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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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"Ariane Jenkins" > wrote in message
... > On 29 Mar 2005 19:13:00 -0800, Sheldon > wrote: > > > aem wrote: > >> Sheldon wrote: > >> [snip preceding] > >> > > >> > You're not making fried rice. In fried rice the whole egg is first > >> > fried like an omelet and then used in bits as a garnish, raw egg is > >> > not blended into anything... in fact in Chinese fried rice only the > >> > yolk is fried > > Yeah, well... you're not Chinese. LOL > > > > But I am. And this is the first I've heard of using only the yolk in > fried rice. Most people I know use the whole egg in fried rice, hot and sour > soup, etc. including myself. And it can be stir-fried separately from the > rice OR stir-fried with it, it varies according to who's making it. An aunt > of mine does it the omelet way--cooking it into a thin pancake and then > cooling it before julienning it for a garnish. Other aunts of mine simply > scramble it with the rice so that it forms small chunks mixed in with > everything else. Less elegant, perhaps, but it's faster and it tastes just as > good. > > Then again, you're also the same person who claimed few procedures in > Asian cuisine takes longer than 3 minutes and that wasn't true, either. > > Ariane > -- > Dysfunction: The only consistent feature of all your dissatisfying > relationships is you. > http://www.despair.com/demotivators/dysfunction.html > Thanks, Ariane. I don't know that my recipe is "authentic", just that mother was given it in Thailand and I've been enjoying it for over 30 years and making it myself for over 20. I definitely use whole egg in fried rice and in these dumplings. Jill |
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One time on Usenet, "jmcquown" > said:
> "Ariane Jenkins" > wrote in message > ... > > On 29 Mar 2005 19:13:00 -0800, Sheldon > wrote: > > > > > aem wrote: > > >> Sheldon wrote: > > >> [snip preceding] > > >> > > > >> > You're not making fried rice. In fried rice the whole egg is first > > >> > fried like an omelet and then used in bits as a garnish, raw egg is > > >> > not blended into anything... in fact in Chinese fried rice only the > > >> > yolk is fried > > > Yeah, well... you're not Chinese. LOL > > But I am. And this is the first I've heard of using only the yolk in > > fried rice. Most people I know use the whole egg in fried rice, hot and > > sour soup, etc. including myself. And it can be stir-fried separately from > > the rice OR stir-fried with it, it varies according to who's making > > it. An aunt > > of mine does it the omelet way--cooking it into a thin pancake and then > > cooling it before julienning it for a garnish. Other aunts of mine simply > > scramble it with the rice so that it forms small chunks mixed in with > > everything else. Less elegant, perhaps, but it's faster and it tastes > > just as good. <snip> > Thanks, Ariane. I don't know that my recipe is "authentic", just that > mother was given it in Thailand and I've been enjoying it for over 30 years > and making it myself for over 20. I definitely use whole egg in fried rice > and in these dumplings. I also use whole eggs in fried rice -- once the rice is ready, I push it over and make a spot to quickly cook and cut the scrambled egg. Then I mix the chunks of egg back into the rice. It looks like the stuff I get at Chinese restaurants, so I must be doing something right... :-) -- J.J. in WA ~ mom, vid gamer, novice cook ~ "You still haven't explained why the pool is filled with elf blood." - Frylock, ATHF |
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