Stir-Fried Yau Mak with Garlic
Chinese, Dinner, Lunch, Vegetable November 28th, 2006
I like vegetables. I think I am okay with all types of vegetables except the obvious bitter ones eg. bitter gourd. I know it is good for health but I usually give it a pass. Not with green leafy vegetables though.
There are many varieties of lettuce around and most of them can be eaten raw or cooked. If you intend to stir-fry the lettuce, make sure that your wok is really heated up to very high temperature (smoking) so as to minimise cooking time and to prevent too much water oozing out from the leaves. The idea is not to have the vegetables swimming in a pool of gravy. You also lose a lot of essential vitamins and minerals by prolonged cooking of the vegetables. Here, I use a type of lettuce known as “Yau Mak” which is a slightly smaller version of the romaine lettuce. I should have taken a photo of it before the leaves were separated and rinsed.
This is my recipe for Stir-Fried Yau Mak with Garlic
Ingredients
- 2 pieces yau mak (or to your desired amount but bear in mind that they will shrivel and reduce in size as you cook, separate leaves and rinse well. Drain in colander to remove excess water)
- at least 5 cloves of garlic (chopped)
- 4 cloves of shallots (sliced thinly)
- 3 tablespoons of palm oil
Seasoning
- 1 1/2 tablespoons of oyster sauce
Method
Heat up oil in wok and fry shallots till golden brown. Remove fried shallots aside.
Add garlic into remaining oil and stir fry for about 10 seconds followed by yau mak. Give it two or three stirs and add oyster sauce. Stir till leaves are evenly coated with sauce. I like the leaves crunchy, so I do not usually stir fry them for more than 1 minute.
Sprinkle fried shallots prior to serving.
Sauteed Chicken Supreme with Dried Chillies
Chicken, Chinese, Dinner, Lunch November 27th, 2006
I can’t believe that this is my 50th post! And I am truly encouraged that some have left kind words of encouragement to me for the recipes here. You can’t imagine how much I beam from ear to ear when I read that some of my recipes have been tried and tested to satisfaction. It’s very much like how a chef will feel when the food that has been cooked is given the thumbs up or finished cleaned on the plate.
Anyway, for the 50th post, I would like to highlight a recipe which my wife shared with me (and cooked for me). She does cook…and she cooks well too. Only thing is that I have persuaded her to allow me to use the kitchen and enjoy my hobby of cooking instead.
This dish is tasty as it is hot and spicy whilst at the same time, has a hint of sourness to it (due to the vinegar / lime used). It is also very fragrant due to the quite liberal use of chinese cooking wine. It is a variant of Kung Po Chicken, I believe but tastes slightly different. Adjust the taste according to your preference. That very day when she cooked this dish, we had some cashew nuts at home and she decided to throw some in hence what you see in the picture. It is not in the recipe but you can add it in for extra bite!
This is my wife’s recipe for Sauteed Chicken Supreme with Dried Chillies
Ingredients
- 500 grammes of chicken supreme (the most tender part of chicken breast which is longish in shape, slice it to cubes / thick diagonal slices)
- 20 dried chillis (pre-soaked for 30 minutes, seeded and cut into halves)
- 5 cloves garlic (chopped)
- 4 tablespoons of cooking oil (preferably palm oil)
Marinade
- 1 tablespoon chinese cooking wine
- 1 tablespoon dark soya sauce
- 2 tablespoon corn flour
Seasoning
- 2 tablespoon chinese cooking wine
- 3 tablespoons of sugar
- 1 teaspoon of sesame oil
- 1 tablespoon white vinegar (or squeeze approximately 10 limes or more for juice)
- 1 teaspoon of cornflour
- 1/2 tablespoon of light soya sauce
- 1 tablespoon of water
Method
Pound meat slightly with blunt side of knife or tenderiser. Marinade for 30 minutes.
Heat oil in wok, fry the dried chilli for 30 seconds and then add the garlic. Continue to stir-fry till garlic begin to brown. Add chicken and fry till cooked (if you wish to add cashew nuts, add them now). Then add seasoning, stir well until evenly distributed and gravy dries up.
Serve hot with steamed white rice.
