens and meat, and only took 40 minutes to make -- which included rice, rereading the recipe multiple times, and bringing my housemate a hammer and a ziploc bag of pork because I'm crap at judging weight and I needed to know how it compared to a pound. Since I'm a ridiculously slow cook, 40 min is actually pretty good.
Have to note that I roughly doubled the recipe, and any further increase would be impossible, because it really is a true stir fried dish, not a 'stir fry' as my family more colloquially calls them, cooked over medium heat.
I have most of the tin of fermented black beans left, and I THINK that for the first time in several weeks, E and I have a normal weekend. I'm looking forward to a trip out to Hong Phat and a chance to try a few more things from the book.
Second: I just finished cooking a dish from Fuschia Dunlop's Revolutionary Chinese Cooking: Recipes from Hunan Province, and I'm delighted. It's about time I used my wok as a proper wok. I'm only just realizing that I've been scared of cooking with high heat ever since the Three Firetrucks incident -- but damn it, it's my own house, and I don't have to call the fire department if I KNOW there isn't a fire. SO THERE.
I picked a recipe that looked relatively simple, both in preparation and ingredients, because I wanted to be able to taste the one ingredient I was totally unfamiliar with -- fermented black beans. They seem to be a bit sour and a lot umami. I had green bell peppers rather than Italian frying peppers, bacon rather than pork belly, and sherry rather than shaoxing wine, but those were all suggested substitutions. I may try it again when I have more time for shopping -- peppers and pork belly are easy to find. (Not so sure about the wine).

The dish isn't knock-your-socks off, but it's definitely tasty, nicely balanced between greens and meat, and only took 40 minutes to make -- which included rice, rereading the recipe multiple times, and bringing my housemate a hammer and a ziploc bag of pork because I'm crap at judging weight and I needed to know how it compared to a pound. Since I'm a ridiculously slow cook, 40 min is actually pretty good.
Have to note that I roughly doubled the recipe, and any further increase would be impossible, because it really is a true stir fried dish, not a 'stir fry' as my family more colloquially calls them, cooked over medium heat.
I have most of the tin of fermented black beans left, and I THINK that for the first time in several weeks, E and I have a normal weekend. I'm looking forward to a trip out to Hong Phat and a chance to try a few more things from the book.
no subject
Admittedly, I grew up cooking wok style, so this is something that's familiar to me. I wonder if I should hunt up some recipes that work really well for me and see if you'd be interested in them.
Stasia
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
But it reminded me of how it always amused me at the bakery that they had a hammer at the Cake Station, mostly for use with wedding cakes.