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好心人

Ho Sim Lang

braised pork trotters

Ramen with Chasu and Egg

August 14, 2017 by Ho Lang

Ramen with Chasu and Egg

There is perhaps nothing more satisfying than making your own Japanese Ramen at home in under 2 hours. Yes. No kidding. It’s not for the weak-willed. But if you are not weak-willed you may try. If you read this statement and say you have decided not to try to cook this and you are thinking of cooking instant noodles instead? Well, nuff said, that’s being weak-willed.

So I decided that I would do this recipe slightly different from my usual style of writing. I will make this a narrative and hopefully, you can see this as a refreshing change to my usual style.

I started by boiling a huge ass pot of broth using pork ribs, dried shitake mushrooms and dried Japanese kelp (aka seaweed). I didn’t really measure, but it was about 2 litres of water in that pot. And basically, that soup stock will form the base for my Japanese Ramen.

In another pot, with the heat turned up, sear the pork belly on all sides until almost charred. No oil needed. Just the fats from the pork belly will be sufficed. Once the pork belly starts to brown, add stock from the big ass pot and add 3 tablespoons of Kikkoman soya sauce, 3 tablespoons of Japanese rice vinegar and a tablespoon of raw sugar, 1 inch of ginger smashed, 4-5 pieces of garlic, leeks or scallions. Boil and boil and boil over a constant fire and make sure it keeps on bubbling.

Traditional Japanese cooking usually takes great amounts of time. They usually slow cook the pork bones for at least 20 hours before the pork bone soup base is ready. And here I am trying to squeeze the process in under 2 hours so that I could feed my family. Actually, you can, but all that effort is spent watching the precious stock evaporate right in front of your eyes.

You got to watch the broth disappear and the heat must be furious. Otherwise, you wouldn’t be able to extract the essence of the pork bones. So the balance and the in-between consistency is important.

So while that was happening, I was cooking the Chasu. The heat has to be constant and furious and you got to keep on ladling the pork bone broth into your pot of soya sauce Chasu. This is to ensure that the Chasu doesn’t burn and that you will have a Japanese Chasu that is both tender and delicious.

In a third pot, cook the eggs. 6 minutes, high heat and then drop them into a bowl of ice cold water to stop them from cooking further. Use a countdown timer. Which I did, but my phone was in silent mode. LOL. And I overshot the cooking time, and the egg yolk basically got cooked. So stuff like that actually happen in the home kitchen, so instead of throwing it away, I dipped the eggs in Kikkoman marinate for about 15 minutes. Just 2 tablespoons of Kikkoman soya sauce would be good enough marinate for 3 eggs.

For the ramen, I use angel hair pasta. There was no way I could use buckwheat flour and eggs to make my own Japanese Ramen. It was impossible to be able to do it in under 2 hours. So I cooked the angel hair pasta for about 5 minutes or until they are soft enough to eat and I serve immediately with the leftover pork bone broth, the leftover Chasu sauce. Placed the cooked Japanese Chasu and the eggs and placed the bean sprouts, thinly sliced scallions and the marinated egg.

All that effort to just prepare 2 bowls of Japanese Ramen for my Wife and me. Was it worth it? Of course, it was. But you got to know exactly what it is that you need to achieve in that 2 hours in order to be successful. I wish you all the best.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Recipes Tagged: angel hair pasta, braised pork trotters, easy to cook pasta recipes, Japanese Chasu, Japanese Ramen, Kikkoman Soya Sauce, pasta recipes, soft runny eggs

Braised Pork Trotters

May 7, 2015 by Ho Lang

image

Braised Pork Trotters

My favourite pork trotters in soya sauce. Finally found a recipe that I think works, but decided to cook it the way that I like to. Sorry the photo doesn’t do the dish justice. But I wanted to show that I took a short cut when preparing this dish.

In a nutshell, everything was thrown into the pot without marination. Reason is because this is a braised dish. Braising means you got to cook it for a reasonably amount of time and that means load everything essential into the pot and let the heat melt the gelatinous fat and bond everyone together.

In the end, it was a very nicely cooked pork trotters. Done the Ho Sim Lang way. It’s so easily done, anyone can do it also.

Recipe

Ingredients

1 whole foreleg of Pork (i’m sure you know I meant Pig)
5-6 tbsp Dark Soya Sauce (more if you like)
2 tbsp of Light Soya Sauce
2 tbsp of Oyster Sauce
5cm length of Cinnamon Stick
2 pcs Star Anise
5 pcs Cloves
2 tbsp Castor Sugar
2 tbsp Corn Flour
5 pcs of Dried Shitake Mushrooms
Half a bowl of Hakka Rice Wine
Water (enough to cover the meats)

Method

1. Place the foreleg into the pot. Drop the cinnamon stick, star anise and cloves in. Add the dark soya sauce, light soya sauce, oyster sauce and rice wine in. Add in hot boiling water and make sure the water cover the meats. Boil until water is bubbling. Do a taste test for saltiness. Meanwhile soak the Shitake mushrooms in hot water. Once soaked, cut off the stems and slice and continue soaking.

2. This is the part that is tricky. You want to taste the correct taste before you let the heat take over. If it is not salty enough, add more dark soya sauce. If it is not sweet enough add more castor sugar. The reason why this is crucial is because you are allowing the saltiness of the broth to braise the meats. So it has to be reasonably salty but not too salty. After your taste test is done, mix in the corn flour (mix with some water first) mixture. Add the soaked mushrooms.

3. Cover the lid. Turn the heat to low and go read a book. After about one hour and thirty minutes. It should be nicely done.

Bon Appetit!

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Braised Pork Trotters

Posted in: Asian, braised, Food, Ingredient, Local, Pork, Recipes Tagged: braised pork trotters, pig trotters, Pork, pork trotters, soya sauce

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