I feel a little bit better today that my cat survives his surgery. I hope he stays strong and will recover soon. I was in a much happier mood to try something new knowing that he is getting a bit better.  I searched on google for scallion pancake recipes. I made this once when I was in a cookery class in high school.  I remember this is one of those things that require a lot of work, and take a lot of skills too.  What was I thinking?  Why would I want to do all these work just for a piece of scallion pancake?  I don’t know.  Once in a while, I do weird things that I can’t explain myself.  Or may be I just needed something to take my mind off worrying about my cat.  I followed Ming Tsai’s recipe except it was too late when I realized I put in cold water instead of hot water.  I thought it can’t be that bad, it was just a small screw up.  Oh well… other than that, it was messy to make it too.  Plus, I wasn’t skillful enough.  It turned out more like a scallion nann bread than a thin scallion pancake.  LOL. Ya, I screwed up sometimes but it’s ok.  I’ll eat my consequence literally hahahha….I should have flatten it out more to make it thinner.  It is not a complete failure, but I certainly need more practice and need to follow the instruction 100% next time.

 

Roll the dough out, add scallion

Roll the dough out, add scallion

Roll it in a long swiss roll, then curl it like a spiral

Roll it in a long swiss roll, then curl it like a spiral

Flatten it out to make a 5 or 6 inches pancake

Flatten it out to make a 5 or 6 inches pancake

Pan fry the scallion pancakes

Pan fry the scallion pancakes

Scallion Pancakes

Scallion Pancakes

Ingredients:

  • All purpose flour, 2 cups
  • HOT water, 1 cup
  • Sesame oil, 1 Tbsp
  • Scallion, 5 or 6 stalks
  • Salt, a dash

Dipping sauce:

  • Soy sauce, ¼ cup
  • Chinese vinegar, ¼ cup
  • Ginger, minced, 1 tsp
  • Red pepper flakes, 1 tsp
  • Sugar, 1 tsp

 

Steps:

  1. Mix the dipping sauce in a small bowl.  Put it aside.
  2. Add a tablespoon of sesame oil in a bowl.  Put it aside.
  3. Cut scallions into small dices.  Add a pinch of salt.  Put it aside.
  4. Sieve flour in a large bowl.  Pour a little bit HOT water at a time to the flour and mix it with a spoon.  Continue to add water until the flour becomes a ball of dough.  You may not need the whole cup of water.
  5. Cover the dough with a piece of damp cloth and let it rest for 30 mins.
  6. Cut dough into 4 pieces. 
  7. Roll a piece of dough into a flat, thin pancake.  Brush some sesame oil on the pancake.  Add about a tablespoonful of scallion to the pancake, spread it out evenly.
  8. Then roll the pancake starting from one end of the dough to form like a swiss roll.  Then curl the roll to form like a spiral.  Then flatten it out with a rolling pin to form a 5 or 6 inches pancake.
  9. Use a non-stick frying pan. Spray some oil in it.  Use medium high heat.  Cook the pancake for about 2 minutes on one side.  Add a tablespoon of water to the pan. Then cover it for a minute. This will create some steam and help to cook the dough.  Flip the pancake over, and let it cook for another two or 3 minutes until it is golden brown or look crispy on the outside.  Serve it hot with the dipping sauce.
Leave A Comment

The weather is getting warm.  I lost a bit of appetite.  Maybe if I keep losing appetite for a while, it could be a good way to lose a few pounds. LOL.  The weirdest thing ever was that I wanted a salad!!!  I am not a salad kind of gal.  This was a very unusual thing.  My coworker used to tell me that if I didn’t find anything I would like to eat in the cafeteria, there was always salad.  So salad isn’t on top of my list if I have other options.  But today, I somehow wanted a salad.  I was also in a mood for some grilled shrimps.  Grilled Shrimp salad sounds refreshing for a hot humid day.  I also added some soybeans to the salad to make it more Chinese. LOL.  Soybeans are packed with tons of protein. They would be great for salad or fried rice.  The salad turned out to be pretty good.  I may put this as my regular meals.

