Search

Random Recipe

Chicken Chow Mein

Chicken Chow Mein

“Chow mein, in English, means fried noodles, whereas lo mein translates to stirred or tossed noodles. So essentially, it's the way the noodles are prepared that makes them different, as the noodles in both dishes are made from wheat flour and eggs, which is similar to the ingredients of Italian pasta.” - Well that works for us as we used Gluten free Spaghetti!!!!

Also Chicken Breasts are 69p for 2 at Home Bargains at the moment…..

Marinade Ingredients:-

2 Chicken Breasts, cut into strips
2 Tsp of Soy Sauce (Gluten free for us)
2 Tsp Shaoxing Wine
1 Tsp of Sesame Oil
½ Tsp of Ground White Pepper
½ Tsp of Salt

Noodle Ingredients:-

Noodles or in our case Gluten free Spaghetti
1 Tbsp of Sesame Oil

Sauce Ingredients:-

2 Cloves of Garlic, minced
50g of Mangetout, finely sliced
4 Tsp of Soy Sauce (Gluten free here)
1 Tbsp Shaoxing Wine
½ Tsp of White Pepper
1 Tsp Castor Sugar
2 Spring Onions, finely sliced
½ a Red Pepper, finely sliced
A handful of Bean Sprouts
1 Tsp of Chinese Five Spice
Oil to Fry
Salt & Pepper to season


Method:-

(1) Combine the Chicken with the marinade and leave for a least 20 minutes.
(2) Heat a Wok or large frying pan and add the Oil.
(3) Cook the Chicken for 2 minutes over a high heat and then transfer to a plate.
(4) Add a little more Oil then add the Shallots, Garlic, Mangetout and Peppers.
(5) Boil the Noodles ( Gluten free Spaghetti!!!! - If you’re that way inclined!) until al détente, rinse in cold water and add the Sesame Oil. Set aside.
(6) To the Wok / frying pan add the Soy Sauce,  Shaoxing Wine, Pepper and Sugar.
(7) Return the Chicken to the Wog / frying pan and stir everything together.
(8) Add the Spring Onions and Bean Sprouts.
(9) Simmer until everything is heated through.
(10) Stir in the Noodles ( Spaghetti ) and add a drizzle of Sesame Oil so the Noodles don’t stick together.

This dish doesn’t need anything else, no garnish, no sides. It’s a bit of a ‘Ronseal’ gig. Enjoy…..

 

On Facebook

Chicken  Chhattisgarh

Just like the recipe the name is made up. I Googled some random India state and hoped for the best!

We had nearly a whole plate of Urad Dah left from Thursday and and half a roasted Chicken left in the fridge from Wednesday. Nothing goes to waste here unless it has taken on a second life. So made up Curry, here we go…

I’ll not even try to list a recipe for this. But basically we blitzed the cooked Urad Dah and added a tin of chopped Tomatoes the make the foundation of the sauce. With the usual fried Onion and spices this made a really robust Curry dish. Once the Curry had simmered and thickened for 45 minutes Sue added the roughly portioned Chicken so that it didn’t deconstruct!

I can at least give our Onion Bhaji recipe:-

Ingredients:-

2 Onion roughly sliced
100g Gram flour
½ tsp Baking Powder
½ tsp Chilli powder
½ tsp Turmeric
Water
Salt
Oil to fry

Method:-

(1) In a bowl mix the dry ingredients except the Onion with enough water to make a very sticky batter.
(2) Preheat your deep fat fryer to 180c.
(3) Add the sliced Onions and stir so that they are well coated.
(4) With a couple of spoons form rough balls and drop them individually into the hot oil. Shake the basket as they do tend to stick.
(5) Once the Bhajis are golden drown and floating remove and drain on kitchen paper.
(6) When your main disk is ready redunk them quickly to crisp up the protruding Onion.

A few Popadums a sprinkle of Coriander and a mound of home made Onion Bhajis and we slid quietly into a food coma! To be fair this was our only meal yesterday and it was mostly Rice bulking the plates up. Do I sound like I’m making excuses? Perhaps! 

 

Social Links

Translate

English French German Italian Portuguese Russian Spanish