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Friday, October 25, 2013

Totally Bamboo Salt and Herb Box Set Giveaway

I am partnering with my friends at Totally Bamboo to give away a Totally Bamboo Salt and Herb Box Set. There will be one (1) winner whom will receive one (1) Totally Bamboo Salt and Herb Box Set.

Perfect for the cook who needs a pinch of salt or that cluttered desk needing a place to store paper clips, Totally Bamboo’s salt and storage boxes are both a beautiful and versatile answer for storing a wide range of small items. Constructed from warm honey colored bamboo these containers feature a magnetic snap close lid for easy one-handed operation.

“I think people will be surprised at the many uses that they come up with for these containers,” says Tom Sullivan, co-owner of Totally Bamboo. “In the kitchen they are perfect for different flavored sea salts, peppers, and herbs, but they are also a great place to store rings, jewelry, loose change and any other small items that might otherwise be lost.”

The Totally Bamboo line of salt and storage boxes ($10.50) includes four laser-etched containers. The lids of each of these 3.5” diameter containers is decorated with delicate and intricate computer guided laser etchings. The Tree of Life Salt Box is etched with hundreds of exotic and endangered animals. The Circles Salt Box is decorated with a series of interlocking circles. The Fern Salt Box is covered with ferns and the Leaves Salt Box is etched with a number of various sized leaves.

The remaining salt box line is made up of six containers of various sizes, shapes and capacities. The Small Salt Box ($13.99) holds 1/3 of a cup, the Medium Salt Box ($17.99) has a 1-cup capacity and the Large Salt Box ($24.99) will hold 1 1/4 cups. The remainder of the line up features the two tier Double Salt Box ($29.99) with two separate compartments and the 3-Tier Salt Box ($19.99) which has three separate compartments and a weighted base to keep if from tipping over.

“These salt boxes will really come in handy,” added Sullivan. “In fact our latest suggested use was for storing bath salts while adding a little pizzazz to your bathroom decor.”

Eligibility: United States only. No purchase necessary and subject to this official giveaway rules. Closing Date: Nov 10, 2013, 11:59 pm PST. Winner will be randomly selected and contacted via email on Nov 11, 2013. The prize is proudly sponsored by Totally Bamboo. To enter, please follow the steps below.

Eligibility: United States only. No purchase necessary and subject to these official giveaway rules.

Step 1
Like Rasa Malaysia on Facebook. (Click on the Like button below.)

Step 2

Follow Rasa Malaysia on Twitter. (Click on the Follow @rasamalaysia button below. If you don’t have Twitter, skip this step.)

Step 3

Fill in the form below. You can enter to win using this form every day.

You will be redirected to the “Thank You” page if your entry is successfully submitted.

ONE ENTRY PER DAY STRICTLY ENFORCED.

cforms contact form by delicious:days


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Chicken Katsu (Fried Chicken Cutlet)

In the United States, when people think of Japanese food, a few items spring to the minds: sushi, sashmi, chicken teriyaki, ramen, and tonkatsu. I believe not everyone loves sushi, sashimi, or ramen, but I think most people like the idea of fried meat. While many people love tonkatsu, or Japanese fried pork cutlet, many people don’t eat pork. So, today, I am sharing with you a friendly recipe, chicken katsu (Japanese fried chicken cutlet) that is sure to please. I can assure you that even the pickiest eaters, including toddlers, love a piece of crispy, light, delicious fried chicken coated with a generous layer of panko.

Much like its close cousin tonkatsu (pork), chicken katsu is basically fried chicken cutlet coated with crispy Japanese panko (bread crumbs), served with a tonkatsu dipping sauce, which you can purchase from Japanese or Asian food stores. Traditionally, you coat the meat with flour, and then dip with beaten eggs before coating with panko. For me, I don’t like the flour coating because I think it separates the panko crust from the meat after deep-frying, so I improvised my recipe. To make my chicken katsu extra crispy, I coat the chicken with two layers of panko. You can’t go wrong with this trick as the end result is a piece of fried chicken cutlet with shattering crispiness. I also don’t like the tonkatsu sauce on top of the meat, so I always have the sauce on the side and dip the chicken as I eat to avoid the chicken being soggy.

