rice

Mondongo A La Soupi (Ox Tripe & Chicken Gizzard My Way)

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If  this recipe does not make you like ox tripe and gizzard, nothing will do the trick. This is on my list for one of the ten dishes I don’t want to live without 🙂

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Mondongo A La Soupi

Mondongo A La Soupi

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Mondongo A La Soupi

Mondongo A La Soupi

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Lettuce Cups With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

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Lettuce cups are widely used in Asia and are usually filled with plain, sesame oil coated rice-, egg- or cellophane- noodles amongst other goodies such as duck, shrimp, tofu, etc. I like my noodles to have a bit more taste and substance, so I usually use a stir fried mixture of noodles and other “stuff”. Here I used dirty rice sticks, along with spicy chicken and a wonderful tasty hoi sin dressing. The result was both eye-pleasing and tasty 🙂

Click here for Dirty Rice Sticks recipe
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Lettuce Cups With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

Lettuce Cups With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

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Lettuce Cup With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

Lettuce Cup With Spicy Chicken And Dirty Rice Sticks

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Dirty Rice Sticks

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Here  is a variation of “Dirty Rice“, this one done with rice sticks. I am a big fan of dirty rice, but I prefer the dirty rice sticks by far, either as a side dish or main course with a couple of fried eggs on top. Serve with soy sauce and chili sauce on the side.

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Dirty Rice Sticks

Dirty Rice Sticks

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Pulpo A La Plancha (Griddled Octopus)

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If  I would be confined to a small island for the rest of my life and given a choice of just 10 food items I could have available for the rest of my life, octopus would definitely be one of them.
Today I was in the mood to have something simple, with no fuzz, little preparation and minimal cleanup. Here is what fit the bill :

” Griddled octopus with iceberg and tomato in raspberry vinaigrette “.

Season water with sea salt, lots of smashed garlic and crashed black pepper corn. Add octopus and bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer, cook for 1 1/2 to 2 1/2  hours (depending on size) until tender but not mushy. Texture is very important for a successful octopus dish, so pay attention!  Remove octopus to  ice bath. Let cool, remove from water, pat dry. Season with sea salt, granulated garlic and freshly ground black pepper. Brush with olive oil. Cook on hot griddle or cast iron pan until a nice char has developed. In the meantime, mix olive oil, lime juice, garlic paste, fresh ground black pepper and lot’s of chopped cilantro and oregano. Plate the octopus, drizzle with the seasoned olive oil. Serve with a green salad and your choice of potatoes, rice  or sour dough bread.

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Pulpo A La Plancha

Pulpo A La Plancha (Griddled Octopus)

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Dear Friend’s, to help support this blog, please be so kind and click on the video on the bottom of this page. (You don’t have to watch it, just click once)   Thank you 🙂

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Chirashizushi (Scattered Sushi) (ちらし寿司

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I am  trying today to continue with my quest for a healthier living.  After a substantial, healthy breakfast,  I decided that sushi will be light and healthy enough. Usually I would have been right, but there was a problem – I, as usual, was so looking forward to it that I prepared way too much and therefore ate too much, as usual 😦
But boy, was it worth the sin 🙂

The “Chirashizushi” included:

Lobster, crayfish, crab legs, octopus, mussels, shiitake mushrooms, avocado, cucumber, nori, black sesame seeds, egg, scallion, sushi rice.

