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The Hungry Scribbler

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Snap Pea Fried Rice with Korean Seasoning Paste

July 5, 2014

If bread is the staff of life for Westerners, rice is the very pillar for people of the Far East.

Hardly a day would pass without our Chinatown family enjoying its pleasures when I was growing up. 

White rice with coin purse eggs. Sautéed greens strewn across a bed of the fluffy grains. Bits of succulent meat in a colorful stir fry piled on top of individual bowls of rice.

We leaned heavily on rice. Put all our weight against it, you could say. 

We even found uses for it besides those epicurean.

Our grandmother somehow discovered for instance, that with the addition of a little water, old rice could be cooked on the stove top to make a glue-like paste for our myriad art projects. She usually cooked the mixture on a large metal spoon over a low flame.

It wasn't quite congruent with the many stories we heard about her. Like, how before the Sino-Japanese War, she had a house full of servants who did everything for her.

And, how when the Japanese burned down the family home, she fled with her children, my mother included. My grandmother's jewelry - the only things of value she could carry with her when they escaped - were sewn into the hem of her dress.

Even as child, these were the types of images that appeared in my mind whenever I watched her hold that spoonful of sticky paste over a flame.

For me, the best use of the hard-working grain has always been as fried rice.

A dish of economy, fried rice is one of the most satisfying ways to use that left-over hardened white (or brown) block inside some forgotten container in the back of nearly every fridge across America.

You know you have one. Go check. It's there.

Use it up! Right now! (As my grandmother, who incidentally, was quite bossy would say.)

Here’s what I did with mine. First, I had to stop my husband from throwing that chunk of old rice into a bowl to “nuke” in the microwave. He was intending for it to be his entire meal.

“Seriously? You’re having just that for lunch?” I said watching him.

He nodded.

“You can’t eat just that,” I insisted, snatching the rice from him. 

I remembered that we had an overabundance of snap peas from our veggie CSA. The fat little pods were crisp and sweet, but so many had appeared recently in our weekly produce box that we hadn’t quite managed to eat them all.

Snap Peas, Unadorned

I moved onto the flavorings.

Rice is great at absorbing whatever seasonings you add to it. The traditional flavorings for Chinese fried rice orbit around ginger and green onions, garlic and soy. Some soft, quickly cooked eggs might be added in for richness. Green peas might be thrown in with a handful of scallions at the end.

I chose to go a different route. I was thinking of kimchi.

If you haven’t had it, you must. Rambunctious, bold and always confident of being liked even when dressed in its full regalia of ground chili, garlic, ginger, anchovy sauce or whatever other un-shy finery it might be wearing, kimchi is delicious.

Often, when for no reason I think of it, my mouth will start watering.

Sadly, I had none in my refrigerator. Yes, I was utterly kimchi-less. So, I did the next best thing.

I made a seasoning paste with the exact ingredients I would normally use to make a bok choy kimchi. 

Korean pepper, garlic, ginger. Anchovy sauce not pictured.

I quickly sautéed my diagonal-cut snap peas first then set them aside.

Next, I seared my seasoning paste in a very hot pan with a few tablespoons of oil. The paste caramelized and took on a smoky flavor.

I added the block of old rice, using a wooden spoon to break it up as I worked the seasoning paste into it. Then, I let the rice sit in the hot pan in as thin a layer as possible to allow the rice to soften and take on all the flavors.

The snap peas were added back in toward the end after the rice was cooked through with the paste.

On top of that, I tossed in a generous amount of chopped cilantro and green onion for freshness. A generous drizzle of toasted aromatic sesame oil followed.

I scooped it up into a bowl and handed it over to Marc.

There, much better. Savory, spicy, fresh. Super quick. And made from leftovers.

"Thanks," He said smiling as he took the bowl. 

What are you waiting for? Go make some already!

*P.S. For those of you eating paleo or ketogenic, you can still make this using cauliflower rice. Add in some cooked bacon or add a fried egg on top! Delicious.

