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Showing posts with label rice-vinegar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rice-vinegar. Show all posts

Friday, February 14

Hakka-style salt-baked chicken

Active: 40 minutes; Total: 4 hours 15 minutes; Yield: 4 servings

Chicken, whole

4 pounds

Ginger, fresh, unpeeled, cut into 5 slices

1-inch piece

Scallions, cut into 1 ½-inch long pieces

2 medium

Rice wine or dry sherry

1 ½ tablespoons

Cilantro

5 sprigs +
2 sprigs

Star anise, whole, coarsely crushed

1

Rose dew liqueur or extra-dry vermouth

1 tablespoon

Salt, kosher

4 ½ pounds +
¼ teaspoon

Chinese chile sauce

1 tablespoon

Water, hot

1 tablespoon

Vinegar, rice

1 teaspoon +
2 tablespoons

Sugar, granulated

½ teaspoon +
1 teaspoon

Garlic, finely chopped

4 teaspoons

Ginger, peeled, finely chopped

1 tablespoon

Oil, corn or peanut

2 tablespoons

  1. Remove and discard giblets; trim excess fat; pat chicken dry with paper towels. 
  2. Smash the ginger and scallions on a cutting board with the broad side of a knife blade. 
  3. Rub the chicken cavity with rice wine; stuff with the smashed ginger and scallion, 5 cilantro sprigs, and crushed star anise. 
  4. Pull the chicken legs together, and truss tightly with butcher’s twine; tuck the wings back behind the neck. 
  5. Brush liqueur evenly over the chicken skin. 
  6. Place the chicken, breast side up, on a wire rack; let stand at room temperature in an airy place until the skin is dry to the touch, about 2 hours. 
  7. Wrap the chicken in a single layer of loose-weave cheesecloth; bunch together extra cheesecloth above the breast, tying into a knot or with a piece of string; trim off excess cheesecloth. (The chicken should be tightly wrapped in a bundle.) 
  8. Preheat oven to 275°F. 
  9. Place 4 ½-pounds salt in a large, heavy, ovenproof stockpot that is just wider than the chicken and will hold the chicken snugly. 
  10. Heat over medium-high, stirring often, until the salt is very hot to the touch, about 8 to 10 minutes. 
  11. Remove and reserve 7-cups salt from the stockpot, leaving about 1 inch of salt on the bottom of the stockpot. 
  12. Place the cheesecloth-wrapped chicken in the stockpot, breast side up, and cover completely with the reserved hot salt. 
  13. Cover the stockpot; bake in preheated oven until a thermometer inserted in thickest portion of the chicken registers 160°F, about 1 hour and 30 minutes. 
  14. Remove from oven; let the chicken stand in stockpot for 20 minutes. 
  15. Hakka chile sauce: Whisk together chile sauce, water, 1-teaspoon vinegar, and ½-teaspoon sugar in a small bowl until the sugar dissolves; let stand 15 minutes before serving. 
  16. Hakka garlic sauce: Whisk together 2-tablespoons vinegar, garlic, and 1-teaspoon sugar until the sugar dissolves; let stand 15 minutes before serving. 
  17. Hakka ginger sauce: Place 1-tablespoon ginger in a small, heavy serving saucer; heat the oil over medium-high heat until nearly smoking, then pour over ginger; stir to combine; sprinkle with salt, stir again; serve warm or at room temperature. 
  18. Gently remove the chicken from the stockpot, holding the knotted cheesecloth on top and pushing the salt aside. (Try not to tip the chicken, so the juices do not spill.) 
  19. Carefully transfer the chicken to a platter, and remove the cheesecloth; discard the salt in the stockpot. Remove the trussing strings from the chicken; remove and discard solids inside the cavity of the chicken. 
  20. Serve the chicken warm or at room temperature; chop Chinese-style into bite-size pieces; garnish with remaining cilantro sprigs, and serve with the sauces. 
Recipe from Food & Wine Chicken.