Chicken Katsu

I shared this Chicken Katsu recipe a while ago on a website that I contributed to and thought my readers here on Rasa Malaysia would love it. Since I am making this for my son tonight, I shot some new pictures above and share it here. You can serve chicken katsu with steamed rice and some salad, enjoy!

Get Recipe(Click Page 2 for the Chicken Katsu (Fried Chicken Cutlet) Recipe)

Pages: 1 2


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Thursday, October 24, 2013

Happy Birthday Lemon Bundt Cake Recipe for Bountiful Cookbook

Lemon Bundt Cake Recipe on White On Rice CoupleWe’re celebrating a birthday today! Our cookbook, Bountiful, is finally released and we can give a big exhale to the last year and a half of writing, photographing, recipe developing and eating-till-we-drop.

In the cookbook, we actually don’t have any cake recipes, however for this occasion, we made cake.  A lemon bundt cake for Bountiful, our 3.7 pounds and  10.6 x 8.5 x 1.3  inch baby. Lemon Bundt Cake Recipe on WhiteOnRiceCouple.comWe learned so much over this process of cookbook-making. First off: don’t try to eat everything you make because you’ll quickly feel how tight your pants will get. Find some neighbors to pass the goodies to. Make friends with your mail man. What ever you do, find good-eaters. They are as important as your recipe testers. Secondly, regardless of what topic you’re writing about, try to incorporate a cocktail recipe in there, some how. Trust us, after hours editing the manuscript, recipe details, conversations and photo editing, you’ll NEED that evening inebriation.

So do we have cocktail recipes in Bountiful too? Of course we do. Seven, to be exact.

Bountiful Cookbook: Recipes Inspired From Our Garden from WhiteOnRiceCouple.com by Todd Porter and Diane CuNow the next stage starts: meeting all of you who we kinda-know-but-really-don’t. How odd it is to tell our parents that we’ll be traveling the country to meet our friends that we’ve never met before. This is the internet life, no doubt.  It’ll be fun to finally meet up with all of you who have supported us through the years on the blog.

If you’re free, stop by one of our signings and give us a hug. We want to see your purty faces.

Lemon Bundt Cake Recipe on WhiteOnRiceCouple.comEvery single one of you have a special place in our lives. This blog wouldn’t be as rewarding without you. And the book? Bountiful? We’ll we wouldn’t have had the inspiration to make it without your support and encouragement.

Thank you a million times for making our lives so incredibly inspired and fulfilling.

You all mean so much to us. And in the meantime, here’s a slice of a wonderful and tender bundt cake for you all.

Happy Day!
Todd, Diane, Sierra and Lexi

Here’s the latest date and cities we’ll be visiting. Come hug and eat together.

Lemon Bundt Cake Recipe on WhiteOnRiceCouple.comBountiful Cookbook: Recipes Inspired From Our Garden from WhiteOnRiceCouple.com by Todd Porter and Diane Cu

Where to buy the book online? Here’s also a list of some great independent bookstores in your area. Please support them! And you can visit our Book Signing/Tour Page Here.

Amazon
Indiebound
Book Larder, Seattle
Book Soup and Vromans, Los Angeles
Kings English, Salt Lake City, Utah
Powells Books, Portland, Oregon
Barnes and Nobles

Yield: one 12-cup Bundt Cake

Total Time: 1 hour 30 minutes

This is not a recipe from our cookbook, we didn't have any in Bountiful. However the occasion needed a cake and this is an insanely moist and tender bundt cake. Easily the best we've ever eaten, let alone made. Because of its moistness, the batter probably won't work in a regular pan, the center will fall in, however in a bundt form it is perfect. It also works great to divide between a couple smaller forms instead of the larger 12-cup bundt form. The recipe is adapted from Shirley Corriher's Bakewise, "Take-Your-Breath-Away Lemon Pound Cake". Like Shirley mentions in her book, the key to the incredible texture comes from whipping the cream before adding it to the batter. She also recommends baking the bundt forms on a pre-heated baking stone in the oven. We have the Emile Henry stones at home and the studio and love them.

