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Lunch! What'd ya have? (2012–2014)


Chris Hennes

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A refreshing BLT salad. All the taste, none of the carbs.

Did you add, perhaps, a light coating of mayo? Couldn't tell from the pic.

Absolutely.

Anna Nielsen aka "Anna N"

...I just let people know about something I made for supper that they might enjoy, too. That's all it is. (Nigel Slater)

"Cooking is about doing the best with what you have . . . and succeeding." John Thorne

Our 2012 (Kerry Beal and me) Blog

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Several recent meals.

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Lunch

• Green & purple long beans (Vigna unguiculata ssp. sesquipedalis) stir-fried w/ garlic.

• Atlantic salmon steamed w/ rough-ground mustard (w/ jalapenos in it), standard mushrooms, ryori-shu, mirin, white pepper, fresh lemon juice, chopped parsley towards the end.

• Cous-cous, cooked w/ previously-made slow-simmered chicken broth.

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Lunch

• “Schnecken” brats [Claus’ German Sausage & Meats], pan-fried. (one was saved for dinner)

• Onion rings, pan-fried & caramelized/browned.

• Fresh broccoli florets, sautéed.

• Fresh baby carrots, simmered in salted water w/ a bit of oil & some Greek oregano.

• Fresh spaghettini [Nicole-Taylor’s] cooked in the water used to cook the carrots, drained, then tossed in the pan w/ the fond/residues from frying the “Schnecken” and the onions.

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Lunch

• Sliced ribeye stir-fried w/ sliced fresh young ginger (see here) & scallions, EV olive oil, Himalayan pink salt & a good splash of ryori-shu [MRT].

• Taiwan A-choy stems, trimmed & skinned to the inner succulent core, then sliced up; plus the trimmed residual leaves; stir-fried w/ smashed garlic.

• White rice (Basmati) [Royal brand; Indian].

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Lunch

• Another iteration of lotus root soup. (I like lotus root soup) Short-cut pork spare ribs, blanched & washed first (“fei sui”); sliced peeled lotus roots; kind-of smoked big Chinese jujubes (南棗), couple of dried cuttlefish, “yook chook” (玉竹; Yale: yuk6 juk1; Polygonatum odoratum (Mill.) Druce); “kei chee” (dried wolfberries/goji berries; 杞子); sea salt.

• Fresh radiatore [Nicole-Taylor’s], w/ a sauce made from chopped garlic, red onions, cipollini onions, Japanese Black Trifele tomatoes, Cherokee Black Heart tomato, Poblano peppers, Western-type celery leaves, Andouille sausage meat, standard mushrooms, seasoned to taste.

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Stuff for the sauce:

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Lunch today became an unexpected banquet. So apologies for the picture quality. I thought I was going for a bowl of noodles and didn't bother taking my real camera. These are from my not very good phone. Well, it makes excellent phone calls.

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Taro, Sweet Potato and Yam

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Fried Rice

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Some kind of deep fried river fish

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Greenery

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Chinese sausage, Hunan bacon on a bed of roasted peanuts

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Celery and Lily Bulbs

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White cut chicken

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Corn

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Braised pork ribs with Chinese herbs and pine needles

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Steamed buns (mantou) with pickled vegetables.

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Taro Soup

Washed down with a beer or three.

Edited by liuzhou (log)
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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

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It's rare that I eat a lunch. Today I had some chicken legs in the fridge, and found a few nice looking squash and tomatoes in my garden, so figured I'd get one last taste of summer. I started by simply coloring the legs and wings in olive oil with a touch of butter over a gentle heat, then finished in the oven. Once done, I removed the legs from the pan, degreased, added some fresh olive oil and sauteed the squash, then added the tomatos, cut in eight pieces, and let stew. Then added a little chicken stock, reduce a bit, then the leg and wing meat (deboned) and some more olive oil. Finished with espelette, fleur de sel, parsley, basil and the petals of a zucchini flower.

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Usually mussels are only available from the wholesale market and they are not too happy to sell me a dozen. They prefer to deal in multi-killograms. But a new supermarket opened last weekend and they are stocking them (so far). So, lunch today was a sort of moules marinières with some crusty bread,

I basically followed this recipe, but omitted the parsley (because I can't find any and don't particularly like the stuff anyway.) I think it still needed something. Some garlic would have helped.

But it was still very enjoyable.

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Edited by liuzhou (log)
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...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

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Some recent lunches.

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• Stir-fried broccoli & cauliflower florets.

• Cod fillets steamed w/ soy bean paste (陳年豆瓣醬) [Mingteh Food Industry Inc] (this one), garlic, ginger, scallions.

• White rice (Basmati).

• Sautéed snow peas (not pictured).

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• Fried rice. Done w/ Andouille sausage meat, chopped garlic, couple of farm eggs, day-old rice, frozen peas, chopped scallions, chopped coriander leaves, salt.