Put shrimp on a stick first

Put shrimp on a stick first

Frozen soybeans

Frozen soybeans

Stir fry mushrooms and soybeans

Stir fry mushrooms and soybeans

Grilled shrimp salad with soybeans

Grilled shrimp salad with soybeans

 

Ingredients (Serves 2):

  • Shrimp, a pound
  • 2 or 3 bamboo sticks.
  • Mushrooms, sliced, 1 pack
  • Soybeans, 1 cup
  • Lettuce, 1 bag (about 9 oz)
  • Baby carrots, a big handful
  • Sweetcorn , 1/2 cup (optional)
  • Extra virgin olive oil, 1 Tbsp
  • Soy sauce, 1 Tbsp
  • Honey, 1 Tbsp
  • Vinegar, 1 Tbsp
  • Chinese cooking wine, 1 tsp
  • Sesame oil, a few drops
  • Sugar, ½ tsp

Steps:

  1. Cut baby carrots into small pieces.  I cut each carrot into 4 pieces.  Put it aside.
  2. Spray a little bit of oil in a frying pan.  Put mushrooms and soybeans in the pan. Use high heat. Let it cook for 4 or 5 minutes.  Turn off the heat.  Put them on a plate and let it cool a little bit.
  3. Make the dressing: Add olive oil, soy sauce, honey, vinegar, sugar, Chinese cooking wine, and sesame oil in a bowl.  Mix it well.  Add a dash of salt if desired.  Put it aside.
  4. Soak bamboo sticks in water for a few minutes. Shell and clean shrimp.  Put them on a stick.  Then start the grill.  Spray a little bit of oil on the shrimp first before you cook it.  Cook the shrimp for 4 or 5 mins on each side or until it is fully cooked.  When the shrimp is done, remove it from the stick. Add a little bit of salad dressing to the shrimp. Mix it well.
  5. To assemble the salad, put some lettuce on the bottom of a serving plate.  Then add some carrots, mushrooms, soybeans, and sweetcorn.  Add shrimp on top.  Drizzle some dressing over the lettuce.
Leave A Comment
My little source of evil

My little source of evil

My cat tried so hard to wake me up between 6 am and 7am this morning.  Damn it, it’s Sunday.  I really wish that my cat knows it’s Sunday, not Monday, and I don’t need to get up so early.  Besides, my body didn’t want to get up.  I played golf yesterday.  I haven’t moved that much for a long time.  My body is really sore.  I finally woke up at 7am.  I gave my cat his food and water.  I made Chicken Congee for breakfast, did a load of laundry, cleaned the bathroom, and I talked to a friend on the phone.  Actually, not a bad thing to get up early.   I got a lot done before noon.  My friend was telling me that her nutritionist told her that she needs to lose weight.  Her nutritionist said her ideal weight is 111 pounds. I’m like WHAT???  She’s 5’4″.  I don’t know how much I weigh since I got too scared to step on the scale.  But my clothes don’t lie, they are getting tight.  Some people may let themselves buy bigger size clothes.  I refuse to do that.  I usually go to McDonald for my Sunday lunch, and ordered a grilled chicken sandwich combo with supersize fries!  But today, I stayed at home and made a very simple lunch.  I had Choy Sum with Oyster Sauce, and some noodles.  Choy Sum is a very common Chinese vegetable.   I like it a lot.  You can stir fry it with some garlic sauce and salt, and it would be very yummy.  Or you can cook it in boiling water, drain, and add oyster sauce to it.  I choice the latter to cut down the oil.  I cooked some noodles to go along with it.  The noodles was about 200 calories.  So I think my whole lunch was probably like 300-350 calories or so.  I can deal with that.