Sushi Rice Recipe Here  (# 3 of the good part)

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Chirashizushi   (Scattered Sushi)    (ちらし寿司

Chirashizushi (Scattered Sushi) (ちらし寿司

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Stir Fried Vegetables, Egg and Walnuts

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Today  I read this article about healthy living. One of the main paths to a healthy life is supposedly to refrain from eating animal protein. But, as you all know, healthy or not, I just love animal protein once in a while. Chicken, pork, lamb,beef, seafood, duck, goose, I love it all.
But, tonight I had a strong craving for rice and vegetables. Since Bella is usually my only dinner guest, I mostly  get to decide on the menu all by myself. So today’s dinner came along that ” healthy path ” .
“Despite” being healthy, it was delicious and a joy to eat. But tomorrow – Steak 🙂

Fan ( Chinese steamed rice ) recipe  HERE
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Stir Fried Vegetables, Egg & Fan

Stir Fried Vegetables, Egg & Walnut

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Ingredient’s :

Broccoli,   floretes, blanched
Bean sprouts,
Red radishes,  quartered,
Shiitake mushrooms,   sliced
Chili’s,  seeded, quartered
Onion,   julienned
Eggs,   hardboiled, Quartered
Walnuts,   candied
Ginger,   grated
Garlic,   paste
Scallions,   sliced
Cilantro,   chopped
Hoi sin sauce,
Soy sauce,
Sesame oil,
Peanut oil,   to saute
Chicken stock,
Corn starch slurry,
Kosher salt,
Cayenne pepper,
Chili oil,
Sesame seeds,   toasted
Fan,

Method :

Saute walnuts in sugar until sugar starts to brown, set aside. Saute onions until translucent, add ginger and garlic, saute until fragrant, Add broccoli, shiitake, radish, scallion and chili’s and saute until heated through. Add chicken stock, soy sauce, hoisin sauce, salt and pepper, bring to a simmer. Add slurry, simmer for a few seconds. Remove from heat, add bean sprouts. Adjust seasoning if necessary. Add eggs. To serve, top with walnuts, sprinkle with cilantro, drizzle with chili oil. Sprinkle fan with toasted sesame seeds.

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !

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Arroz Con Pollo

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Arroz con Pollo
In my opinion this is one of the most widly and often prepared dishes in the whole world.
“Hans, have you gone nuts?”, you probably think when you read this statement.
But what I am talking about is the actual Concoction, not the dish named “Arroz con Pollo”.
“Arroz con Pollo” simply translates into “Rice with Chicken”. Now, it is my firm believe that anywhere in the world where you have rice, and where you also have chicken, sooner or later folks threw the two, plus another bunch of stuff, together and made it a one dish meal, calling it “Rice and Chicken” or, surprise surprise, “Chicken and Rice”.

I would like to ask my readers to please give us the name of your country’s or region’s dish containing chicken and rice and other stuff   🙂
Also, any other dish containing these ingredients, be it from your own country or region or any other you might be aware of. Descriptions or pictures even more welcome.
I am looking forward to your input in the comment section. Thank’s.
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Arroz Con Pollo

Arroz Con Pollo

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Ingredient’s :

Chicken,   preferably dark meat
Rice,   rinsed repeatedly to get rid of all excess starch
Chorizo,   sliced
Peppers,   diced
Chilis,   diced, use your preferred heat level
Onions,   diced
Garlic,   paste
Saffran,   or substitute with turmeric (I used both for a brighter color and taste)
Oregano,   freeze dried or fresh
White wine,   substitute with beer if preferred
Chicken stock,    substitute with vegetable stock if preferred
Kosher salt,
Cayenne pepper,
Olive oil,   to saute

Method :

Saute chicken until golden, add onions and chorizo, saute until onions are translucent. Add garlic, peppers and chilis and saute until garlic is fragrant. Remove chicken, set aside. Remove 1/4 of the vegetables to use as brightly colored garnish. Add rice and saute until each corn of rice is covered with olive oil. Add wine (or beer, or both) and stock, season with salt and pepper. Return chicken, bake at 385F in center of oven until moisture has been absorbed by rice and rice is done. Sprinkle with reserved vegetables and chopped cilantro.
My meal yesterday had also a nice glass of chilled chardonnay (same as which went into the dish) and what I call “avocado cream” . (mashed avocado, seasoned with lime juice, cayenne pepper, kosher salt, roasted garlic paste and cilantro). Not quite guacamole, but even less prep and equally good  🙂
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Note : Some folks like their arroz con pollo very moist, others less so. If you like it more moist, simply add more liquid while cooking until the rice is done, giving you more of the texture of an “Asopao”.
Note : Some folks like their arroz con pollo more “heavy “, some like it more “light and fluffy”. This will depend on the amount of fat used in the dish.
I usually like my arroz con pollo dry but heavy, so I use less liquid and a bit more fat 🙂
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ASOPAO

“Asopao”
Image Source : http://www.cynical-c.com

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 Buen Provecho !   Life is Good !