2 3/4 cups (345g) flour1 teaspoon baking powder1 teaspoon kosher or sea salt1 1/4 cups unsalted butter3 cups sugar1/3 cup canola oilzest from 4 large lemons1/4 cup fresh lemon juice1 tablespoon vanilla extract6 eggs1/2 cup (120ml) heavy cream1/3 cup (80ml) fresh lemon juice1/2 cup (100g) sugar1 cup confectioners sugar1 teaspoon vanilla extract2 tablespoons heavy creamPreheat the oven to 350°F. Butter and flour a 12-cup bundt pan or 24 fluted brioche tins.In a bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt for at least 20 seconds. Set aside.In a mixer on medium speed, cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes (if the bowl does not feel cool while creaming, place it in the freezer for 5 minutes, then continue creaming).Beat in the oil, lemon zest, lemon juice, and vanilla extract. On the lowest speed, beat in the eggs, one at a time, until just incorporated.Mix in the flour mixture in three stages, until just combined.Whip the cream just past the soft peak stage. Stir in about 1/4 of the whipped cream into the batter, and then fold in the remaining whipped cream. Pour the batter into the prepared bundt pan (or brioche tins). Drop the pan from about 4" above the counter to knock out any bubbles.Bake on the middle oven rack for 50-60 minutes (about 20 minutes for small tins), or until a toothpick comes out clean near the center. Allow to cool for 10 minutes, then loosen the cake by knocking it against the counter. Invert the cake onto a serving platter.Stir together lemon glaze ingredients (if needed, heat them briefly to help dissolve the sugar). Brush on the hot cake until all of the glaze is absorbed. After it has cooled, if serving within a day or two continue to final step, or if serving later in the week, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate until ready to serve (keeps 4-5 days wrapped in the fridge).On the day you are ready to serve (or the night before), take the bundt out of the fridge to come up to room temperature. In a bowl, whisk together the icing ingredients, adjusting the cream or confectioners sugar amount to make the icing fairly thick but pourable, not too runny. If the icing is close to the thickness you want, but still a touch too thick to pour, warm it slightly and it will become more fluid until it cools off (perfect for icing the bundt cake). Drizzle the icing over the top of the bundt cake and serve.

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Spicy Cashew Chicken

I've said it many times before on this blog and I'll say it once more: chicken thighs rock. All over Asia (and Europe, for that matter), this is considered a prime cut that has all sorts of uses, from stir-frying to deep-frying to braising. But for some reason most of America still treats it with suspicion.

Instead we revere chicken breast (not as flavorful IMHO), with is often double or triple the price of chicken thighs in grocery stores and contain only marginally less fat and fewer calories than thighs. But to each his own. The low demand just means that even at my relatively expensive neighborhood butcher shop, chicken thighs are always available and plenty affordable.

Today I had an urge to stir-fry dark meat chicken for lunch and decided to update this spicy cashew chicken recipe from last summer. Enjoy! 

________________________

If you're a regular reader of the blog, you may have already tried to recreate some of your favorite takeout dishes from Chinese restaurants. Kung pao chicken and General Tso's chicken have been two of the most popular recipes on Appetite for China for the past few years. And recently I've added new favorites, such as Orange Beef and Broccoli Stir-fry, Shrimp Lo Mein, and Almond Chicken.

Cashew chicken is, of course, another favorite takeout dish. And once you try making it at home, I guarantee you'll find it better-tasting and even quicker than picking up the phone and ordering takeout. Marinating and cooking the chicken takes just 15 to 20 minutes, faster than delivery. 

This version of cashew chicken is for the spicy food lovers out there. I like using about 2 teaspoons of chili sauce for 1 pound of chicken, but you can always increase the dosage to 3 teaspoons (or more!) if your tongue can handle it. The chicken is marinated in soy sauce and rice wine for flavor and corn starch to lock moisture in, resulting in a tender, juicy chicken. Which is more than you can usually hope for inside the white takeout cartons!

Try pairing this spicy cashew chicken with sides such as Vegetable Fried Rice, Sichuan Cucumber Salad, and Baby Bok Choy with Braised Shiitake Sauce.