Choy Sum

Choy Sum

Cook Choy Sum in boiling water

Cook Choy Sum in boiling water

1 pack of dried egg noodle

1 pack of dried egg noodle

Cook noodles

Cook noodles

Choy Sum with Oyster Sauce and Egg Noodles

Choy Sum with Oyster Sauce and Egg Noodles

Ingredients (serves 2):

  • Choy Sum, two small bunches (like two handfuls, or 4-5 stalks per person)
  • Dried noodle, 2 packs (1 per person for small serving portion)
  • Oyster Sauce, 2 Tbsp
  • Soy sauce, 2 tsp
  • Sesame oil, a few drops (Optional, I didn’t use it)

Steps:

  1. We need to wash the vegetable first. It’s important. You don’t want to have Choy Sum and Dirt Sauce… hehhehe…  Fill up a pot of container with cold water, soak the Choy Sum in the water.  Shake it a little bit.  Disgard the water.  Repeat it for one more time.  Drain the vegetable. Put it aside.
  2. Boil a big pot of water.  Use high heat.  When the water boils, put the vegetable in the pot.  Let it cook for 2 or 3 mins. You can put a teaspoon of oil in the water. I skipped this to cut back the fat.   Turn off the heat.  Remove the vegetable and put it on a serving plate.  Drain a little bit to get rid of any excess water in the vegetable.
  3. Use a pair of scissors, cut the vegetables into halves length-wise.
  4. Now cook the noodles. I don’t mind putting the noodles in the same pot of water since it is only veggie.  You can boil a separate pot of water if you prefer.  Turn the heat to high.  When the water boils, put the dried noodles in the pot.  Use a fork to separate the noodles in the pot.  Let it cook for 3 minutes or so.  Turn off the heat.  Disgard the water.  Put noodles in a drainer.  Run the noodles under cold tap water to get rid of the starchy taste.  Drain well.
  5. Put the noodles in a serving plate.  Put it in the microwave for 1 minute to heat it up a bit.
  6. In a small bowl, mix the oyster sauce with soy sauce.  Pour it over the vegetable and noodles. 
  7. Optionally, add a few drops of sesame oil to the noodles. I skipped this too since I am totally cutting back on any oil for this lunch.
Leave A Comment

It was a delayed action that it took me this long to make this traditional Chinese vegetarian dish.  It is traditional vegetarian dish for Chinese New Year Day 1.  I really wanted to make this dish back then, but I got so tied up at work and stuff.  Mom used to make this on Chinese New Year Day 1. According to her family tradition, we should be vegetarian on that day to show some kindness of not killing any living thing for at least one day a year.  So she would make a huge amount of this dish and we used to have it for breakfast, lunch and dinner.  Ya, you can imagine how boring that day would be.  Even though I respected my mom’s tradition, it was really hard for a meat lover to have 0 meat for the entire day.  So after I complained a few times, she only forced us to be vegetarian for breakfast and lunch. 

 

Dried Gold Needle - high fiber edible flowers

Dried Gold Needle - high fiber edible flowers

Chinese Hair Vegetable

Chinese Hair Vegetable

Fried Tofu

Fried Tofu

Tofu Skin Rolls

Tofu Skin Rolls

Putting all the vegetables in a pot

Putting all the vegetables in a pot

Chinese Vegetarian Dish with Hair Vegetable

Chinese Vegetarian Dish with Hair Vegetable

Oh BTW, you may not have seen or heard a lot of these ingredients here. That’s ok, that means there are more new stuff for you to try out. Awesome :)

Ingredients:

Note I don’t really measure these. Just get a handful of each ingredient.

  • Dried Gold Needles, a handful - these are edible, high fiber flowers.  They have a subtle sweet taste. 
  • Hair Vegetable (Fat Choi in Cantonese) or Black Hair Moss, a small handful - these are wild moss grow in the Mogolian dessert.  So, it take a lot of manpower to harvest these, ie, expensive stuff.
  • Tofu skin roll, about 3 long rolls – It’s very thin tofu product rolled into a long roll. 
  • Wood ear mushroom, a small handful – OOPS, I forgot to add them. They are black fungus. I’m sure you’ve tried them before. They are used in hot and sour soup.
  • Fried tofu, 1 pack
  • Cellophane noodles, a handful
  • Dried shaiitake mushrooms, 8-10
  • Chinese Bok Choy, 3 or 4 leaves
  • Water, 4 cups
  • Oyster sauce, 2 Tbsp
  • Soy sauce, 1 tsp
  • Fish sauce, 1 tsp
  • Chinese cooking wine, 1 Tbsp
  • Sugar, 1 Tbsp
  • Salt, a dash

