Showing posts with label Braised. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Braised. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Pork Meatball

猪肉丸



These bouncy and juicy pork meatballs can be added to soups or congee.

Ingredients:

500g minced pork

1 teaspoon salt

Half tsp soy sauce

Half tsp sugar

Dashes white pepper

Half egg (about 26g)

Half tsp water

Shredded dried codfish (optional)

Method:

1. Put all ingredients in a stand mixer and use mixer with k paddle attachment to mix until the mixture is pasty. Lift the meat mixture up and slam it against the mixing bowl. Repeat this slamming a few times. 



2. Use hand to shape the balls, then poach them in water until the meatballs are just cooked.




3.  The water can be used to cook pork porridge.

Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Braised Pork Belly

 扣肉包


Adapted this recipe by Chef Yeung Koon Yat.

Ingredients (serves 4 pax)

600g pork belly

1 bunch of spring onions

1 knob ginger, peeled and smashed

1 small piece of tangerine, about 2 cm

5 tbsp light soy sauce

1 tbsp dark soy sauce

3 tbsp Chinese rice wine (I used Shaoxing wine)

45g rock sugar

400ml water

1 tsp rice vinegar

1/4 tsp fish sauce


Method:

1. Blanch pork belly in boiling water to remove surface scums, or sear the pork belly (all sides) on high heat using a cast iron pan.

2. Place ginger, spring onion and tangerine peel in a pot. Place pork belly (skin side down), add soy sauce, rice wine and rock sugar, and cover the pork with water. Bring to boil, then lower heat and simmer for 1 hour or until pork is tender. Flip the pork belly at halfway mark.



3. Remove pork belly from pot and set aside. 

4. Add rice vinegar and fish sauce to the pot. To thicken the sauce, continue to cook it and then stir in corn flour slurry. Note: The leftover sauce can be kept in fridge and use as seasoning for stir fried dishes.

5. Slice the pork belly and serve with vegetables (e.g. kai lan) or lotus leaf bun. Refer to my post here on how to make lotus leaf bun.



Sunday, June 25, 2023

Braised Pork On Rice Lu Rou Fan (Braised Pork Rice Bowl)

滷肉饭



Ingredients (serves 4)

600g pork belly (with skin)

1 tablespoon sake (optional)

55g small onions (sliced thinly to make fried shallots)

3 small onions (diced)

2 garlic cloves (diced)

2 eggs (or a few quail eggs) - optional

1 tablespoon brown sugar (or rock sugar)

400ml water


Seasoning

2 tablespoon dark soy sauce

2  tablespoon light soy sauce

1 teaspoon five spice powder

Dashes of white pepper

1 cinnamon stick

1 star anise


Optional (to thicken the sauce during simmering)

A few pieces of pork skin

A few slices of ginger

A few sprigs of spring onion

1 tablespoon sake


1. Blanch pork belly in a wok/pot of boiling water. Once cooled sufficiently, cut into strips of 1cm.

2. Clean the pork skin and pluck off hair. Boil the pork skin with the spring onions, ginger slices and sake. Then simmer for 15minutes. Remove from liquid and let it cool down. Once cooled, use blender to grind the pork skin into smaller pieces.

3. Hard boil the eggs (or quail eggs, if using). Once cooled, de-shell and cut eggs into half. 

4. Put sufficient oil in wok and fry shallots under low heat until golden and crispy. Remove remaining oil from the wok. Set aside the crispy shallots.

5. Heat up wok to high/smoking. Add the pork and stir fry until the liquid from the pork has evaporated. Add sake over the pork and continue to stir fry until the alcohol has evaporated and pork edges are golden brown. Turn the heat down to medium.

6. Add diced onions and stir fry until translucent and fragrant. Add the diced garlic cloves and stir fry until fragrant.

7. Add sugar to the pork and stir fry for 1 minute.

8. Add dark and light soy sauce to the pork from the side of the wok, then stir fry to mix. 

9. Add water to the pork, followed by five spice powder, white pepper, cinnamon stick, star anise and fried shallot crisps. Stir to mix thoroughly. Turn the heat down to low and simmer for 45minutes or until pork is tender. Skim off the oil/pork fat that is released during simmering. Stir ocassionally to precent sticking. Add the pork skin (from step 2) and stir to mix in thoroughly. Simmer for another 15minutes and stir ocassionally to prevent sticking.

10. Wash the leafy greens and blanches them. 

11. Serve the pork with rice, vegetables and eggs.



Monday, June 19, 2023

Ikameshi (Squid Stuffed with Glutinous Rice)

 乌贼饭


Ikameshi is a dish we tried in one of our trips to Japan. So, when we caught a lot of squids from our offshore fishing trip recently, I tried to cook ikameshi. This is my adaptation of stuffed squid (sotong) recipes from CookismCooking with Dog and Cooking With Mama Betsy

Ingredients

6 medium squids (sotong) around 600g

100g Japanese glutinous rice, Mochigome (substitute: Japanese short grain rice)

500ml water

2 tablespoon Japanese soy sauce

1 tablespoon sugar

1 tablespoon sake (substitute: shao xing wine)

satay sticks (cut into two) or toothpicks


Method

1. Rinse the glutinous rice until the water runs clear. Soak the rice for at least 2 hours and drain.

2. Clean and remove the insides of the squids using a spoon. Dab the squids dry. Cut up the squid heads (beak and eyes removed) into small pieces and set aside.

3. Fill each squid belly with glutinous rice and the pieces of squid head until 60% full. Gently shake the squid so that the rice can fill the bottom of the squid. Then use satay stick or toothpick to close up the squid.

4. Prepare the braising liquid: put water, soy sauce, sugar and sake into a pot. Add the squids and bring to boil over medium heat. Once boiling, skim off the foam and scum. Then, lower the heat to low-medium and cover with an otoshibuta (drop lid) to limit evaporation. Boil for 40minutes. At the 20th minute mark, flip the squids. After 30minutes, remove the squids from the pot. Boil the sauce to reduce it.

5. Once the squids have cooled down a little, slice the squids to bite size. Drizzle with the sauce and serve warm.