Yam potato in Japanese style, cauliflower and pork stir fry with salt and black pepper sauce (Dinner 1 Oct)
I always try to use more than 10 different kinds of veggies with small portions of meat every day especially at dinner that Mr. Husband joins.
By taking small portions of meat with lots of veggie ingredients, we can take protein more efficiently compare to taking veggies solely.
This menu was a successful example.
Menu
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Cauliflower and pork stir fry with salt and black pepper sauce: Ingredients
- Cauliflower 100g
- 1/2 pieces of carrot
- 70-80g pork belly
- 5-6 stems of aspragus
- 1 teaspoon of grated ginger
- 1 tablespoon of sake
- 2/3 teaspoon of black pepper
- 1 tablespoon of sesame oil
- 1.5 teaspoon of chinese chicken stock (if not, 1/4 cube of chicken stock)
- 1 teaspoon of salt
- 2 teaspoons of cornflour
- 150cc of cold water
Directions
1. Slice pork belly as thin as possible, then put into a bowl. Season with sake, ginger and pinches of salt
2. Cut cauliflower into small bite sized. Slice carrot thinly. Peel the surface of stems of aspragus and remove the bottom. Then cut aspragus into three portions lengthwise
3. Bring water into boil in a pan, add 1 tablespoon of vegetable oil and cook all veggies for 3-4 mins until they get half done. Meanwhile, heat up a large frying pan over medium temperature and fry the pork intil they get half done
4. Take out veggies from the pan and put into the frying pan. Combine veggies and pork and stir fry them over medium temperature for 2 mins5. Pour the sauce and cook for 1 min to make it thick and dress it with all ingredients.
Yam potato in Japanese style
This is called Nishime and a traditional recipe of root veggies
Ingredients
- 3-4 Yam potatoes
- 1 carrot
- 1/2 of Konjaku pack (about 80g)
- 100g chicken thigh
<seasoning>
- 1 tablespoon of sesame oil
- 1 teaspoon of sugar
- 100cc of dashi (japanese fish stock)
- 2 tablespoons of mirin
- 2 tablespoons of soy sauce
- 1/2 teaspoon of salt
Directions
1. Boil konjaku for 2 mins to remove out the smell of lime. Take out from the water and allow it cool
2. Tear konjaku into small bite sized pieces with hands. Cut all other veggies into large bite sized. You can cut konjaku with a knife but using hands allows the seasoning get into the fiber of konjaku much quicker than using a knife3. Heat up a thick large deep pan over medium temperature. Grease the pan with sesame oil and fry all ingredients for 4-5 mins with sugar. Add mirin in the end
4. Add dashi, soy sauce and salt
5. Shimmer gently for 10-12 mins until veggies get tender. In case using a pressur pan, cover the lid and bring it into boil then turn the heat over small temperature. Leave it for 3 mins and turn off the heat. Leave the pan until the lid is ready to open
6. Add some green veggies (beans or sugar snaps) to boil. Serve in a small dish with some depth.
Important Point
Japanese cuisine often combines soy sauce seasoning with sugar or mirin sauce to deepen the taste. In this salty-sweet combination sugar must be added first, and soy sauce second. If the sequence is reversed, the dish just tases of soy sauce.This is because sugar molecules are much larger than salt molecules. If ingredients are seasoned with sugar first there remains space to absorb salt in the cells. In the opposite order, salt is absorbed densely, leaving no space for sugar. (Please refer to the illustration of this site: http://www.tsujicho.com/oishii/recipe/j_food/ichinensei/sashisuseso.html)
Time to prepare: 40 mins
Total cost: 4.9 pounds (1.2 for yam poptatoes, 1.5 for chicken thigh, 0.7 for cauliflower, 1.5 for the all other veggies and meat)
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