Steamed Chicken with Carrots, Wood-Ear Fungus, Dried Lilybuds and Mushrooms
Chicken, Chinese, Dinner, Lunch, Vegetable November 23rd, 2006
Remember I used to have a recipe called Mixed Vegetables - Cabbage, Carrots, Wood-Ear Fungus, Dried Lily Buds and Mushrooms? Well, I am going to modify that recipe a bit instead. Using most of the same ingredients, these will be steamed together with chicken to make a nice healthy dish.
In this dish, the chicken is sweet-tasting and has a hint of chinese cooking wine as it was marinated prior to steaming. The meat will usually be tender when cooked as whole chicken leg (drumstick and thigh meat) is used and the wine further tenderises the meat. This is in contrast with the crispness of the wood-ear fungus, sweetness of the carrots and lily buds and smoky taste of the mushrooms. Truly, it comes with a riot of taste and goes well with steamed white rice.
Actually, as emphasised in most of my recipes, you don’t actually have to follow the ingredients in full especially if you have difficulty finding them at the place you live. Just use a bit of creativity and substitute them with different ingredients. If you are not sure, feel free to ask me at the comment section below.
This is my recipe for Steamed Chicken with Carrots, Wood-Ear Fungus, Dried Lilybuds and Mushrooms.
Ingredients
- 2 whole chicken legs (chopped into bite pieces)
- 1 small sized carrot (sliced)
- 50 to 100 grammes of wood-ear fungus (pre-soaked till soft)
- 5 dried chinese mushrooms (pre-soaked till soft) or enoki, oyster or button mushrooms
- 50 grammes of dried lily buds (pre-soaked till soft and knotted in the middle)
- 1 whole bulb of garlic (chopped)
- 1 tablespoon of cooking oil (preferably palm oil)
Marinade for chicken
- 1 tablespoon of oyster sauce
- 2 teaspoons of light soya sauce
- A couple of dashes of white pepper powder
- 1 tablespoon of chinese cooking wine
- 1 tablespoon of corn flour
Seasoning
- 1 tablespoon of oyster sauce
- Salt to taste
Method
Marinade the chicken for about an hour.
Heat oil in wok, followed by garlic and chinese mushrooms. Fry till garlic begins to brown. Add carrots, wood-ear fungus and lily buds. Stir-fry for 2 minutes. Remove and set aside.
Place chicken on a suitable plate for steaming (I use a stainless steel plate as seen in the picture above). Place the pre-stirfried vegetables on top of the chicken. Steam in wok / steamer for at least 20 minutes or until chicken is thoroughly cooked.
There is a famous soup called ABC Soup which is essentially a combination of cubed potatoes, carrots, tomatoes and onions cooked in meat stock (usually pork or chicken). After my posting on Hot and Sour Szechuan Vegetable Soup recently, Tummythoz, girlgirl and tekko informed me that they add carrots and even corn into the soup. That was new to me.
So, when I went home to my mum’s place last night, I was most surprised to see a bowl of Szechuan Vegetable Soup which has carrots, onions and potatoes in it! It is indeed a marriage of the Hot and Spicy Szechuan Vegetable Soup with the famed ABC Soup! And true enough, it has the hot and sourness of the szechuan vegetables and the sweetness of the ABC soup. I shall call it the A B C D Soup then!
It is another one of those simple-to-cook yet appetising and nutritious soup which is great on a cold weathered day!
This is the recipe for A B C D Soup.
Ingredients
- 200 to 300 grammes of meat (pork ribs or suitable cuts or chicken parts)
- 2 medium sized potatoes (washed, skin removed and cubed in big chunks)
- 1 carrot (cut in big pieces)
- 2 large tomatoes (quartered)
- 2 large onions (quartered)
- 1 piece szechuan vegetable (washed and sliced)
- 2 bowls of water (approximately 800 ml to 1 litre)
Method
Bring water to boil. Add meat and let water reboil. Remove layer of scum from surface of water.
Add the rest of the ingredients, bring to boil again for 5 minutes and then lower heat to simmer for at least 1 hour or longer.
You don’t really need to add any seasoning to this soup as the various ingredients will impart its taste.



