Jody's Astounding Asian Rice
One of my favorite ways to stretch my food dollar is to use leftovers. I like to call them "New-overs", because there is nothing left when I serve these! I don't like wasting food, and with the economy hitting us all, every penny in our pantry counts.
Here is a wonderful "New-over" recipe for some of your leftover rice. Try turning your rice into a brand new meal by adding some Asian flavors to it! No need to run to your favorite restaurant to satisfy your craving. 10 minutes of effort is all that this recipe takes!
2 Tbsp Vegetable Oil
1 Cup finely chopped green onion
3-4 cups left over cooked rice
2-4Tbsp Low Sodium Soy Sauce
1/2 can mixed vegetables, drained
2 beaten eggs
In a very large frying pan, heat the vegetable oil until it glistens. Add the chopped green onion and saute quickly, just until the onion starts to brown. Remove the onion and turn the heat down to medium low heat. Add the beaten eggs, stirring quickly to scramble and break apart. Add the leftover rice and green onion. Add the soy sauce, and stir for about 3 minutes heating the rice and evenly distributing the soy sauce. Some of the rice will remain white, so don't overdo the soy sauce, or you will end up with very salty rice.
Add the mixed veggies, and stir for about an extra two minutes in order to heat the veggies.
Your fried rice is done!
I like to chop up any leftover chicken or beef and add it for an additional layer of flavor. If you have some bamboo shoots and water chestnuts (found in the interntional section of your grocery store), throw those in as well before adding the rice. If you have regular soy sauce, add a Tablespoon at a time, and taste the rice before adding more.
Here's another tip: if you don't happen to have green onion, use 1/2 cup of white onion. The taste is just as good - just not as green. Thrown in some toasted sesame seeds (which I keep in the pantry), for a nutty flavor.
The more you make this super fast and easy dish, the more ideas you will get to make this "New-over" new every time!
There is no more perfect gift to give to those you love, than the gift of food. This holiday season, try sending a home-made gift basket to those relatives or friends that you haven't seen in some time. Maybe they'll even invite you over to enjoy it with them!
I sent some of my relatives a gift of prime steak, so I am including my favorite home made steak marinade in this blog. Once this steak is grilled or pan-seared and finished in the oven, you won't need any steak sauce before savoring this soft, succulent steak!
Jody's Steak Marinade
1 cup Low Sodium Soy Sauce
1 cup good red wine, preferably a Cabernet or Pinot Noir (but anything left over from the night before will work)
1/2 cup Olive Oil
1 Tsp Balsamic Vinegar (white vinegar will work too)
10 cloves minced garlic
1/2 onion chopped (if you have any left over from last night's salad, throw that in)
2 Tbsp Liquid Smoke
1 tsp dried thyme
Mix all of the ingredients together in a glass lasagna pan. (Metal will react with the ingredients, so only use glass or ceramic). Lay defrosted steaks on top of the marinade, then flip them over. Cover with plastic wrap and store in the refrigerator while the steaks marinade. After two hours, flip the steaks over, and continue marinating for another two hours. (You can marinate the steaks overnight, as well). Grill your steaks as you would and enjoy! The wine and vinegar in the marinade will tenderize the meat and the soy sauce and smoke will add all of the flavor you'll need to complement the steak.
Tip: I use liquid smoke in a lot of dishes. You can find liquid smoke in the aisle with the Worcestershire sauces. I highly recommend this when grilling, and when cooking indoors when you need to add a smokey flavor to your dish.
Herb R. recently wrote to ask if I had ever made tamales. Tamales happen to be one of my favorite foods of all time, having grown up on them when I lived in Peru. Tamales can be a meal all on their own, or as a complement to eggs for breakfast. You can eat tamales as an appetizer, before the main course, served with a little spicy salsa on the side. Tamales are extremely versatile, as you can see!
Tamales are square-shaped corn meal cakes that are prepared with a soft, grainy mixture, and then boiled solid in banana leaves. Picture a litte cake made of grits, with meat and other treats cooked inside, and that is a close description of a tamal.