Monday, December 7

Shrimp toast with scallion-chili sauce

Total: 35 minutes; Makes 4 dozen toasts

Shrimp, large, shelled & deveined

8 ounces

Egg

1 large

Salt, kosher

1 teaspoon

Butter, unsalted, cold, cut into cubes

2 tablespoons

Sesame seeds, toasted

2 teaspoons +

1 ½ teaspoons

Bread, white, crusts removed

6 slices

Oil, canola

For frying

Scallion, finely chopped

½ +
Garnish

Soy sauce

1 tablespoon

Vinegar, rice

1 tablespoon

Sambal oelek sauce

1 ½ teaspoons

  1. Combine the shrimp, egg, and salt in a food processor; process until smooth, about 15 seconds, stopping to scrape down the sides as needed. 
  2. Add butter and 2-teaspoons sesame seeds, and pulse until smooth with flecks of butter remaining, about 7 pulses. 
  3. Spread ¼-cup shrimp mousse on each bread slice. 
  4. Pour oil to a depth of 1/8 inch in a large nonstick skillet; heat over medium until shimmering. 
  5. Working in batches, add bread slices, mousse-side down, and cook until lightly browned, about 2 minutes. 
  6. Flip the toasts; cook until browned and mousse is firm to touch, about 1 minute. 
  7. Transfer to a paper towel lined plate to drain. 
  8. Stir together 1 ½-teaspoons scallions, soy sauce, vinegar, samba oelek, and remaining 1 ½-teaspoons sesame seeds in a small bowl. 
  9. Cut each toast into eight triangles; transfer to a platter or board. 
  10. Garnish with slice scallions; serve soy sauce mixture with toasts. 
Recipe from Food & Wine Holiday Recipes.

Wednesday, March 22

Pork chops with cherry-miso mostarda

Oil, canola
1 tablespoon +
Shallot, minced
1
Garlic, minced
5 cloves
Cherries, sour, dried
1 cup
Sugar, light brown
¼ cup
Vinegar, rice
¼ cup
Miso, white
2 tablespoons
Mustard, whole-grain
1 ½ tablespoons
Water
½ cup
Salt, kosher

Pepper, freshly ground

Pork chops, bone-in, 1 ¼-inches thick
4
  1. In a small saucepan, heat 1-tablespoon oil. 
  2. Add the shallot and garlic; cook over moderate heat, stirring, until softened, about 3 minutes. 
  3. Add the cherries, sugar, vinegar, miso, mustard, and water; bring to a boil. 
  4. Simmer over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until the cherries are coated in a sauce, about 8 minutes; season with salt and pepper. 
  5. Scrape into a bowl, and let cool; stir in a little water if it gets too thick. 
  6. Heat a large cast-iron skillet. 
  7. Brush the pork with oil, and season generously with salt and pepper. 
  8. Add the pork to the skillet, and cook over moderate heat, turning once, until browned and an instant-read thermometer inserted in each piece near the bone registers 135F, about 12 to 15 minutes. 
  9. Transfer the pork to plates or a platter, and let rest for 5 minutes. 
  10. Serve with the mostarda. 
Recipe from Food&Wine Magazine, April 2017.

Tuesday, March 7

Shrimp with green banana cocktail sauce

Pickle
Daikon, peeled, very thinly sliced
1 pound
Mirin cooking wine
½ cup
Vinegar, rice, unseasoned
½ cup
Peppercorns, Sichuan
5
Star anise
2
Sugar
1 tablespoon
Salt, kosher
2 teaspoons
Sauce
Banana, green, peeled, cut into ½-inch pieces
1
Ketchup
1 cup
Chili sauce, sweet
½ cup
Horseradish, prepared
3 tablespoons
Lemon juice
2 tablespoons
Shoyu or other soy sauce
1 tablespoon
Shrimp
Garlic
4 cloves
Lemongrass, cut into 2-inch pieces
2 stalks
Jalapeño, halved lengthwise
1
Bay leaf
1
Kaffir lime leaf
1
Salt, kosher
3 tablespoons
Allspice, whole
¼ teaspoon
Coriander seeds
¼ teaspoon
Peppercorns, black
¼ teaspoon
Cinnamon
1 stick
Water
8 cups
Shrimp, extra jumbo
2 pounds
Pickle
  1. Place the daikon in a heatproof bowl. 
  2. In a medium saucepan, bring the mirin, rice vinegar, peppercorns, anise, sugar, and salt to a simmer, stirring to dissolve the sugar. 
  3. Pour the hot brine over the daikon, let cool slightly, then cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours. 
Sauce
  1. In a small saucepan, combine the banana, ketchup, chili sauce, horseradish, juice, and soy sauce, and cook over moderately low heat until thickened, about 30 minutes; let cool slightly. 
  2. Transfer to a blender, and puree until smooth. 
  3. Transfer to a small bowl, cover, and refrigerate until chilled, about 1 hour. 
Shrimp
  1. Prepare an ice bath. 
  2. In a large saucepan, combine the garlic, lemongrass, jalapeño, bay leaf, kaffir leaf, salt, and spices with the water, and bring to a boil. 
  3. Reduce the heat to moderately low, add the shrimp, and simmer until just cooked through, about 7 minutes. 
  4. Drain and transfer the shrimp to the ice bath; let cool completely. 
  5. Drain, peel and devein the shrimp, leaving the tail end intact; discard the shells and aromatics. 
Serve the shrimp with the drained pickled daikon, cocktail sauce, shrimp chips, and fresh basil.

Recipe from Food&Wine Magazine, March 2017.