Snap Pea Fried Rice with Kimchi Seasoning Paste

Ingredients

For Kimchi Seasoning Paste:
1 ½ Tablespoons gochugaru (Korean chili pepper flakes)
1 Tablespoon anchovy sauce
1 teaspoon evaporated cane sugar
1 teaspoon minced garlic
½ teaspoon peeled, grated ginger

For Fried Rice:
1 cup fresh snap peas
3 ½ cups cooked leftover rice
Kimchi seasoning paste (see above)
1/3 cup chopped fresh cilantro plus more for garnish
¼ cup chopped green onions,  plus more for garnish
4-5 Tablespoons oil of your choice (I used olive oil)
Additional salt, as needed
Dark toasted sesame oil to finish dish

Instructions
In a small bowl, stir together ingredients for seasoning paste. Set aside to allow flavors to combine for about 15 minutes.

In the meantime, remove ends of snap peas by pulling down on top and bottom ends to remove string-like “tail.” After you have done this with all of your snap peas, cut each one on the diagonal into ¼-inch pieces and place them in a small bowl. Some of the peas from inside will begin to spill out one the entire pod is cut. Toss them into your bowl.

Heat skillet (or wok) over medium-high heat. Place a tablespoon or two of oil in your skillet. Toss in the cut snap peas (and loose peas). Season with a generous pinch of salt. Stir and toss to cook for 2-3 minutes. You want the peas to be still very crisp. Set aside.

Wipe out the skillet.

After your seasoning paste has had time to come together, place skillet or wok over high heat. Allow skillet to become nice and hot before turning down to medium-high. Add oil then paste. Allow paste to sizzle and cook until it darkens a bit. It may even smoke slightly.

Add rice, breaking any chunks by pressing down gently on it with a wooden spoon or spatula. Stir and flip rice with utensil to work paste in well then spread out in a layer on the bottom of the pan. Allow to cook undisturbed for 7-8 minutes. Scrape up rice and continue to flip and stir for 5-10 more minutes. This depends on how long your rice has been hanging out in the back of your refrigerator.

When your rice is sufficiently softened and cooked, toss in cooked snap peas. Toss and flip rice to combine. Toss in cilantro and green onions. Quickly combine then shut off heat. Taste for salt and add any additional as needed.

Scoop into a serving dish and garnish with additional chopped green onions and cilantro. Drizzle generously with sesame oil.

Serves 3 generously.

Tags Snap Pea Fried Rice with Kim Chee Seasoning Paste, Asian, Gluten-Free
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Crispy and delicious!

Pork and Chive Pot Stickers with Dandelion Greens

May 18, 2014

When I was growing up, pot stickers were an exotic thing to me. The "Chinese" food we ate in our house was almost entirely of the Cantonese variety. There were some small exceptions, like the jars of smokey, wok-stirred chili oil that my aunt from Shanghai would make. Pot stickers - a northern Chinese or Taiwanese specialty called jiaoze, were something we only had on occasion and never at home.

Chinese hands, rolling out dough. 

There were infrequent trips to the Taiwanese dumpling place outside of Cantonese Chinatown where we lived. Bottles of vinegar and dark soy sauce sat on the tables. My mouth always started watering as I got ready to dunk the puffy, crispy dumplings into the vinegar and soy dipping sauce. So good.

Thin, but not as thin as a wonton skin.

When my mom comes to visit a few times a year now, we make wontons, the Cantonese cousin to the pot sticker. We put together massive quantities that require every able-bodied person in the house to help. We eat many then freeze as many to consume slowly until the next time “Po Po” (grandmother) comes to visit.

Half a tablespoon of filling per dumpling is plenty.

Our most recent group cooking effort included pork wontons seasoned with coriander, cumin and turmeric. We get adventurous and step outside of the usual taste parameters around here when it comes to meat wrapped in thin dough skins. These got eaten before my brother suggested we try serving them in a cream sauce.

While wontons are light and ethereal, cloud puffs that float to the top of a clear, clean-tasting broth, potstickers are made of thicker, egg-free dough. The bottoms brown to a crisp before water is added, creating billows of steam that cause the tops to puff and the meat filling to cook through. The liquid cooks off, reinforcing the bottom crust.

Good pot stickers are moist, crispy and chewy. Just a few will fill you up. They are satisfyingly of the earth while wontons are of the sky, for the dreamers among us. In some ways, potstickers are the complete opposite of wontons. The yin to the wonton’s yang.  

Start from the middle, make one pleat then work to the right, adding two more pleats. Cute, huh?

Lately, I’ve been craving potstickers. And, I was thinking about how my mom would use garlic chives that we kids would forage from along the railroad tracks behind our house in northeast L.A. I had no idea what these greens were called as I yanked them from the sandy soil. To me, they were stinky and unruly looking weeds.