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Congee With Smoked Pig’s Tails & Vegetables

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Rice Porridge.
First thing that comes to mind is probably baby food or hospital gruff. Most folk’s would never think of ordering it from a menu in a restaurant, much less wake up and crave it for breakfast, if they hadn’t tasted or at least seen it before.

Now, let’s try again :
Congee. Lúgaw. Chok. Xifan. Juk. Okayu.
OK, that’s better  🙂

Sounds more interesting and exotic? These are just a few names given to rice porridge around the world. If there is a country or region which traditionally eats rice, then there is some form of rice porridge eaten.

Congee can be enjoyed as breakfast, snack, lunch or dinner. Congee most often contains rice, but other grains can be used. Ideally it is made with strong, tasty stock that infuses great taste and debt into the dish. But from there on, let your fantasy run wild. Congee can be made with seafood, meat, vegetables or a combination thereof. Then there are the toppings. Pickled vegetables, fried shallots, sliced scallions, pulled mushroom stems, crisp fried garlic, dried shrimps, 100 year eggs, cilantro, etc, etc. If you like it, put it on.
Below is a version I made on sunday for breakfast. The texture is more like a filipino Lugaw, with the rice VERY soft but still keeping it’s shape. At first I was not so sure about the smoked pigstails. I was worried they might be too  overpowering. But not to worry. The taste was very rich with only a hint of smokiness. Another slightly unusual ingredient (served as condiment) was the freshly grated horseradish, although when you think of the japanese version Okayu, wasaby seems to be a fitting condiment. I prepare congee at home often, this version is definitely special and a great addition to my congee repertoire.
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All about   CONGEE
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Previous CONGEE posts :         1     2     3
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Ingredient’s :

Jasmin rice,
Smoked pig’s feet,
Corn on the cob,  cut into thick slices
Chinese unsmoked sausages,  thinly sliced
Bell peppers,  diced
Ginger,  grated
Garlic,  paste
Cilantro,  chopped
Scallions,  sliced
Salt,
Soy sauce,
Horseradish,  freshly grated
Sesame oil,
Chili oil,
Peanut oil,  to saute

Method :

Saute garlic and ginger in peanut oil until fragrant. Add water and pigstails. Simmer pigstails in unseasoned water for about an hour or until starting to become tender. Taste stock and if necessary season with salt and pepper. (Some smoked meats can be overly salted, so don’t season at first) Add rice and very slowly simmer for another hour or until the rice is close to the texture you desire. Now add the corn, diced peppers and sausages. Simmer for another fifteen minute. At this point, adjust texture and seasoning if necessary. If the congee is too thick for your liking, add some hot stock. If it is too thin, simmer longer or strain some of the liquid.
To serve, sprinkle with scallions and cilantro. Drizzle with chili oil.
Serve with horseradish and soy sauce.  Acompanied by Oolong tea.

Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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” More Rice ” 飯 – Fan (Chinese Steamed Rice)

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One of the comments to my ” Rice ” post yesterday came from one of my former
students at “Le Cordon Bleu”, Christine, who post’s at: The Perky Poppy Seed

Thank You Christine  🙂

” I was thinking about your class last night… so I made my Perfectly Steamed Rice 

from Perky’s Le Cordon Bleu Notebook:) You might find it amusing to read…
it may bring back memories from class:) LOL:) “

Below find Christine’s post from The Perky Poppy Seed

Perfectly Steamed Rice from Perky’s Le Cordon Bleu Notebook

September 1, 2012 by The Perky Poppy Seed

Perfectly Steamed Rice from Perky’s Le Cordon Bleu Notebook

Tonight I thought I would share my Perfectly Steamed Rice from Perky’s Le Cordon Bleu Notebook.  This recipe comes from my Cuisine Across Cultures Day 2 notes.  My Chef … my oh my:)  He was one of the best instructors at Le Cordon Bleu.  Chef Susser would never accept excuses for anything.  Things had to be done the way he said or forget it, you just wasted your time.  Chef really taught us to do things properly and in an orderly fashion.  Now, sometimes I thought he was a bit nuts… but… it all paid off in the long run.  Chef Susser wanted to teach us things that would stay in our head forever.  He wanted us to do things properly without thinking:)  I am not sure about the other students, but he certainly gave me a whole new second nature!  I never, and I mean never walk past a pot that is boiling without attempting to turn it down.. I never let a tomato get mushy when blanching…. I am always cognizant of the dishes that I dirty.  I stop in the middle of things sometimes to clean them:)  I am always aware of the rules of sanitation…. which I like to call the rules of sanity:)   If at all possible, before anything I make a ” sample” to make sure that the outcome is going to be what I had anticipated.  I have Chef  Susser to thank for my second nature in all these areas and in all the other areas that he stamped on my brain.  Before his class I had to think.. and in the kitchen thinking takes up valuable time.. time that just cannot be wasted on lolly gagging… Now I go into the kitchen and I am thinking but it is not about things that Chef Susser taught us, those I just DO!…:)  Thank you, Chef Susser:)  This one is for you:)

Now a word about the rice.  This is the simplest no- fail way to do rice.  I have done it with all sorts of rice.  It always works:)  It turns out just like the rice in Chinese restaurants.  The other day my boyfriend wanted to buy pre-made rice in a microwave bag.  Are you kidding? I told him there was no way I was paying that much money for rice!  This recipe is great for making ahead and freezing in vacuum sealed pouches.  It is also great for children, since there is no flavoring in it.. it is just rice, which most children like to eat.  It is great anytime you want rice as a side dish.  This rice is great for company, when it is soaking shower & finish setting the table… have a drink.. then make sure your silverware has no spots or fingerprints on it… make sure all the glasses are sparkling..( a newspaper is great for this.. http://theperkypoppy.com/2012/07/20/no-more-dirty-glass/ – check out my post on dirty glass- use a mixture of vinegar and water for your drinking glasses.) Then when and hour is up, drain the rice & bring to a boil; simmer for five minutes, then off heat and let sit for 10 minutes and that is it! That is it… Perky Perfection:)

 

 

Perfectly Steamed Rice from Perky’s Le Cordon Bleu Notebook

 

1 cup of rice makes 2.2 cups of rice 

 

  • 1 cup of rice ( for this you can use any kind of rice…the cheap rice at the grocery works..plain white rice (just make sure it is not par cooked.. basmati rice works.. jasmine rice, etc)
  • 1 cup of water

 

  1. Put rice in colander and rinse… rinse … rinse 

    See the cloudy water… this rice needs to be rinsed MORE!

  2. Do not skimp on this step (if you do you will have gross rice that just sticks together & and is a glob of starchy yuckiness)
  3. Keep rinsing until your water comes clear (once again … DO NOT skip this step, it is vital to the final product’s success) 

    See the clear water? This rice has been rinsed properly:)

  4. Once water runs clear for the rice, place in a large bowl fill bowl with water so that it covers at least 2 inches above the rice.
  5. Then let the rice soak for an hour..Set your timer for this, the time is very important.  You do not want the rice to absorb too much water, or not enough water… ONE HOUR-NO MORE -NO LESS  (if you doubt me just ask Chef:)-
  6. Then strain the rice in a fine strainer (a larger strainer will let too many rice grains through) 