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Roasted Broccoli Grilled Cheese and More from Bountiful

Roasted Broccoli Grilled Cheese Sandwich Recipe Bountiful Cookbook: Vegetable and Fruit recipes from WhiteOnRiceCouple.comThe birth of our Bountiful cookbook wasn’t as painful as we had originally thought. Aside from a few weeks of never ending dirty dishes, the whole journey was creatively liberating and fun. Thanks a million to all you guys and gals and so many nice cooks, bloggers and friends out there who spread the good cheer.

Seeing what everyone is cooking from the book reminds us why we love what we do so much. Those late nights in the kitchen recipe testing, developing, editing, writing and washing dishes makes it all worth it when someone shares their favorite dish that they made from the cookbook.

Our goal was to make the recipes, approachable, non-fussy, delicious and make a vegetable or fruit the hero. We’re always looking to incorporate more vegetables into our meals, so writing this cookbook helped us do more of it on a daily basis. And we’re sharing some Bountiful recipes with you that amazing bloggers have shared. And some of them are hosting a giveaway of the book too!

A simple and favorite lunch is our roasted broccoli grilled cheese sandwich. Pair it with a bowl of chicken soup or tomato soup and what you have is a meal that everyone in the family will love. The roasted flavor of the broccoli and melted cheese is almost like eating a broccoli/cheese soup, but even better. It’s sandwiched within two crispy slices of bread. Now try to dip it in some tomato soup. It’s really to die for!

Maria from Two Peas and Their Pod made this Roasted broccoli grilled cheese and is sharing the recipe on her blog.

Tracey from Shutterbean perfected our Braised Brussels Sprouts with Pancetta and Parmesan. Love the photo.

Julie from The Little Kitchen made our Baked Eggs in Tomatoes. It’s beautiful! Head over there for the recipe.

Kelly from Just a Taste is a egg rolling master! Check out our Kale and Chicken Egg Roll recipe that she mastered.

Elise from Simply Recipes added kale to our Roasted Spaghetti Squash with Sausage and Parmesan. Brilliant.

So there you have it, a sampling of some recipes from Bountiful. Make them all for lunch or dinner!

And come visit us at our next signings in New York City, Seattle, Salt Lake City, San Francisco and Melbourne, Australia! Link is here.

Happy Weekend,

diane and todd

Where to buy the book online? Here’s also a list of some great independent bookstores in your area. Please support them!

AmazonIndiebound Book Larder, Seattle (signing on Friday, October 25, 2013)Book Soup and Vromans, Los AngelesKings English, Salt Lake City, Utah (signing on Saturday, November 16th, 2013)Powells Books, Portland, OregonBarnes and Nobles Avenue Bookstore, Melbourne Australia (signing on Saturday, November 9th, 2013, 11am )Book Passage, San Francisco (signing on Saturday, January 18th 2013, 1pm)

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Chocolate Chip Brownies

I have been offline for a little bit due to this as I am back in Penang, so I feel totally relieved that my contributor is helping me to fill in the void with new baking recipes. After I posted the brownie butter cake recipe, I came to realize just how much my readers love baking, and that they also love chocolate and brownies. So this chocolate chip brownies recipe is for you.

There are many variations of brownies, plain old baked brownies, chocolate mint, salted caramel, peanut butter, etc., but nothing beats chocolate chip brownies in my opinion. These cake squares are dense, rich, and studded with white chocolate chips plus chopped pistachio, so every bite is extra decadent and sinful. It’s a recipe that no one can resist, even the pickiest eater, I assure.

Chocolate Chip Brownies

If you are looking for the absolutely best brownie recipe, this is it. I won’t convince you anymore with my words, but I will let you judge for yourself with the pictures in this post. This chocolate chip brownie recipe is a keeper, yielding fudgy, chocolatey, moist, simply perfect brownies every time! Give it a try.

Get Recipe(Click Page 2 for the Chocolate Chip Brownies Recipe)

Pages: 1 2


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Vietnamese Cookbooks List

Vietnamese Cookbooks List - Viet World Kitchen window.fbAsyncInit = function() { FB.init( { apiKey: 'a279adbe87e2b3c505e777af99a5260d', xfbml: true } );};( function() { var e = document.createElement( 'script' ); e.async = true; e.src = document.location.protocol + '//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js'; document.getElementById( 'fb-root' ).appendChild( e );} )();Viet World Kitchen Newest Post Dumplings Asian TofuRecipe IndexEventsFav SitesAbout MePermission+Credit Welcome! Join me to explore, create, and contribute to the culinary traditions of Asia.