Our mom cooked with them unapologetically. Back then, we didn’t care that there was brake dust, creosote vapors, or god knows what else on our greens. They grew freely and were, well. Free!

I’ve included a liberal amount of regular chives here, since they are growing in our garden. They aren’t anywhere near as pungent as the flat-leaved garlic chive variety of my childhood. So, I've added some actual garlic to the mix. 

I've also included some of the slightly bitter dandelion greens we "weeded" out from under our plum tree this morning. Nothing wrong with some free greens, right? Especially if they are nutritious and tasty.

The filling is thus slightly onion-y and definitely garlicky, with a bitter edge to round out the pork's richness. Pot stickers indubitably of  the earth. 

Also included are directions for making the dumpling skins. I urge you to make them instead of buying them. Homemade definitely tastes better here and this soft, pliable dough is easy - and even dreamy, I'd dare say - to work with. 

Hope you enjoy these earthly dumplings as much as I did.

Sorry dreamers, there will be a recipe just for you soon!

 

Pork and Chive Pot Stickers with Dandelion Greens

Makes 40 to 50 pot stickers – enough for a party or to freeze

Ingredients

Filling

7 cups finely chopped napa cabbage
1 cup finely chopped dandelion greens
½ cup finely chopped chives
1 pound ground pork (a little fat helps make the dumpling juicier)
4 tablespoons finely chopped fresh ginger
3 tablespoons finely chopped garlic
3 tablespoons soy sauce
4 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
1 ½ tablespoons sea salt
2 eggs, lightly beaten

Dough
2 cups boiling water
4 ½ cups all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons oil for pan frying (sunflower, grapeseed both work)

Instructions

For the filling:
Combine the cabbage, dandelion greens and 1 ½ teaspoons of the salt in a bowl and set aside for 30 minutes. Place the cabbage and greens in a kitchen towel, gathering it together. Wring as much water as possible out. This will help the filling come together better.

In another large bowl, combine cabbage, dandelion greens, pork, chive, ginger, garlic, soy sauce, sesame oil, remaining salt and egg. Mix gently but well.

For the dough:
In a large stainless-steel bowl, stir together the flour and salt. Add the boiling water slowly and in small increments, stirring in between additions until a ball is formed and the dough is no longer too hot to handle. More or less water may be needed, depending on the day’s humidity. Knead dough on a floured work surface for at least 15 minutes. You may also use a stand mixer with a dough hook attachment for 7 minutes instead. Form dough into a ball and place it in the same bowl covering it with a damp towel. Allow to rest for 1 hour.

To make the wrappers, add a generous coating of flour to the work surface. Divide dough in half. Shape one half into a log (I roll it between my hands forming a “snake”) until it is about 1 inch in diameter. Cut into ½-inch pieces. Stand each piece on its cut end and press down with the palm of your hand. Roll into circles 3 inches in diameter and 1/16th of an inch thick.

Fill the wrappers:
Place about ½ a teaspoon of filling in the center of the wrapper. Fold in half to form a half-moon. Seal the top center of each dumpling by pressing between your fingers. Starting there, make 3 pleats going from the middle toward the right. Repeat, going toward the bottom left. Press your dumpling gently to flatten the bottom.

To cook:
Heat a large skillet over high heat. Add the oil and swirl to coat. When oil is hot, add the pot stickers with their flattened bottoms down. It’s helpful to place them in rows going in one direction. These dumplings enjoy snugging together, so let them. Cook undisturbed on medium-high for five to six minutes. Then, add about ½ cup of water and immediately covered (or you will be getting a steam facial!). In another minute, lift the cover to check water level. You want to make sure about 1/8 of an inch of water remains. If not, add more water. All pot stickers to steam until water has evaporated, up to 10 minutes. If your water evaporates before the pot stickers are done, add water in ¼ cup increments. If the opposite occurs and the pot stickers seem done but liquid remains, drain the liquid and put the pan back on the heat to evaporate any remaining liquid.

Allow pot stickers to recrisp on the bottom, another 2 to 3 minutes. Cook the pot stickers as above in batches.

You may serve the pot stickers with a dipping sauce made by mixing together equal parts soy sauce and rice wine vinegar and a spot of toasted sesame oil. Sometimes I also like to mix in a bit of honey or sugar.

