Thursday, April 19, 2007

Clay Pot Sticky Rice

Remember when I cooked Claypot Chicken with Mushroom ? I've been so eager to whip up another one of my favorite claypot dish - Claypot Sticky Rice. After drooling over Lyrical's "Claypot Chicken Rice", Precious Pea's "Lor Mai Gai" ( Sticky Rice with Chicken ), and WMW's Sticky Rice Feast, I screamed to myself, "I've got to have them all !" Oh well, since I only have two hands, I guess I'll stick to what I had originally planned on - Claypot Sticky Rice. Luckily I already have most of the ingredients I needed at home. Some leftover peanuts from my last peanut soup dish, chicken, dried shrimp, dried chinese mushroom, and wood ear mushroom (I enjoy the crunchiness so I tend to use it in any dish I can). All I needed from the Asian grocery store were just the glutinous rice and some quail's eggs.


There are numerous popular glutinous rice dishes in Asia. In Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, and Burma, glutinous rice is commonly used to make sweet savory desserts such as Durian/Mango sticky rice steamed with coconut milk and black sticky rice pudding. In Chinese dim sum, it is stuffed with meat, chestnuts and salted eggs, wrapped in lotus leaves and steamed. In Japan, it is used to make you see mochi, and in Korea and Shanghai, sticky rice cakes.



Sticky Rice aka glutinous rice or labeled as sweet rice comes in different grains - short, long, round and black, and it is usually soaked for hours before cooking to yield a sticky, chewy texture. The glutinous rice resembles the Arborio, Carnaroli Rissoto because they do exude more starch when cooked, becoming sticky, with one exception - glutinous sweet sticky rice is actually gluten-free.

Claypot Sticky Rice Recipe
Ingredients :
4 pc dried chestnuts ( skinless )
10 oz dried peanuts ( soaked and rinsed )
3 oz dried shrimps ( soaked and chopped )
1/2 a can of cooked quail eggs
4 oz wood ear mushroom ( soaked and shredded )
12 oz dried chinese mushroom ( soaked and shredded )
3 chicken drumsticks
chopped green onions
fried shallots
sesame oil
oyster sauce
thick sweet soy sauce to taste
thick black soy sauce for taste & color ( optional )
white pepper
salt to taste
chinese cooking wine
3 cups glutinous rice ( OR labeled as Sweet Rice )

Method :
1) Soak glutinous rice in water overnight ( or 12 hours ).
2) In a crock pot, boil peanuts and chestnuts in enough water to just cover them for 1-2 hours OR until soft.
3) In a wok, stir-fry green onions, dried shrimp, dried mushroom, and wood ear mushroom until fragrant.
4) Cut chicken drumsticks into smaller pieces and marinate with a dash of sesame oil, fried shallots, oyster sauce, and a splash of chinese cooking wine. Refrigerate for 30 minutes ( preferably overnight ).
5) Pan fry chicken until slightly browned on both sides. Add ingredients from Step (3). Stir-fry for 1 minute, add water ( enough to cook the sticky rice later ), white pepper, sesame oil, thick sweet soy sauce, thick black soy sauce, fried shallots, chinese cooking wine, and salt to taste. When the broth starts to boil, turn to low heat, cover, and simmer for about 10-15 minutes OR until chicken is done.
6) Remove chicken, debone and cut into bite size chunks.
7) Strain the broth to cook the glutinous rice with.
8) Rub some cooking spray all over the inside of a claypot, put in glutinous rice and pour in broth ( covering 1/4 inch above rice ), cover, and cook to a boil. Turn to low heat and cook for 5-10 minutes.
9) Remove cover. Use a fork to fluff the rice around. Check the texture of the rice. Add more broth if needed and continue to cook on low heat for another 5 minutes.
10) Add all the cooked ingredients and quail's eggs in. Stir until rice and ingredients are evenly mixed and simmer on low heat for another 5 minutes or until rice is done.