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• Cantonese roast duck [Asia Mart], pork & shrimp wontons [Prime Food], fresh small tung koo, young Tuscan kale (hydroponic), skinny wonton noodles [Twin Marquis]; in chicken stock simmered w/ a little oil, some ikan bilis & those small tung koo.

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B’fast/Lunch Part 1

Culatello slices & a Debreziner sausage [Goose the Market].

• Walnut & cranberry bread [brotgarten].

• Sautéed baby leeks (purposely browned/slightly blackened) (each "stalk" shown is an entire leek, minus the roots and the green tops).

Lunch Part 2

• Steamed Har Gow [Prime Food] & Shumai [JFC].

• Dipping sauce of light soy sauce [Pearl River], aged soy sauce [Kim Lan], “aged gourmet rice vinegar” [Kong Yen], a splash of sweet mirin [Honteri], chopped scallions.

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• Slow-simmered chicken broth; plus fresh carrots, celery & orange sweet “snacking peppers” simmered in the broth.

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• Sautéed leeks (these were cut-up mature leeks, with very long white parts).

• Spaghetti [Garofalo] w/ fresh Hazan-(simple)style tomato sauce, using canned Italian-type plum tomatoes. The sauce is much less “liquid” than a previous batch using fresh ripe tomatoes (deskinned, deseeded).

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• Hainanese Chicken Rice. Small (3 lb) Bell & Evans chicken, skin exfoliated w/ coarse Kosher salt, rinsed off, stuffed w/ sliced ginger and scallion pieces, poached [brought to boil then heat shut off] to ~ 160ºF in the thigh, dumped in ice water; rice (cooked w/ additional chicken fat, rendered in the rice pot; chopped garlic, ginger, pandan leaves, the poaching stock); young collard greens (hydroponic) in the poaching stock; grated ginger/chopped scallion/salt/hot oil dipping sauce.

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• Hainanese Chicken Rice. Small (3 lb) Bell & Evans chicken, skin exfoliated w/ coarse Kosher salt, rinsed off, stuffed w/ sliced ginger and scallion pieces, poached [brought to boil then heat shut off] to ~ 160ºF in the thigh, dumped in ice water; rice (cooked w/ additional chicken fat, rendered in the rice pot; chopped garlic, ginger, pandan leaves, the poaching stock); young collard greens (hydroponic) in the poaching stock; grated ginger/chopped scallion/salt/hot oil dipping sauce.

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it is as authentic as can be. The collard greens in stock looks like a v good innovation - hawker stalls normally just drop in chopped scallions.

however, i would also have the chilli+ginger+garlic+sugar+salt+rendered chicken fat dipping sauce...for me, i cant do without chilli in HCR.

Maybe its the photography, and YMMV but the chicken looks too pale and white - did you brush it with soya sauce and/or sessame oil right after you finished cooking it? The skin looks a bit thin: did you do the dipping in hot stock and ice/cold water 3 times or more? I was told that this technique increases the thickness of the skin's gelatinous collagen, but i still cannot get consistent results, and i blame it on the chicken, and not my technique :-))).

Edited by jsager01 (log)

It's dangerous to eat, it's more dangerous to live.

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• Hainanese Chicken Rice. Small (3 lb) Bell & Evans chicken, skin exfoliated w/ coarse Kosher salt, rinsed off, stuffed w/ sliced ginger and scallion pieces, poached [brought to boil then heat shut off] to ~ 160ºF in the thigh, dumped in ice water; rice (cooked w/ additional chicken fat, rendered in the rice pot; chopped garlic, ginger, pandan leaves, the poaching stock); young collard greens (hydroponic) in the poaching stock; grated ginger/chopped scallion/salt/hot oil dipping sauce.

attachicon.gifDSCN9650a_1k.jpg

it is as authentic as can be. The collard greens in stock looks like a v good innovation - hawker stalls normally just drop in chopped scallions.

however, i would also have the chilli+ginger+garlic+sugar+salt+rendered chicken fat dipping sauce...for me, i cant do without chilli in HCR.

Maybe its the photography, and YMMV but the chicken looks too pale and white - did you brush it with soya sauce and/or sessame oil right after you finished cooking it? The skin looks a bit thin: did you do the dipping in hot stock and ice/cold water 3 times or more? I was told that this technique increases the thickness of the skin's gelatinous collagen, but i still cannot get consistent results, and i blame it on the chicken, and not my technique :-))).

