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Big Bunny

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Posts posted by Big Bunny

  1. A sauce should be unnecessary and also imperative.

    So true.

    Sauces make good better, they cannot make bad good.

    There are degrees of perfection - sometimes a sauce makes food "more perfect."

    On the other hand, sauces can be ornaments. Dishes served with a variety of sauces can be eaten as a theme and variations, or a rondo.

    BB

  2. All of the above.

    If I immediately make "sticks" of unused celery and/or carrots, they will probably get nibbled up before they go bad, especially when I need munchies while I prepare supper after work.

    I do a lot of stir-frying, so I am used to throwing away half of each head of garlic and bunch of scallions.

    BB

  3. we see a lot of japanese-korean or japanese restaurants run by koreans because (in my opinion) japanese food (sushi) caters mostly to western tastes.  Koreans will get more business from americans if they have japanese food on the menu as well as korean food.  Korean food just isn't that popular as japanese or chinese food.  You do see chinese food at korean places except these places serve things like: jajangmyun, tangsooyook, jampong, jelly fish salad, etc.  They don't serve americanized chinese food, rather the chinese food you find in korea.

    Here in Baltimore, there are many Korean families in which the parents run small businesses to send the kids to college ... the great American tradition.

    I imagine that this increases the number of Korean-Whatever places because of the demand for "whatever".

    Of course, there are also Korean restaurants which cater to a mainly Korean clientele. Our Korean population is large enough to support quite a few of these.

    BB

  4. How many volumes will this book be?

    Asia is big, and there is a lot of history to deal with. Food is all about history and geography.

    My guess is that you will be torn between showing all of the links and relationships that exist between these cuisines and the sheer impossibility of really doing the subject(s) justice in the limits of one book.

    Over the weekend I did the "Hunan Steak Kew" recipe from Michael Tong's book. This is a great example of "Authentic American-Chinese Restaurant Cuisine."

    I usually read several recipes before doing one. Eileen Yin-fei Lo mentions the possibility the "kew" is actually a Chinese-American pronunciation of cube, and that the idea of big chunks was inspired by the easy availability of beef in the U.S.

    Of course there is no "steak kew" in Hunan (Or, maybe there is now), and the Shun Lee dish is really spiced-up (American-) Cantonese, but mainly it is a simply delicious dish in the American-Chinese restaurant tradition.

    Hmmm. That may be hard to quantify, but that quality of self conscious "deliciousness" often separates restaurant cuisine from traditional (everyday) cuisine, doesn't it?

    BB

  5. My favorite use for kohlrabi is a soy-sauce pickle I learned from Florence Lin's vegetarian cookbook. Slice the k. into thin dominos, let it "weep" with salt and sugar, then put in a jar and cover with soy sauce.

    This keeps "forever" in the frij, and is a great side dish to anything with rice, especially rice poridge.

    BB

  6. I have a story about this.

    Years ago I was putting leftover steamed fish away. Because I knew of this tradition, I was careful NOT to flip the fish in the process.

    Later that day, there was a report on the radio that a local fishing boat had turned over, drowning one fisherman. If I HAD flipped that fish, I would probably have been a wreck when I heard that news.

    BB

  7. I use peanut for Chinese, olive for Mediterranean.

    To me, the real comparison is between olive oil, and the combination of peanut oil with a spritz of sesame oil. Sometimes, as an experiment, I use peanut oil on a Mediterranean dish, then give it a dash of sesame oil. That works quite well. Olive oil doesn't need the same "lift."

    I have never tried to do a Chinese dish in a fragrant olive oil (but NO sesame oil.) That would be interesting.

    BB

  8. I by-passed the new Ken Hom 'easy' book and Yan's Chinatown. This last one wasn't separated into the Chinatowns -- just a lot of recipes.

    I got Yan's Chinatown with some of my Christmas money. It isn't divided into sections by city, but many (most?) of the recipes are attributed in their intros.

    I have made a Macanese claypot rice dish, and a lovely (unattributed) lime and silver fungus soup. Both were quite good.

    BB

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