Showing posts with label Chinese food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese food. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

Mu Shu Pork or Chicken

a/k/a Asian Burrito



This is my version of the Chinese restaurant favorite. It's not authentic but it's good!

For convenience, I've substituted tortillas for the thin and very perishable pancakes. If you want to forgo them and just serve this with rice or noodles, you have my blessings. Enjoy!


Ingredients
Total 3 cups shredded cabbage, carrots, onion and mushrooms (see note)
1/2 cup Canola oil
1 tsp. sesame oil
1/2 tsp. white pepper
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 tbs. minced fresh ginger
1 tbs. soy sauce
1 cup chicken stock
1 cup water
10" tortillas
1 cup Hoisin sauce
1 tbs. corn starch
Approx. 1-1.5 pound lean boneless pork or chicken (preferably thighs) cut into thin strips

Notes
You can use pre-made coleslaw mix, if you like, or simply shred some green cabbage, a couple of carrots, about a quarter of an onion (more or less, according to preference) and thinly slice about 4-5 white mushrooms.

Method
Heat wok (or heavy frying pan) and add about a tbs of oil, then half the garlic and ginger. Let it sizzle a bit and stir. Then add vegetables and soy sauce. Stir frequently, add white pepper and sesame oil and half the water. Stir well and cook until wilted. Remove from wok. Set aside, cover and keep warm.

Wipe wok with paper towel. Add about a tbs of oil, then the other half of the garlic and ginger. Let it sizzle a bit and stir, then add pork (or chicken) and stir rapidly until done, then remove from wok; add to wilted vegetables; cover and keep warm.

Add chicken stock to hot wok. Dissolve cornstarch in half cup of water, then add to hot stock and stir. Add about a tbs. of hoisin sauce, then add pork (or chicken) and vegetable combination. Stir and mix well.

To serve, lay a tortilla out on a plate. Spread a little hoisin sauce in the middle and add some of the pork (or chicken) and vegetable combination. Roll like a burrito and serve.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Toa Toa in Sunrise


Dim Sum "Of The Heart"

By Richard Pachter

In business, we're taught to always have a "Plan B," but I'd add that it's wise to make sure that the alternative is as good or better than the original.

In other words, when you're dealt lemons, don't just make lemonade — make a lemon daiquiri!

One recent afternoon, I invited a group of music producers and audio teachers from The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale for lunch at a west Broward Japanese-Thai-Vietnamese emporium, but when I arrived early, it was closed!

Fortunately, Toa Toa, one of South Florida's very best Chinese restaurants, was nearby and for our group, the substitution turned out to be fortuitous.



Situated in a cool corner of an expansive shopping center in Sunrise, Toa Toa is a reliable purveyor of Cantonese, Mandarin, Hunan and Szechwan favorites. It also excels in the popular dishes customized for American palates such as chicken chow mein, shrimp with lobster sauce, beef lo mein and the like.

But the best thing about Toa Toa is its delightful dim sum. Dim sum, which means "of the heart," originated in Canton's tea houses.

Each order consists of a single, small portion of steamed or fried dumplings, buns, stuffed vegetables, noodles, meats, fish, or steaming bowls of soup with noodles, shrimp, fish, meat, and vegetables. A meal consists of an array of these small plates, usually shared among several people, family-style.

For business lunches, a meal of dim sum at Toa Toa is a powerful catalyst for instant conviviality. You might not want to invite a stuffy, uptight client or boss for lunch here, unless, of course, they are predisposed toward lightening up a bit or you know they love Chinese cuisine.

But its scrumptious little plates, efficient service and reasonable prices make Toa Toa the ideal spot for a friendly repast, for business or pleasure. Plus, the variety and staggered arrival of each dish provides convenient pauses for lively conversation.

Our group of eight was seated after a very short wait. The server handed us a slender paper menu listing each of the available items in English and Chinese. A "regular" menu was also included, as was a laminated pictorial guide to the dim sum dishes, along with a pencil.

I wrote the desired number of portions of each item on the menu and handed it back to the server after announcing the choices our group would share to my assenting guests.

Shrimp dumplings are usually a favorite, so four orders of the four-dumpling dish were requested. We also ordered multiple portions of siu mei (wonton skins filled with a pork and shrimp mixture); stuffed eggplant; beef rice paste (a flat rice dumpling filled with chopped and seasoned beef); steamed pork and chicken dumplings (which had an airy pastry-like texture); fried crab claws and silver noodles, which resembled malformed bean sprout shafts combined with strips of scrambled egg, shrimp and roast pork. Yum!

Each dish arrived at our table hot from the kitchen. First up were the shrimp dumplings. A splash of soy sauce and a drizzle of (spicy) chili oil gave them an extra kick.

Audio engineer Ed Mashal, one of my guests (check the credits of your copy of the Eagles album "Hotel California"), declared that it was "fantastic!" He doesn't eat meat, so he passed on the siu mei, which appeared shortly thereafter, but Russ Ben-Ezzer and Brian Campbell, partners of StepBrother Productions (www.stepbro.com), devoured them with gusto — and chili oil.

Ray Dawson of Deerfield's Zero Digital noted that "the prices here are amazing."

Indeed. They ranged from $2.45 for the shrimp dumplings to $5.95 for the silver noodles (take-out and dinner prices are slightly higher). The eight of us stuffed ourselves for under $80 plus tip. True, if we'd ordered drinks, the tab would have increased, but the hot tea was the ideal accompaniment for the steamed and fried dishes.


Logistics
  • Rating: Terrific food — and the price is more than right.
  • Details: Located in an outdoor shopping center with ample parking.
The Basics
  • Address: 4145 NW 88th Ave., Sunrise (Pine Plaza). 954-746-8833.
  • Type of food: Mandarin, Hunan, Szechwan and Cantonese favorites, especially dim sum.
  • Average prices: Approximately $10 per person for lots of small plates and hot tea.
  • Service: Friendly, helpful and non-intrusive.
  • Atmosphere: Broward neighborhood, family Chinese.
  • Best for: Inducing or reinforcing instant conviviality and a spirit of sharing among business colleagues.
  • Linger factor: Until drowsy.
  • Hours: Monday, Tuesday and Thursday: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Friday and Saturday: 11 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.; Sunday: 10:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Wednesday.
  • Credit cards: Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover.
  • Reservations: Not necessary, but not a bad idea for larger parties. 
  • Website: http://www.toatoachineserestaurant.com
Originally published 2005 in the Miami Herald

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Feed a cold and feed a fever


Got a cold? Feel one coming on? Or just feel blah. Here's what you need...

Almost every neighborhood Chinese restaurant I've encountered has something on the menu called "house special won ton soup" or "ten-ingredient soup," made up of broth, roast pork, chicken, shrimp and vegetables plus a few won tons. (If you don't eat meat or chicken or shrimp, decent restaurants will be happy to accommodate your needs and if not, keep going until you find one!)

The soup is usually pretty good as-is but if you can get it to-go, grab a quart (about $5-$6), bring it home, add some raw onions, chopped fresh garlic, celery, cayenne and any other vegetables you have around: Carrots, bell pepper, mushrooms, jalapenos... like that. And if you have any cooked chicken, why the hell not. Tofu, too, if you like.

Tabasco or other hot sauce should be added to taste.

And if you want to dump in some cooked rice or noodles, sure. Ramen noodles will work, too.

You will feel better while you eat it, at the very least, guaranteed.

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