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Monday, March 26, 2007

Lion's Head Meatball Soup

I may be in sunny California, but as soon as it turns dark, I still get the occasional shiver as the chilly spring breezes battle valiantly to fend off the advancing forces of the summer heat. Tonight, especially, is one of those nights when I would like nothing more than to wrap my cold, clammy hands around a bowl of hot soup and sink my teeth into something meaty. It didn't take long for my noggin to remind me of a dish I had seen at someone else's table on a recent visit to a Shanghai cuisine restaurant - Lion's Head Meatball Soup. Yes ! That should do the trick :)

If you are unfamiliar with "Lion's Head Meatballs", they aren't really meatballs made from lion's heads. This popular Shanghai dish got it's name from the resemblance of the meatball to a lion's head and the accompanying napa cabbage to it's wavy mane. Funny thing is, as I was shaping the meatballs, my mind was actually conjuring up a visual of the movie "Monster's Ball" starring Simba (from "The Lion King") instead of Halle Berry... haha. Luckily, my meatballs turned out looking more like Simba's head than Halle's boobs... I think. Okay... I really should stop thinking out loud :P

Anyway, enough about disturbing and odd visuals and on to the recipe. Instead of napa cabbage, I've chosen to go with baby bok choy for it's crisper texture and sweeter flavor for the soup. The "fattiness" of the ground pork used will literally make or break the meatball. If it's too lean, the meatball will be dry and tough. Too much fat and it will be mushy and break easily. From personal experience, I've discovered that it's tastier, not to mention healthier, to use leaner ground pork. To offset the toughness, I mash luncheon meat or Spam finely into the ground pork. That not only makes the meatball bouncier without mushing it up, but also adds a very mild smoky flavor to boot. Try it, I'm sure you will enjoy my secret ingredient in your meatballs rather than your e-mail account :)

A) Meatball Recipe

Ingredients :
1 lb ground pork leg ( OR any lean part of pork eg. pork loin )
4 dried shitake mushroom ( soaked, rinsed and finely chopped )
finely chopped green onions
finely chopped ginger
1 tbsp cornstarch
1 egg
1 can of luncheon meat ( OR spam ) finely mashed
2 tbsp oyster sauce
sesame oil
white pepper
salt to taste
shaoxing cooking wine

Method :
1) Mix all the ingredients evenly and form into desired sized meatballs. Set aside.

B) Meatball Soup Recipe

Ingredients :
baby bok choy
bonito fish granules
chopped green onions
chopped chinese celery

Method :
1) Add bonito fish granules to boiling water in clay pot.
2) Slowly place meatballs in and simmer for 8 minutes.
3) Add baby bok choy, chopped green onions and chinese celery and simmer on medium heat for another 5-10 minutes.

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Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Claypot Chicken And Mushrooms

I was recently fortunate enough to pick up a clay pot for only USD $2.99 at one of the many popular "99 Ranch" Asian grocery stores here in Southern California. Since then, my regular pots have been collecting dust in the sidelines. My tastebuds, on the other hand, aren't complaining about the more tender and flavorful dishes produced with my new "toy".

Clay pot cooking is very much like a steaming process. Before cooking, soak the clay pot in water for about 15 minutes. That way, the water that's absorbed in the clay is released as steam during the cooking process, thus sealing the juices of the dish inside the clay pot while keeping any meat moist and tender.

Clay Pot Rice and Clay Pot Noodles are two of the more popular clay pot recipes in the Cantonese cuisine. I can't wait to whip both of them up anytime soon. But for today, since I'm short on Chinese sausage and salted fish, I'm going to stick with one of my mom's that I enjoyed growing up - Clay Pot Chicken and Mushroom recipe.

Other than shitake mushroom, I'm also going to use some "cloud ear" mushroom that I've been saving for this dish. The shitake mushroom is for the flavor whereas the "cloud ear" mushroom is for that interesting crunchy texture that I enjoy. The "cloud ear" mushroom may also be substituted with it's thicker cousin, the "wood ear" mushroom, like the ones you might find in hot and sour soups.

A final word on the clay pot before I move on to the recipe. Dish-washing detergent should not be used to clean them because it will absorb into the clay. I've read that scrubbing them with salt is the preferred cleaning method.

Clay Pot Chicken and Mushroom Recipe

Ingredients :
1 whole chicken ( about 2 lbs, cut into serving pieces )
green onion strips
ginger strips
3 tbsp shaoxing hua tiao wine ( OR any other chinese cooking wine )
cloud ear mushroom ( soaked and cut )
shitake mushroom ( soaked and sliced )
4 tbsp oyster sauce
white pepper
sesame oil
cornstarch solution
sugar and salt to taste

Method :
1) Saute the ginger, green onion, cloud ear and shitake mushroom in the clay pot until fragrant.
2) Add the chicken in, pan fry the chicken pieces on both sides until lightly browned.
3) Mix in the oyster sauce, chinese cooking wine, white pepper, sesame oil and water. ( up to your preference on how saucy you like it to be )
4) Cover the clay pot, and cook on medium-low heat for an additional 20 minutes.
5) Add sugar and salt to taste, cornstarch solution to thicken the gravy and mix well.

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