Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Re-post: Hainan Chjicken Rice
The Chicken 2 kg whole corn-fed chicken* coriander leaves for garnishing *mature corn-fed chicken will be tastier but tougher. Chicken rice shops use young farmed chicken which are very tender (and cheaper) but flavorless so msg is added to the sauce to cover the bland taste. Updated on 25/6/08: 1. Put enough water in a pot to almost cover chicken (too much water and your soup will be tasteless). 2. Put chicken into the boiling water, cover, turn heat to high and when it starts to boil, lower heat so water is gently bubbling. Simmer 10 min. Turn off heat and leave chicken in pot for 30 min, covered. Test the thigh with a skewer. If the water that runs out is red, heat the water to nearly boiling, then switch off and let chicken sit in it for another 5-10 min. If not, go to step 3. 3. Remove chicken and immerse chicken in a basin of ice-cold water for 15 min. Pour away water. Leave chicken to cool completely, rub some sesame oil over if like, before cutting into small pieces with bones on. Garnish with chopped coriander. The Rice 1 bulb garlic, chopped finely 5 cups rice 1 chicken stock cube, crumbled 1 tsp salt a knot of pandan leaves 3 to 4 slices ginger, smashed kunyit (tumeric)* juice or powder for color Heat 2 T oil and lightly brown the garlic. Remove the garlic but leave the oil. Fry the rice under medium heat for 1 min, then put rice into a rice cooker and add the stock from boiling the chicken till level 5 (or less, according to the type of rice). If you don't like your rice oily, do not fry the rice. Stir in all the remaining ingredients except the fried garlic. The garlic should be stirred well into the cooked rice just before serving. *Orange-colored ginger which is used as a natural yellow food dye. The Soup 1/2 head of Sichuan preserved veg, sliced & soaked in water for 10 min 3 to 4 tomatoes, in wedges finely cut spring onions for garnishing Put the Sichuan veg and tomatoes into the stock in which the chicken was boiled and let the soup simmer 15 min. Do not add salt. The Chili Sauce 5 red chilies 2 cloves garlic 3 cm piece of ginger 1/2 T vinegar 1/2 t fine sugar 2 T stock/soup 1. Pound the first 3 ingredients in a stone mortar till fine. 2. Heat 1/2 T oil and fry the pounded ingredients for 5 seconds, turn off fire and add the remaining ingredients. Ginger Dip 4 cm piece of ginger, pounded finely 2 cm piece 'sand' ginger, pounded finely spring onions, cut finely 1 T each light & dark soy sauce (if like) 1/2 T oyster sauce 2 T oil sesame oil (optional) Put spring onions in a sauce bowl. Heat 2-3 T oil until smoking, add the gingers, fry 2 seconds, then turn off heat and add oil and ginger quickly onto the spring onions . Add the soy sauces and oyster sauce if used. Alternatively, put the gingers and spring onions into a small dip dish and pour hot oil over, then add the soy sauces. The more common dip is ginger, spring onions, hot oil and salt but my parents included soy sauces in this and I prefer it that way. Note: Serve with sliced cuke, or blanched veg, or a simple beansprouts dish: boil the beansprouts briefly, drain well, splash a little fish sauce over and top with fried garlic bits.
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Main (Asian): Birds
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1 comment:
Hi Terri,
There's something funky with the formatting of the words on the blog page. Blogger is showing all your recipes as one giant run-on sentence!
Tina
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