eG Forums: Pictorial: Chicken Stir-fried w/ Butter Blk Pepper - eG Forums

Jump to content

Welcome to eGullet.org! This website is a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, a 501c3 nonprofit organization dedicated to advancement of the culinary arts. Anyone can read these forums, however if you want to participate in active discussions you must join the Society. If you'd like to receive our news and update emails, please become a NewsGullet subscriber.

Close Open
Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot reply to this topic

Pictorial: Chicken Stir-fried w/ Butter Blk Pepper Home Cooking Series 25, 黑椒牛油雞ߌ

   #1 User is offline   hzrt8w

  • Group: eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • Posts: 3,779
  • Joined: 03-July 04
  • Location:Sacramento, CA

Posted 06 November 2005 - 12:47 AM

Chicken Stir-fried with Butter and Black Pepper (黑椒牛油雞丁)

Butter in Chinese cooking? Well, not in traditional recipes. I have been to a Vietnamese/Chinese restaurant in Garden Grove, California. They offer a dish named "House Special Chicken". They wouldn't tell me what the "House Special" sauce is made of, but the taste of butter and black pepper is unmistakable. I have since come up with my own version of Chicken Stir-fried with Butter and Black Pepper. The result is very nice.

This dish is very light. It doesn't use any heavy sauces as in traditional Chinese recipes except a small amount of light soy sauce.

Picture of the finished dish:
Posted Image


Serving suggestion: 3 to 4

Posted Image
The main ingredients:

(Clockwise from the top right) 3 pieces of chicken breast, about 2 pounds. Fresh black pepper (or use ground black pepper). 1 small chili. 1/4 of a stick of butter (one stick is 1/4 of a pound). 5 to 6 stalks of green onions. 4 to 5 cloves of garlic (not shown).


Preparations:

Posted Image
Trim the fat off the chicken breasts. Dice the chicken meat into 1 inch by 1 inch cubes.

Posted Image
To marinate the chicken meat: Use 2 tsp of sesame oil, 1 tsp of freshly grinded black pepper, a pinch of salt (suggest 1/4 tsp or to taste), 1 - 2 tsp of light soy sauce, 2 tsp of Shao Hsing cooking wine, 1 - 2 tsp of corn starch. Add all ingredients to a small mixing bowl.

Posted Image
Mix all ingredients. Set aside for at least 20 minutes before cooking.

Posted Image
Meanwhile, trim off the ends of the green onions. Chop into 1/4 inch pieces. Peel and mince 4 to 5 cloves of garlic. Slice about 1/2 of a small jalapeno chili. Use about 1/4 of a stick of butter (about 3 tblsp), cut into slices.


Cooking Instructions:

Posted Image
Velvet the chicken meat first. Heat up a pan/wok on the stove (set at high). Add 3 tblsp of cooking oil. Add chicken cubes.

Posted Image
Cook for a few minutes until all chicken meat barely turns white (slightly undercooked). Remove from pan.

Posted Image
Start with a clean pan. Stove set at high. Add 2 tblsp of cooking oil. Wait until oil starts fuming. Add butter. It would quickly melt.

Posted Image
Add minced garlic and sliced chili. Add 1/4 tsp of salt. Divide the chopped green onions into 2 portions. Add only the white portion of the green onions into the pan. Grind another 1 tsp of fresh black pepper onto the mixture. Dash in 1 to 2 tsp of white vinegar.

Posted Image
Add about 4 to 5 tblsp of chicken broth, and 1 tsp of sugar. Bring the mixture to a quick boil. Use some corn starch slurry (suggest 1/2 tsp with 1 tsp of water) to thicken the sauce a little bit.

Posted Image
Re-add the chicken into the mixture. Cook for another 2 to 3 minutes.

Posted Image
Before removing the chicken from the pan, dash in 1 tsp of light soy sauce and add the remaining portion of chopped green onions. Stir well. Finished.

Posted Image
The finished dish. Grind some more fresh black pepper on top if desired. The quantity made in this recipe is a bit more than twice the portion shown in this picture.

This post has been edited by hzrt8w: 06 November 2005 - 01:01 AM

W.K. Leung ("Ah Leung") aka "hzrt8w"

   #2 User is offline   jo-mel

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 1,610
  • Joined: 01-November 03
  • Location:New Jersey via Massachusetts

Posted 06 November 2005 - 07:07 AM

"The quantity made in this recipe is a bit more than twice the portion shown in this picture."


I have to figure this one out!! LOL! So how much pepper did you use -- the tsp or the 1/2 tsp?

Somewhere in China, I had a vegetable dish (?snow peas or tips? I forget which), but it had the unmistakenable flavor of butter and soy sauce. It surprised me, even tho I'm aware of butter being used in the Tang and Yuan Dynasties. And altho I'd have to search my Chinese travel food log, I know it was not a Moslem restaurant.

Even now, when I stir/fry spinach, I add a little butter (or a sub) to the final flavoring.

Have you used any of the jarred Black Pepper Sauces? I've tried them and DO NOT LIKE THEM! I even tossed one jar! Black pepper dishes have been favorites of mine, and I often order them if they are on menu --- usually beef, scallops, shrimp and ocassionally chicken. Easy to make and not have to rely on the jarred stuff. A simple sauce and fresh pepper. Easy!

This dish will certainly be on the menu this week, but I might have to {{{{{groan}}}}} use a teeny little bit of fake butter along with the real stuff -- for diet sake.

   #3 User is offline   Jay Francis

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 295
  • Joined: 11-December 03
  • Location:Houston, Texas

Posted 06 November 2005 - 07:37 AM

This was a great posting and I thank you for taking the time to do this one. I look forward to the day when I am technically savvy enough to start posting recipes with photographs. For me, this is the absolute best way to walk someone through a recipe.

   #4 User is offline   hzrt8w

  • Group: eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • Posts: 3,779
  • Joined: 03-July 04
  • Location:Sacramento, CA

Posted 06 November 2005 - 11:16 AM

jo-mel, on Nov 6 2005, 07:07 AM, said:

I have to figure this one out!!  LOL!  So how much pepper did you use -- the tsp or the 1/2 tsp?
.....
Have you used any of the jarred Black Pepper Sauces?
View Post

All measurements of sauces and spices in the receipes match with the serving suggestions and the amount of meat and other ingredients used. It is just that I use a small plate of Chinese design to pose the final photograph, it doesn't hold all the food. I just don't want the readers to think that 3 pieces of chicken breasts would come out as just one small plate! LOL! :laugh:

I don't like those jarred Black Pepper Sauces either. I don't think they do it right - even with the LKK brand name. There other "Black Pepper Something" dishes that you had in restaurants are mostly fermented black bean base with black pepper added.

Since I bought this small pepper grinder, I wouldn't even go back to the ready-ground black pepper!
W.K. Leung ("Ah Leung") aka "hzrt8w"

   #5 User is offline   jo-mel

  • Group: participating member
  • Posts: 1,610
  • Joined: 01-November 03
  • Location:New Jersey via Massachusetts

Posted 06 November 2005 - 03:42 PM

hrzt --

"The quantity made in this recipe is a bit more than twice the portion shown in this picture."

Got it! I was thinking "portion of black pepper" for some reason -- not the actual quantity of chicken on the plate.

And my question on the amount of black papper was also a case of misreading the pepper quantity and the amount of salt.

All is now straight in my mind -- and THAT is something!

Page 1 of 1
  • You cannot start a new topic
  • You cannot reply to this topic

1 User(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users