Showing posts with label ginger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ginger. Show all posts

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Homemade Egg Rolls!


I was reviewing my blog recently and noticed that over the last couple/few years, my posts and cooking habits have been very Asian-heavy.  I'm not complaining. I love all Asian cuisines. Well, with the exception of some Asian countries like Kazakhstan or Uzbekistan...not a big mutton fan. So, in keeping with my Asian persuasion, I present our simple dinner tonight.

Carrot and Ginger Soup with Homemade Pork & Shrimp Egg Rolls. I'm patting myself on the back.

I'm pretty sure I've told you all about this soup before.  It's insanely easy: carrots, onion, ginger, broth, garlic and some half and half to finish.  Delicious and packed with vegetable goodness.

Ever made your own eggrolls?  Again, insanely easy.  In my opinion, an eggroll is one of those things where you can take extreme poetic license, kind of like how I do with fried rice, burritos, omelets, etc.  You can literally use whatever you have and roll it up in an eggroll (or wonton) wrapper and go to town. The only thing that may take a little practice is your rolling technique, but again, slow down, pay attention to what you're doing and you'll realize it's just not that hard.

Tonight's concoction consisted of:





1/4 lb ground pork mixed with 1 tsp of soy sauce, 1 tsp Shaoxing wine and about 1/4 tsp white pepper.  I think white pepper that you find in grocery stores tastes weird, so I use white pepper powder that I get at the Asian market near Dutch Square.  Mix this up and set aside while you heat up your wok, or skillet.

Shred about 8 oz cabbage; you can use regular green cabbage but I prefer Napa. Chop about 3-4 cloves of garlic, and a tsp of ginger. Slice about 2-3 green onions, julienne about a 1/4 cup bamboo shoots, and roughly chop about 1/2 cup bean sprouts.  You'll also need about 1/2 of julienned carrot, but here, I cheat with grocery store matchstick carrots in the bag. And, lastly you'll need about 20 medium sized shrimp. 

Start with a hot wok, and cook the pork mixture, breaking meat up with a wooden spoon.  Remove to a large bowl.  To wok, add 2 tsp oil then garlic and ginger. Stir fry just until it becomes fragrant. Then add cabbage, carrots, and salt. Stir fry until vegetables are becoming tender but still have some bite. Remove from heat and add to bowl with pork. Mix in green onion, bamboo shoots and bean sprouts. While this cools, cook shrimp in wok just until they start to turn opaque (they will cook more later.) Chop them into pieces, as big or small as you prefer. 

Once your filling is cool enough to handle, assemble your egg rolls.  You can fry them, which is traditional, but they can also be air-fried or baked.  Your choice. We fried them tonight and they were GBD (golden brown & delicious.)  I went to a nearby Chinese restaurant and bought a couple containers of their homemade hot mustard. Don't bother with that garbage in the packets. Our little dinner of soup and eggrolls was super yummy and easy. My kinda meal. 


Sunday, March 8, 2015

Our favorite Chicken Casserole

Growing up Southern, I think a casserole can be the perfect dish...comforting, creamy and gooey, easy, complex, helpful to a friend who is ill, church covered dish, awesome to have stocked up in the freezer.  Now, my Southern-turned-Minnesotan husband doesn't always share these sentiments.  One the one hand, it was his Mama who told me "every great dish begins with a can of Cream of Mushroom."  But, on the other hand, apparently, up in the Norse Land, they put anything and everything together in a casserole dish and simply call it "Hot Dish."  Neil grew to hate the words "hot dish" as well as the concept of "hot dish."  According to him, that's all the info you got...hot dish.  No clue as to what was in there.  And, he says it all pretty much tasted the same...crappy.  At least down here we're specific enough to let you know it's chicken casserole, crab casserole, green bean casserole.

It was well into our relationship that my casserole-lovin' self was finally made aware of this hot dish disdain.  I was flabbergasted!  How can one not love a good casserole?  As the story unfolded, I began to understand.  To this day, I serve casseroles very sparingly to be sensitive to Neil's old hot dish memories.  BUT...there's one that defies this casserole conundrum of his.  My chicken-almond-rice casserole.  Yep, it's a good ol' Akre family favorite at this point.

Akre's Creamy Chicken Almond Rice Casserole
 Originally, I got this recipe from a Weight Watchers cookbook. I've been making it so long and have tweeked it over the years, including adding almonds.  It's one of the few dishes that we do repeat around here and every one of us loves it.  I made it again recently and it dawned on me that I've never told you guys about it.  At least I don't think I have! 

Chicken Almond Rice Casserole
2-3 good sized chicken breasts, cubed bite-size
1/2 tsp garlic powder (I just sprinkle it over 'til it looks right)
olive oil mixed with a coating of PAM

Low sodium Rice-a-Roni
1 Tbs butter
2 1/4 cups water

1 can reduced calorie Cream of Chicken soup
3/4 cup reduced fat sour cream
1 cup sliced mushrooms (if you're 'shroom people that is)
1/4 chopped almonds
1/4 tsp pepper
1/4 cup crushed crackers, bread crumbs, etc.
1 Tbs melted butter
1/2 tsp poppy seeds 

So, here we go:  cook the Rice-a-Roni with the water & butter measurement above, according to package directions. While that's cooking, coat another skillet with PAM and a little olive oil. Season the chicken with garlic powder and saute until it loses its pinkness.  If you're using mushrooms, cook them here with the chicken.

Combine the chicken, rice, sour cream, soup, almonds and pepper in a bowl and mix well.  Spread into your casserole dish.  Melt the 1 Tbs butter and combine with crumbs & poppy seeds.  Sprinkle on top and bake at 350 for about 35 minutes. 
2-3 chicken breasts, whatever is right for you
Make them bite-sized
The San Francisco Treat!
Toasting up the rice
Mix it up, Baby!
Buttery, poppy seed topping
Sprinkle over the top
Ready for the 350 oven
Get your biggest serving spoon!


Most recently, I combined this with a simple, yet delicious side dish of honey-gingered carrots. I'd gotten these beautiful, young, tender carrots in my www.BrownBoxVeggies.com box and wanted to use them. They were so brilliantly orange & juicy little carrots.  
Aren't these beautiful?
Simmered with a little butter, honey & minced ginger
Our dinner!
Here's a warning:  when I make this casserole, the three of us can plow through almost 3/4 of it in one dinner.  I'm telling you, it's just that good.  If you don't like mushrooms, leave them out.  Can't eat nuts?  I've used water chestnuts for crunch and that works just as well as the almonds.  You can have fun with it.  I hope you'll try it and enjoy it as much as we do.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Big Cuts of Meat

I'm 42 years old and I'm still not always sure what to do with big cuts. Most often, I call my mom and ask her "What do you do with a bottom round?" I'm getting better though. Today, I discovered sirloin tip roasts at BiLo for B1G1. Thanks to the internet, we're having roast beef with ginger & jus tonight.

Ginger is one of the most heavenly roots on Earth. I love everything about it: the aroma, the flavor, the bite it can have. I've never combined it with a traditional roast beef, so I'm excited to see how this turns out.

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