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October 15, 2013Vietnamese Cookbooks ListVietnamese cookbooks

Itprobably doesn’t surprise you to know that Vietnamese cookbooks make up a fairshare of my cookbook collection. I've been collecting them for decades,gleaning them not just for recipes and techniques, but also social history.That’s how I justify owning books written in English, Vietnamese, French,Chinese, and Japanese. (I can barely read Chinese characters and forget about Japanese!)

Partof the original VWK website constructed in 2002 was a page with short recaps of English-languageVietnamese cookbooks that I owned. I pulled down the page when I switched to ablog format in 2007 because I didn’t think people were all that interested. Noone seemed to notice until this year. Rick from the UK and another gal emailedabout the list. “Where did it go? Would you publish it again?” they asked.

Iput their request on my to-do list and finally had time to work on it over theweekend. Here it is, with Vietnamese cookbooks that date back to 1968! I’ll tryto keep this list updated as I review more Viet cookbooks so bookmark thispage. Or, return to VWK and search for “Vietnamese cookbooks.” Hang on to your hat, this is a long list. 

Vietnamese Home Cooking (2012)
Charles Phan and Jessica Battilana
A great book for fans of Charles Phan, the Chinese-Vietnamese chef/restaurateurof the Slanted Door restaurant group in San Francisco. His debut cookbook,written as a collaboration with Jessica Battilana, includes many of the dishesserved at the restaurant (hello Slanted Door’s shaking beef!) as well as Cantonesedishes of his heritage. There are Thai recipes (his wife is Thai) as well asideas drawn from Japan. Techniques and recipes tend to be fussy, reflecting therestaurant’s kitchen, not that of Viet home cooks. More in this review of the book. I also madefresh bun rice noodles from Vietnamese Home Cooking too.

VietnameseStreet Food (2011)
Tracey Lister and Andreas Pohl
People are crazy for street food these days and Vietnam has much to offer. Inthis photogenic book, Tracey and her husband take to the streets. They live inHanoi and have documented the beloved recipes savored throughout the country. Therecipes are easy to follow if you’re familiar with Viet cooking and Asianingredients. Futher details are in this Q&A with Tracey on Vietnamesestreet food tips. For a sample recipe, try this vegan faux crab and ricenoodle soup (bun rieu cua chay).

Indochine:Baguette and Banh Mi (2011)
Luke Nguyen
I’m not one to say thatViet food is an offshoot of French cooking as Viet cooks are not one to kowtow. That said, it’s hard to avoid getting into the Franco spirit when you’relooking at colonial buildings in semi-decrepit states. This is Luke Nguyen’sthird book (his second solo work) and it parallels his television show. In thebook, he canvases traditional and modern Vietnamese food to paint apicture of timeless fusion cooking. He recounts interactions withVietnamese, French-Vietnamese, French, and Vietnamese-French people andincludes their recipes, which range from street food to fancy plated fare. Fromthat mix of content, you get an interesting global perspective of Vietnamesecuisine.

Appetitesand Aspirations in Vietnam (2011)
EricaPeters
If youyearn for a historic and rigorous look at the French colonial era in Vietnam, checkthis work by historian Erica Peters. It presents the push-pull dynamic of the colonialFrench-Viet relationship, all from the perspective of food.

The Songs ofSapa (2009)
Luke Nguyen
I met chef and restaurateur Luke Nguyen in Sydney in 2009 and he was beginning anew project – a food and travel television show. This book was the first ofseveral that he pumped out as works that accompany his series. The location photographyis compelling, though the recipe writing can challenge cooks who are not wellversed in Asian or Viet ingredients and cooking techniques. A beautifulpublication. The original book was released as The Songs of Sapa but it was reissued in 2011 as My Vietnam in the United States. I tried Luke’s recipe for roast pork here and was inspired to cookokra his way.