Steps:

  1. Soak dried shaiitake mushroom in hot water for 20 mins or so.  Cut them in halves if they are too big. Put them aside.
  2. Soak the hair vegetable in water for a few minutes.  It will expand and get soft.  Drain well and put it aside.
  3. Soak the dried gold needle flowers in water for a few minutes.  Drain well and put them aside.
  4. Soak cellophane noodles in water for 10 minutes or so. Drain well and put them aside.
  5. Soak wood ear in warm water for 10 minutes or so.  Drain well.  Just coarsely cut them and put them aside.
  6. Cut fried tofu into halves. Put them aside.
  7. Break tofu skin rolls with your hand into long pieces of about 3 inches each.  Put them aside.
  8. Cut Chinese Bok Choy into pieces.
  9. Use a big pot, put dried shiitake mushrooms, dried gold needle flowers, tofu skin rolls, fried tofu, wood ear mushrooms, water, oyster sauce, fish sauce, soy sauce, sugar, chinese cooking wine into the pot.  Ya, basically you can put everything except the cellophane noodles and bok choy and salt.
  10. User medium heat.  Let it cook for 30 minutes or so. The dried shiitake mushrooms need a longer time to cook in order to be soft and tender.
  11. There should be some water in the pot, not completely dry.  Add more water if needed.  Then add the cellophane noodles, let them cook for another 15 minutes or so. 
  12. Taste it and see if you need to add salt, or more oyster sauce. 
  13. Finally, add Bok Choy and let it cook for 3 more minutes. The sauce should be almost dried up.  See picture of the dish.

NOTE: If you are a real vegetarian, skip the oyster sauce, fish sauce and use soy sauce, salt, sugar and vegetable broth instead.

Leave A Comment

It was good that I bought a bunch of stuff from a Chinese grocery store last week.  I got trapped at home for days because of the snow.  I had some leftover Chinese Lo Shui Chicken I made the other day.  So I just made a Stir-Fried Snow Pea Tips, a veggie dish, and that was easy enough to fix my dinner tonight.  I don’t really like snow peas, but I like snow pea tips.  Snow pea tips have the same kind of subtle sweatness like snow peas, but they are leafy.  I didn’t remember mom had ever made snow pea tips when I was a kid.  It could be the reason that snow pea tip is expensive.  I got a bag of snow pea tips slightly more than a pound and it costs like $6 from a Chinese grocery store.  It’s not cheap compare to other Chinese veggie.  So you can imagine it’s gonna cost you double the price in a restaurant for a dish of snow pea tips.  Besides the price, I don’t like the fact that most Chinese restaurant add too much oil in cooking the dish.  Ya, I’m bit cautious on the amount of oil used these days.  I really have to lose weight. 

Put garlic and ginger in the pan first

Put garlic and ginger in the pan first Snow pea tips

Snow pea tips

Snow pea tips

Stir-Fried Snow Pea Tips with Garlic Sauce
Stir-Fried Snow Pea Tips with Garlic Sauce

 

 Ingredients (Serves 2):

  • Snow pea tips, 1/2 pound
  • Garlic, 1 clove, chopped
  • Ginger, 2 slices
  • Chinese cooking wine, 1 tsp
  • Salt, a pinch
  • Oyster sauce, 1/2 tsp

 

Steps:

  1. Make sure you wash the snow pea tips.  You can use a big pot of water.  Soak the snow pea tips in it for a minute. Then disgard the water.  Repeat for one more time.  Drain well.
  2. Finely chopped the garlic.
  3. Spray oil to the frying pan. Use high heat.  Add ginger slices, garlic, and a pinch of salt.  Count 30 seconds.
  4. Add snow pea tips.  Keep stiring.
  5. Add Chinese cooking wine, and oyster sauce.  Mix it well for couple of minutes. 
Leave A Comment

I loved broccoli when I was a kid.  Broccoli was more expensive compare to other veggies.  Maybe that’s the reason I like it, I liked anything that is expensive. LOL.  I seldom order broccoli at a Chinese restaurant.  They usually under cook it, and make it too hard.  The cafeteria at work would over cook it, which is also yucky.   Ya, I know, I told you I’m picky.  Alright, here is an easy recipe to cook Broccoli chinese style.

