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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Let's share the best Chinese cuisine you ever have^^
My choice--"bo zai fan" (i.e.cooking rice in a pot with meat, fish or chinese sausages on top, a traditional way of cooking ) It's like heave. the meat juice is totally absorbed by the rice. The best way of eating rice, and the best Chinese cuisine I ever have!! |
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Please share us the recipe, if you don't mind.
> wrote in message ups.com... > Let's share the best Chinese cuisine you ever have^^ > > My choice--"bo zai fan" (i.e.cooking rice in a pot with meat, fish or > chinese sausages on top, a traditional way of cooking ) > > It's like heave. the meat juice is totally absorbed by the rice. > > The best way of eating rice, and the best Chinese cuisine I ever have!! > |
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On Feb 5, 3:17 pm, yetanotherBob > wrote:
> In article . com>, > says...> Let's share the best Chinese cuisine you ever have^^ > > > My choice--"bo zai fan" (i.e.cooking rice in a pot with meat, fish or > > chinese sausages on top, a traditional way of cooking ) [snip] > But if it's "like heaven", well then yes, please share. > The OP is referring to the simplest kind of home cooking that you seldom find in cookbooks. You make something up that just needs steaming or heating, and put it on top of the rice after you've brought the rice to a boil and let some of the water boil away. About the time the water has reached the top of the rice you put on your topping, cover the pot tightly, turn down the heat and let it finish cooking. Best known example, known to all Chinese grandmothers, is to get some lop cheung -- small Chinese sausages -- and slice them into bite-sized pieces on the diagonal, and put them on the rice. That's the recipe. I've occasionally added some sliced gai lon to that. Another one from my family is to make a seasoned ground meat mixture much like what you might use for meatballs. For example, mix together ground pork, salt and white pepper, minced garlic and ginger, a little soy sauce, a little wine and some chopped scallions. Form a loaf to fit the size of the pot. With anything of this type you can also toss some frozen peas on top a few minutes before it's done. I don't suppose Chinese grandmothers did that, but Chinese-Americans did. -aem |
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On Feb 5, 4:31 pm, "aem" > wrote:
> > says...> Let's share the best Chinese cuisine you ever have^^ > > > > My choice--"bo zai fan" (i.e.cooking rice in a pot with meat, fish or > > > chinese sausages on top, a traditional way of cooking ) > > The OP is referring to the simplest kind of home cooking that you > seldom find in cookbooks. You make something up that just needs > steaming or heating, and put it on top of the rice after you've > brought the rice to a boil and let some of the water boil away. [snip] Following up my own post, I remembered another aspect of this home cooking technique. Many leftovers can be reheated in this simplest of ways. Say you had a couple of cooked chicken thighs, or some pork cutlets. Start the pot of rice, put the leftovers on top when you cover it and turn it down. By the time the rice is cooked the meat will be hot from the gentle steaming action. Better than the microwave and predates it by a few thousand years. -aem |
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On 2¤ë6¤é, ¤W¤È6®É41¤À, wrote:
> Let's share the best Chinese cuisine you ever have^^ > > My choice--"bo zai fan" (i.e.cooking rice in a pot with meat, fish or > chinese sausages on top, a traditional way of cooking ) > > It's like heave. the meat juice is totally absorbed by the rice. > > The best way of eating rice, and the best Chinese cuisine I ever have!! Here's a pic to sha] http://i58.photobucket.com/albums/g2.../907097097.jpg |
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