    Using a fine strainer to strain the rice

  7. Then put rice in a sauce pan with equal amounts of rice to water ( ie: 4 cups rice, 4 cups water)
  8. Then place on stove top.  Bring to a boil, meanwhile take a piece of aluminum foil that is at a little larger than the size of the saucepan; and get a heavy pot that is at least the size of the mouth of the sauce pan.
  9. Once rice & water come to a boil, quickly turn down to low, as low as it will go..
  10. Then cover the saucepan with the foil, making a tight seal ( be careful, as the pot is very HOT) 

    Tight foil to seal in the steam

  11. Then cover the foil covered saucepan with the heavy pan that you gathered earlier.  If you see steam escaping, crimp the foil tighter around the pan. (Be careful STEAM IS VERY HOT!!!! ) 

    Heavy pot over the foil to seal in the steam. This may look a little ghetto, but when properly done, it seals in the steam!

  12. Set the timer for 5 minutes.. yep just 5 minutes.. no more no less!!!
  13. Once timer goes off immediately remove pot from the heating element.  (Do not disturb the foil or the heavy pot.. KEEP THEM ON)
  14. Then once pot is off heating element, set the timer for 10 minutes (Remember to keep the foil & heavy pot on at this time)
  15. After 10 minutes, your rice is ready!!!
  16. Take off the foil & heavy pot, then fluff with a fork 

    Fluffing with a fork

  17. At this point, you can serve your rice.  Personally I like a little pink sea salt from the Himalayan mountains on my Himalayan Mountain Basmati rice & a touch of extra virgin olive oil.  Or you can place this on a sheet tray or a cookie tray to cool then package up for the vacuum sealer:)  Or put a little milk & honey or maple syrup on it with some freshly grated nutmeg & cinnamon. Anyway you make it, this is some tasty rice:) 

    Himalayan Basmati Rice & Himalayan Pink Sea Salt go perfectly together:)

  18. Enjoy your fluffy,  Perfectly Steamed Rice from Perky’s Le Cordon Bleu Notebook :) 

    Perfectly Steamed Rice from Perky’s Le Cordon Bleu Notebook

 

 

 

Related articles

” Rice “

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POLO 


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CHELO 
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Image Source: Fae’s Twist & Tango

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Lately, instead of making steamed rice (Turkish Pilaf or Chinese Fan for example),
I have moved on to mostly make Polo sometimes with, sometimes without  the tahdig (crust).
I just love the simplicity and the plain flavor, as well as the uncomplicated, surefire
procedure. I just soak basmati rice for 4 hours, rinse it thoroughly and then cook it
in boiling salted water for 4 to 5 minutes. Strain, done. Absolutely fool proof and
pure rice goodness.  If you want to make Chelo (Chelou),  there are numerous
video instructions on the net, many different ones with different results.
Just pick your favorite.   🙂
All our latin friends will understand the heavenly texture and flavor of tahdig,
which means bottom of the pot and consists of the crispy rice which forms when
you cook the rice again after you have cooked it and strained it the first time.
At this point you can add just salt, a little water and saffran and return it to the
heat , slowly cooking until a wonderful crust has formed at the bottom of the pan.
Invert it on a plate or platter, with the golden crust on top the star of the dish.
You can also add vegetables and proteins before you cook the rice a second time
to make it a one-pot meal.
In different latin countries  tahdig is called socarrat, pegao, raspa, etc.
The Koreans call it nurungji and I am sure every other language has at least
one  or several words for this delicacy. Just don’t call it burnt rice, because if
it is burned, it is ruined.
The crust should be golden brown, light and crispy but not hard.
( Thadig, Polo and Chelo originate in the ancient persian language )

Please note that some folk’s use the pilaf method and cook the Chelo in one single cooking process.

More on rice (Sushi Rice)
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