 

Broccoli with Garlic Sauce

Broccoli with Garlic Sauce

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:

  • Broccoli crowns, 2
  • Garlic, 2 clove
  • Chinese cooking wine, 1 tsp
  • Oyster sauce, 1 tsp
  • Water, 3 Tbsp
  • Salt, a pinch

Steps:

  1. Finely chop garlic.  Put it aside.
  2. Wash and cut broccoli into florets.  Put it aside.
  3. In a pan, add 1 tsp cooking oil or you can use spray oil.  Add a pinch of salt.  Use high heat.
  4. Add chopped garlic to the pan.  Stir fry it for 10 seconds.
  5. Add broccoli to the pan.  Stir fry it for a minute.
  6. Add cooking wine to to the pan.  Stir fry it for another minute.
  7. Add 3 tablespoon of water.  Stir fy it occasionally.  Cook for a few minutes until the water dries up.
  8. Add a teaspoon of oyster sauce.  Mix it well.  Cook it for 1 minute.  DONE.
Leave A Comment

Like most people, I may not be willing to try new stuff or create a new dish when I am busy.   It would be too much trouble when the time is tight.  Couple of years ago, I decided to learn a new dish whenever I have a break.  I got a couple of days off around Thanksgiving and I decided to learn a few new dishes.  I made butternut squash and apple pie   Both kind of semi-failed.  LOL. The apple pie turned out to be too sour. It looked good, but not too edible. The butternut squash was edible but a bit chunky!  I asked around.  My coworker told me that I can steam it instead of bake.  So I tried the second time, and it was a success.  I should really make this dish more often because butternut squash contains tons of Vitamin A which is really good for vision.  My vision is definitely getting worse as I use my computer all day long.  Hey, I have no choice, that is my job.  Anyway, I like to make butternut squash as a side dish for meatloaf because the cooking time of these two dishes are pretty much the same.  I made these two again tonight. It was yummy in my tummy

Steaming Butternut Squash

Steaming Butternut Squash

Super Yummy Butternut Squash

Super Yummy Butternut Squash

Ingredients (3-4 servings):

  •  Butternut squash, 1 medium/small
  • Honey, 1 Tbsp
  • sugar, 1 tsp
  • Nutmeg, a dash
  • Cinnamon, 1/2 tsp
  • Salt, a dash (optional)
  • Butter, 1/2 tsp (optional)

Steps:

  1. Cut the butternut squash in halves.
  2. Remove the seeds.
  3. Prepare a steamer. Add enough water to the pot (at least couple of inches high for water level) because we will steam the butternut squash for 45 minutes.
  4. Add the butternut squash to the steamer.  Use medium high heat.  Cover it with a lid and steam it for 45 minutes.  Check occasionally to see if you have enough water in the pot.  Add more water if needed.  DO NOT burn the pot.  I made this mistake before!
  5. Remove the butternut squash from the pot when it is done.  Be careful, it is super hot!
  6. Use a spoon, scoop off the meat and place it in a big bowl.  Discard the skin.
  7. Add the following to the squash: honey, sugar, nutmeg, cinnamon, salt (optional) and butter (optional). Mix it well.  Since it is steamed, it may have a little bit of water in the bowl after mixing it, you can use a spoon to scoop off excess water.

Optional step: The texture so far should be very soft.  If you like it to be more dense, you can put it in a 375F oven for 25 minutes or so.  I did not add this extra step tonight, see the picture.  It turned out pretty good as is.

Leave A Comment