And there you have it: Jiaoze!

In Pork Tags Spring, Asian, Pork and Chive Potstickers with Dandelion Greens
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Coin Purse Egg on Haiga Rice Topped with Scallions, Chives and A Dash of Tamari

Coin Purse Eggs...Hello Spring!

April 20, 2014

Winters here in Western Washington can sure feel long. By the end of February, the consistently dark and wet days begin to feel like they will never end. You wake up with your house solidly encased in darkness, turn all the lights on (for mental health reasons) and before you know it, your afternoon goes from murky dampness to pure blackness once again. And it’s not even anywhere near dinner time yet.

Lately, our still drizzly days have been punctuated here and there by an actual sunny day. That’s when you’ll find us running outside dressed in tee shirts and shorts. Who cares if it’s still a bit cold out? Who even notices that we are blinding one another with the full moon glow of our winter skin?

We tilt our faces up to the sky, grateful for the light. We greet our friends, whom we haven’t seen since we traded cookies and jars of hot fudge in December, with hugs and say things like, “You made it through the dark months!”

Hello Spring. You are here!

For me, Spring is about fresh eggs. Not those bland ones from the supermarket that we dye for Easter. I’m talking about rich, Omega-laden yolks like the ones local pastured hens have been busy laying now that there is more light each day (Did you know, chickens need about 14 hours of daylight to be able to lay consistently?).

Eggs make me think of my little Chinese mom who raised six hungry kids by herself with a simple dish of steamed white rice and coin purse eggs. We ate a lot of this stuff. It was filling and cheap but still felt special. After all, each “coin purse” contained the promise of wealth and prosperity.

Fresh Eggs From My Brother's Hens

Before you start on the eggs, make sure you already have a pot of cooked rice done. Long-grain is good. So is medium-grain brown. Today we made haiga, a Japanese type which is almost white but not quite brown rice. The bran has been removed, but the germ still remains. It's an in-between thing. Anyway...

It’s time to start your eggs.  

You’ll be cooking one egg at a time, but the whole process goes pretty quickly. You'll be eating very, very soon. I promise.  

Heat two tablespoons or so of oil of your choice (I like sunflower or peanut) in the bottom of curved cooking vessel – like a wok, for instance. Make sure it’s good and hot. This is important!

Take one fresh egg (now’s definitely the time to splurge on organic, farm fresh) and crack it into your little pool of heated oil. Alternatively, you can place your egg in a bowl or cup and then slide it in. But we live on the edge around here. Crack it right in, I say!

Once it goes it, it will sizzle and pop in a most satisfying way. The white should puff up and start to set around the edges. I like to tip the pan to one side to encourage the white to stretch a bit toward one side. This will make it easier to fold.

At this point, swirling the oil a bit around the whole egg is good too. The bottom will start to become crispy and develop brown spots. The yolk will still be wiggly with some uncooked white immediately around it.

It’s been about a minute-and-a-half now. Take your spatula and carefully work it under one side of the egg.

Gently fold the white over the yolk so that it comes together with the opposite edge of white. Introduce them. Let the edges be friends.

This next part might get a little tricky, especially if you are cooking on a flat surface. You might need to tilt the pan a bit and try to nestle the egg into the curved inner part. You will need to hold your spatula for a few moments keep the egg used to its new position. It will quickly set.

When you let go, you’ll see that you’ve made a chubby purse-shaped package with a delicious yolky “coin” inside. So cute. It wiggles when you touch it.   

The proper way to eat it?

Scoop some rice into a bowl. Gently lay your egg on top. Add a splash of soy sauce and a sprinkling of green onions. Shower it with some sesame seeds and it's practically fancy. Poke the soft yolk and let it run down into the hot rice. Mix this rich, sunshine-y concoction up with your chopsticks then savor each bite.

Here’s to sunny days ahead! Enjoy!

Note: If you have some greens lying around in your veggie bin (Radish greens are great – we don’t like to waste anything around here), go ahead and sauté them with a little garlic and oil. Add that to your bowl and you will have a beyond satisfying meal. 

In Lunch, Eggs, Healthy Meals, Pantry Meals Tags Eggs, Spring, Light meal, Light supper, Asian, Coin Purse Eggs
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— Nigel Slater

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