Sunday, 22 April 2012

Sichuan hot pot is the best choice

Sichuan hot pot performance Chinese cooking inclusive. The word "pot" is a cooker. The performance of the harmony of the road of the Chinese diet contains. Soup from raw materials, using cooking techniques with the, with the divergent, differences in the sum, so that meat and prime, raw and cooked, spicy and sweet, tender and crisp cotton rotten, fragrance and mellow wonderful combined. Especially in the folk customs, showing scenes and psychological feelings of school harmony and dripping Earned compatibility, to create a "concentric with the poly to share the fun culture. It has large popularity.



  • 1/4 cupfermented black beans
  • 1/3 cupshaoxing wine (substitute ( medium dry sherry)
  • 3 inchesfresh ginger, unpeeled
  • 1/4 cupdried hot red chili pepper (Sichuanese preferred)
  • 1/2 cuppeanut oil (substitute ( vegetable oil, any high smoke point oil)
  • 2/3 cupdripping (original recipe (beef or lard)
  • 1/2 cupszechuan hot bean sauce
  • 3 quartsbeef stock
  • 1 tablespoon rock sugar
  • 1/3 cupsichuanese fermented glutinous rice wine (optional)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt (really, to taste)
  • 1 teaspoonszechwan pepper, whole
  •   Practices:


    Directions:


    1. Make a paste out of the black beans and 1 Tbsp Shaoxing rice wine, using either a mortar and pestle or a food processor.
    2. Wash the ginger and cut it into slices about the thickness of a coin.
    3. Using a scissors, snip the chiles into 1 inch sections and remove the seeds.
    4. Heat 3 tbs of the oil in a wok over a medium flame so it's hot but not smoking.
    5. Stir fry the chiles to flavor the oil; you want the oil to sizzle around the chiles, making them crisp and fragrant, but NOT burning; using a slotted spoon remove them and set aside.
    6. Rinse out and dry the wok, the put on a simmer/low heat.
    7. Add the rest of the oil and the beef drippings.
    8. Once the drippings have melted completely, turn up the heat to medium.
    9. When the oils just begin to smoke (around 250-300 degreesF), add the chile bean paste and stir fry until the oil is rich and fragrant (60-90 seconds).
    10. The paste should NOT burn; if necessary either move the wok off the heat or turn the heat down to let the paste sizzle in the oil.
    11. When the oil has reddened, add the black bean mash and the ginger.
    12. Stir fry until they also are fragrant.
    13. Add about 1 1/2 quarts of the beef stock and bring to a boil.
    14. When the liquid reaches a boil, add the rock sugar, the rest of the Shaoxing wine, and (optional) the glutinous rice wine.
    15. Salt to taste.
    16. Add the chiles and the Sichuan pepper (adjust the quantity depending on how "hot and numbing" you want it) leave the broth to simmer for 15-20 minutes.
    17. You are now ready to use this to dip ingredients to cook.

    I highly recomonde the Haymarket hot pot restraurant in Chiantown which is very nice. The food there is fresh

    Long Lin

    Haymarket Hot Pot Restaurant
    1/93-105 Quay Street, Haymarket Chinatown, Sydney
    Tel: +61 (02) 9211 0105

    Reference:
    http://chinese.food.com/recipe/spicy-hotpot-broth-sichuan-hong-tang-lu-382803
    http://www.urbanspoon.com/r/70/1544603/restaurant/Sydney/Chinatown/Haymarket-Hot-Pot-Haymarket

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