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好心人

Ho Sim Lang

chilli padi

Thai Style Stir Fry Tang Orh with Minced Pork

January 21, 2017 by Ho Lang

Thai Style Stir Fry Tang Orh with Minced Pork

My wife loves Tang Orh and I love cooking Tang Orh, that’s why we love each other so much. We share a symbiotic relationship and this is one of the ways I show love for her. Words mean only so much, I very much also like to express my affections towards her in cooking the foods that she likes. It makes our relationship multi-faceted and interesting.

She loves Tang Orh cooked in a soupy style, like in a steam boat. In fact, that’s one of the better ways to eat Tang Orh, in a soupy broth. This Thai style stir fry is supposed to be mildly dry with little sauce, but I decided to add a little more “soup” to enhance the flavour of the Tang Orh, since in my opinion the Tang Orh is the star ingredient here.

It’s very easy to cook, and Tang Orh generally cooks within minutes. It’s not a hardy vegetable so be sure to cook it quickly and serve as the last dish. The flavour of the minced pork makes it delicious. I have also added generous amounts of minced garlic and chilli padi. Not for the faint hearted, this dish is fiery hot.

Recipe

Ingredients

5 pcs Garlic (finely chop the garlic pieces)
5 pcs Chilli Padi (finely chopped)
500 grams Tang Orh (also known as garland chrysethemuem)
400 grams Minced Pork (make sure it is fatty minced pork, it adds to the flavour)
2 tablespoons Oyster Sauce
1 tablespoon Thai Fish Sauce
2 tablespoons Olive Oil

Method
1. Minced the garlic and chilli padi together and mix it together into a paste.

2. Heat oil in a frying pan and then fry the garlic chilli paste until fragrant. Add the minced pork and stir fry till pork is relatively cooked. To tell the difference is when the colour changes to slightly white.

3. Add the oyster and fish sauce with a little water. Then throw all the Tang Orh into the pan and cover the lid. Let the heat wilt the vegetable for about two minutes.

4. The water from the vegetables will form part of the soup. That’s it. Easy. Serve with steamed rice.

Bon Appetit!

Tang Orh with Minced Pork

Garlic and Chilli Padi mixed into paste

Soupy style Tang Orh with Minced Pork

Posted in: Recipes Tagged: chilli padi, fish sauce, Garland Chrysethemuem, spicy minced pork, Tang Orh, thai style cuisine

Spicy Szechuan Vegetables with Minced and Pork Belly

November 30, 2014 by Ho Lang

image

Spicy Szechuan Vegetables with Minced and Pork Belly

This is a childhood classic for me. I remember the nanny cooking this for lunch on a few occasions, although I can’t really remember the details of what she cooked though, I mean who can? It’s been so many years. Alright, I know I said I had a photographic memory before, but this is different. 

So when she told me that it was from Szechuan province, from a far away place and that it traveled very far to get to our home. It was a little unbelievable at first. She said that everyone from that place simply loves and adore the vegetable, and that they would eat it day and night. I thought that they must be extremely proud and sad at the same time eating it. I mean I would be proud knowing that the world was eating my “vegetable”, but yet at the same time, I would be sad because everyone in the world would think that it was all that we ate all day. There was probably nothing much else to eat. Of course I am sure they do eat other vegetables but as a child, we thought in absolutes.

Years past and the dish has become commonplace in many cai fan 菜饭 places. Some places do it well while others just cannot make it. Anyway, wifey wanted to eat this dish and since we had the szechuan vegetable in the fridge, I thought that it was also good time to cook it.

My rendition of the classic dish is to add pork belly and minced pork with some chilli padi and a dash of dark soy sauce. I bought my szechuan vegetable from the wet market, which basically meant that it was likely to be spicy and very high in salt content. There are different types of szechuan vegetable that are being sold in the supermarkets and these are already shredded nicely for the cook and they are not so salty. They come in a variety of spicy and non-spicy which really helps if you want to make a non-spicy version.

Recipe

Ingredients

half a dollop of Szechuan Vegetable – purchased from the wet market, high in salt content and spicy
100 grams of Pork Belly – following from the recipe for preparing boiled pork belly
150-160 grams of Minced Pork
a tbsp of Dark Soy Sauce
4-5 pcs of Garlic
4 pcs of Chilli Padi

 

Method

1. Soak the szechuan vegetables in a bowl of hot water. I realised that it is better to slice them thinly first before soaking. This would help a lot. Recommended to soak at least 30 minutes. While that is soaking, mince the garlic and heat up the oil in the wok. Fry until fragrant.

2. Add in pork belly and fry, moderate the heat to a medium. Then add the minced pork and fry until the colour just change which suggests that it is semi-cooked. Then add in the shredded szechuan vegetable along with the shredded chilli padi. Fry the dish until it is more or less cooked, then add a dash of the dark soy sauce and continue stirring. The end result should look a little bit like the picture below.

Bon Appetit!!

 

Ho Sim Lang

 

Posted in: Asian, Food, Local, Pork, Recipes, Vegetables Tagged: chilli padi, garlic, minced pork, pork belly, Singapore, szechuan, szechuan vegetables

Anchovy Pasta (olive oil)

August 11, 2014 by Ho Lang

image

Anchovy Pasta (olive oil)

This is a recipe that I learnt from my friend Andrew Lum. Simple, exotic and delicious. I finished all 170 grams of the spaghetti and my tummy is still rumbling. I think I must be very hungry, or the pasta is really yummy. I suspect it is the latter. Simple to prepare and great for gatherings, you can prepare this pasta in less than 15 minutes. Of course, you need to know what you are doing in order to meet the 15 minute timing. But no worries, can one.

The only problem I find with this particular recipe is the availability of the Anchovy. I use canned Anchovy from Cold Storage, and it seems that NTUC, even Finest, don’t really sell the preserved fish. They sell all kinds of Sardines, Tuna, but somehow I can’t seem to find the Anchovy. Ok, that said, maybe I didn’t try hard enough. Maybe I should also ask someone at the store? I admit that I am the if-I-can’t-find-it-at-the-store-it-is-likely-to-be-sold-out type of shopper. Either that or I don’t bother to ask. Okay, I am lazy.

Recipe

Ingredients

 

250 grams Barilla Spaghetti *cooks in 5 minutes – 2 servings*

1 can Anchovy Fillets in Extra Virgin Olive Oil (50 grams) *Waitrose brand from Cold Storage*

1 Egg *raw*

5 Chilli Padi *reduced the chillis if you can’t take the heat*

1 Punnet Cherry Tomatoes *sliced*

1 Box Sweet Basil leaves

Parmesan Cheese

 

Method

1. Boil a pot of water. Add oil and sea salt. How much depends on yourself. Add pasta in the pot once the water is boiling. Note the number of minutes that is needed to cook the pasta to al dente, this is usually indicated on the packaging of the Barilla Pasta box. If you want it a little softer, then you cook it a minute of two longer.

2. For some folks, they sometimes complain that the pasta noodles have an odd smell. I don’t have that problem. Maybe it might be a case of the quality of pasta? Who knows.

3. Once pasta is cooked, drain the pasta and immediately add the raw egg, chilli padi and anchovies (mashed). Mix thoroughly, and allow the egg to coat the hot pasta. This will also partly cook the egg. The egg acts like a sauce in a way. Add sliced cherry tomatoes and sweet basil and give it a good mix.

4. Serve with grated Parmesan Cheese.

Bon Appetit!

Posted in: Asian, Food, Noodles, Pasta, Recipes Tagged: anchovies, barilla, cherry tomatoes, chilli padi, olive oil, spaghetti, sweet basil

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