Authenticity is a slippery word. Still, thank you

Unlike ayam kampung in M'sia these and most non-free range chickens here do not have that deep yellow skin and darker flesh. (This chicken also had very thin skin to start with) I don't do the soy sauce brush or the sesame oil brush - I don't particularly care for them. I may brush the chicken after poaching w/ a neutral vegetable oil on occasion. I sometimes drizzle the assembled dish of chopped chicken pieces w/ sang chow, though, as I did here. I did the ice-water dipping just once. I frequently don't even do this - I like the extra gelatin that pools beneath the chicken (and gels into nice flavorful tidbits) when I don't. I'm not terribly concerned if I don't do precisely what some favored hawker or other does, I take into account what I feel like and what pleases me. I use many other kinds of vegetation and whatnot in the soups accompanying the HCR I make - I've described them in several other previous posts on HCR here on the forum. I use other sauces too, like a chicken liver sauce which I have also described elsewhere here. I also use various formulations for the chilli sauce for the HCR when I do have chilli sauce, also described elsewhere here.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Some lunches from the last few weeks.

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• Fried rice. Made w/ Chinese sausages (lap cheong; liver & wine-flavored varieties), smashed chopped garlic, broccoli florets, day-old Basmati rice.

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• Red chard, “stir-fried” w/ minced pork, garlic, plus splashes of this-and-that (don’t exactly remember what now).

• Spaghetti [Garofalo] w/ leftover “Marcella Hazan” tomato sauce.

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• Fresh wood-ear fungus (muk yee; 木耳) sautéed w/ small fresh Chinese mushrooms (shiitake-type; tung koo; 冬菇), scallions & coriander leaves.

• Romaine hearts stir-fried w/ garlic & fermented bean curd (fu yee; 腐乳).

• Leftover Teochew-style Bak Kut Teh (from here).

• White rice (Basmati).

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• Chinese rose wine & shrimp soup. I had been thinking of this off-and-on since Anna N’s post and finally got around to it.

• Fried rice w/ chopped Chinese long beans, lots of chopped scallions, chopped celery, farm eggs scrambled in situ. (Not pictured)

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image.jpg

Dry-fried beans with ground chicken instead of pork and I added some bean sprouts rather than let them die.

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Anna Nielsen aka "Anna N"

...I just let people know about something I made for supper that they might enjoy, too. That's all it is. (Nigel Slater)

"Cooking is about doing the best with what you have . . . and succeeding." John Thorne

Our 2012 (Kerry Beal and me) Blog

My 2004 eG Blog

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Couple of past lunches.

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Lunch

• Salad of romaine & red leaf lettuces, red Russian kale, a Marconi pepper, and Napa cabbage heart. Dressed w/ a vinaigrette of smooth Dijon mustard [Grey Poupon], ‘Stoneground Xxspress Mustard’ [Local Folks Foods], sugar, sea salt, ‘Aged Gourmet Rice Vinegar’ [Kong Yen], EV olive oil [Fresh Foods], generous fresh ground black pepper, fresh lime juice, generous rice wine (ryori-shu) [Morita].

• Leftover beef short ribs stewed w/ young daikon, lily buds, bamboo shoots, Chinese-type shiitake mushrooms (far koo), garlic, mutenka shiro miso paste [Maruman] (see here and here for more info). Gussied up w/ more of some ingredients & re-stewing for a bit.

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Lunch

Part I.

• Steamed char siu bao [Prime Food].

• Steamed pork, scallop & shrimp dumplings (shui gow) [Wei Chuan], dressed w/ chopped scallions. (no pic, I was tucking into it before I remembered the camera)

Part II.

• Teochew-style steamed fresh striped bass. Live fish from the tank the day before. Dressed w/ Shaoh Xing wine [Lam Sheng Kee], sliced ripe tomato, sliced scallions & ginger (also stuffed into fish cavity), vegetable oil, sea salt, slight drizzle of light soy sauce, sliced preserved sour mustard (syun choi/harm choy) [Pigeon brand], pickled plums [Hana]; then steamed till just done.

• Cauliflower florets “stir-fried”/sautéed w/ garlic in vegetable oil.

• White rice (Basmati).

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Edited by huiray (log)
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Just because I managed to reach the exalted age of 72 without ever having made real honest to goodness chicken soup... I do have some trouble eating chicken because of all the little extra bitsies which are involved unless you eat straight chicken breast meat which is not fascinating. .

Used a leftover gifted B-B-Q chicken with Martha Stewart's recipe leaving out the bay leaves and the garlic. Incredibly delicious. Was blown away.

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Darienne

 

learn, learn, learn...

 

We live in hope. 

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Late lunch/early dinner yesterday:

• Pan-fried Merguez sausages [smoking Goose, this one; via Goose the Market]; a chunky cultivar of Maitake mushrooms (see here) sautéed in the pan residues & oil; Austrian Crescent & Purple Peruvian fingerling potatoes simply simmered in salted water & tossed in the pan remnants to coat w/ a little oil.

• Chicken broth w/ fresh leafy celery wilted in it.

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