Peruvian tamales have unique morsels in them, such as indigenous olives, ham and hard-boiled egg, and the grain is unique to the region. Just the memory of steaming leaves being pulled back to reveal the tamal cake makes my mouth water!
Nowadays, you can buy tamales frozen, in most any grocery store that has a section on international foods.
I have not made tamales, but would welcome anyone with a great recipe to send it to me at comments@thechefnextdoor.com. I will review and test the one I think readers would find useful, and post it after the holidays.
Herb - thank you for conjuring up some of my favorite memories of my childhood. I look forward to receiving some tips and posting them for all to enjoy!
Happy Thanksgiving! We have now come to one of my favorite aspects of cooking: leftovers. Or, as I like to call them New-overs.
So why are leftovers so special? One - I hate to waste food. Especially food that I have taken great care to prepare. Two - they still taste great the next day! Let me share with you one of my favorite recipes for leftover turkey.
Thanksgiving Turkey and Rice
No longer than two hours after serving the turkey, cut up the leftover pieces into cubes and put them into a plastic freezer bag, and into the fridge to use the next day.
1 freezer bag's worth of turkey, but at least 2 cups
1 1/2 cups rice, boiled
1 cup of cooked peas (if you have them, if not, cooked green beans or asparagus will do)
1 large onion chopped
1 clove garlic minced
1/2 red bell pepper chopped, or 1/2 cup jarred peppers (optional)
1 Tbsp flour
2 cups milk (if you have leftover table cream, throw that in as well)
Salt and Pepper to taste
Saute the onion, red pepper and garlic in a large pan, until very soft, but not brown about 8 minutes (If you prefer not to have the red pepper, or don't have any, just leave it out.) Add the Add the Tbsp flour and continue to cook for another minute. Add the milk, stirring with a whisk until very smooth. Add salt and pepper to taste. Add the turkey and peas or leftover veggies and mix it into the turkey mixture.
Serve over the hot rice.
Fast, easy, economical and delicious. Now, who doesn't like this new-over!
I have been asked to provide some guidance on cookware for singles. There is actually no such thing, because the size of the cookware doesn't vary - it's the amount of food that you decide to cook that can change. A single person can entertain and throw parties, and the cookware will remain the same.
So, the question is, what are the basic tools for cooking for one, on a day to day basis? Having been single most of my life, I can say that the list below is the absolute must:
1 large pot (4 quarts or larger) - if you want to boil a chicken, you need something large enough to fit it in. The same goes with boiling pasta.
1 medium covered pot - for cooking rice, potatoes, veggies
1 small covered pot - if you're making rice in the medium pot, and want veggies too, you need something to cook them in.
1 large frying pan - Say you want two fried eggs instead of one. Or two hamburgers, or several pieces of French toast or bacon. You don't want to dirty two frying pans.
1 small frying pan - for those days when you want just one egg, or one grilled cheese sandwich.
2 cookie sheets - have you ever tried to make one recipe of cookies with just one cookie sheet?
A tip on gadgets: most cooking amateurs (lovers of cooking) love cooking gadgets. By a gadget, I mean, any implement that has one unique use, that can be replaced with a multi-use implement. A potato slicer is a gadget, for example, as a knife can slice a potato and do other things as well.
I don't advocate the use of gadgets, unless they provide a visual enhancement to a piece, like a melon baller. I like cooking the old fashioned way. However, there is an exception: a meat thermometer.
This item is a must in every kitchen, especially for those who fall into the Can't Boil Water category.
1) A meat thermometer ensures that the meat/poultry/fish is cooked to a temperature that is safe to eat. Eating undercooked meat can be risky.
2) There is no better way to judge whether a turkey is done, than through a meat thermometer. I remember one time when my sister accidentally put the turkey in the oven on an upper rack, and the little button popped out after just a few hours.
3) You should never cut a steak to see if it is done. This lets out all of the juices, and you end up with a dry, mangled piece of meat. Use a meat thermometer instead. Enjoy that special treat you paid top dollar for, as it was meant to be enjoyed!
There are plenty of inexpensive meat thermometers on the market. Invest in one. You'll be glad you did!