Secrets of the RedLantern: Stories and Recipes from the Heart (2008)
Pauline Nguyen and Luke Nguyen
A lovely book from the brother-and-sister team behind Red Lantern, a charminglychic Vietnamese restaurant in Sydney, Australia. It’s an interesting book for comparingand contrasting Vietnamese restaurant fare inside and outside of the motherland.If you’re interested in the Viet diaspora, this book spotlightsViet-Australians exceptionally well. For more, see this postor try this recipe for red rice.  

Wild, Wild East:Recipes and Stories from Vietnam (2008)
Bobby Chinn
Chef/restaurateur/travel television show host Bobby Chinn takes a brash andunnerving approach to getting recipes from folks in Vietnam. He distilled hisexperiences and insights into this book. Based in Hanoi, Bobby's work has nicelocation photography. The recipe collection includes many modern takes on oldfavorites. I included it in the 2008 round-upof notable Asian cookbooks. Bobby has smuggled Phu Quoc fish sauce in his luggage for me. What a friend!

Into the Vietnamese Kitchen: Treasured Foodways, Modern Flavors (2006)
Andrea Nguyen
My labor of love for several years, this is a collection of 175+ recipes thatpays homage to old-fashioned methods and classic Viet dishes yet providesreaders with instructions on how to prepare the delectable foods in a modernkitchen. Recipes cover the broad spectrum of foods, from the super simple (justa few ingredients needed) to more elaborate time-honored treats like banh chung (Tet sticky ricecakes) and banh nuong (moon cakes). For more details on my book, check this page.

Viet-cookbook-collage2
The Little Saigon Cookbook: Vietnamese Cuisine andCulture in Southern California's Little Saigon (2006)
Ann Le
Here's a book that covers Viet cooking as it is presented in Little Saigon, thelargest Vietnamese American enclave located in Westminster, California. Asouthern California resident, Ann works in the finance industry and has putlots of heart into this work in order to represent her community well. The useof olive oil in the some of the recipes, however, is a bit odd.

Quick& Easy Vietnamese: 75 Everyday Recipes (2005)
Nancie McDermott
This is part of publisher Chronicle Books' series of quick and easy ethniccookbooks. The books are not designed to be in-depth or comprehensive, butNancie is a veteran writer and you're in good hands. Her first work, RealThai (1992), anamazing book regional Thai cookbook that I still cook from.

A Vietnamese Kitchen: Treasured Family Recipes (2005)
Ha Roda
Like Ann Le's book above, this one presents Viet food as it is prepared in theVietnamese immigrant kitchen in America. Ha Roda is a media arts professionalbased in Los Angeles. She's not a professional food writer, but if you'refamiliar with Viet cooking or are a seasoned cook, you can follow her recipes.However, the use bouillon cubes, prepackaged seasoning mixes, and KitchenBouquet are rather disappointing, though a fair number of Viet American cooksuse those prepackaged ingredients. Hippocrene Books, the publisher, should havespent more on photography. The black and white images are unattractive.

Didier Corlou'sVietnamese Cuisine (2003)
Didier Corlou
French chef Corlou's cookbook contains gorgeous photography from Vietnam, wherehe was based as key staff person of the Sofitel hotels. He was formerly theexecutive chef at the Metropole in Hanoi. Corlou has an unending passion forVietnamese cooking (he's married to a Viet woman), and the book offerstraditional as well as modern recipes that he developed. The recipeinstructions are not in depth and somewhat hard to follow. However, it's asophisticated, lovely work. Pick up a copy at the Metropole in Hanoi. This bookisn't available online.  

VietnameseHome Cooking (2003)
Robert Carmack, Didier Corlou, Nguyen Thanh Van
A title in Periplus series on Asian home cooking, this work comes fromprofessional cooks based in Vietnam at the Hanoi Metropole Hotel. Carmack isthe professional writer. Beautiful photography, but the ingredients andinstructions aren't easily adapted to the American home kitchen. If you're aseasoned Asian cook, this title is worth having.

TheVietnamese Cookbook (2003)
Diana Tran
A nice small book written by a Vietnamese-American career woman who offers hercontemporary, time-saving approaches to putting Viet favorites on the table forher family. Theinstructions can be breezy so beginner cooks may have a hard time.

Lemongrassand Lime: New Vietnam Cooking (2001)
Mark Read
A book from London’s Bam-bou restaurant that focused on modern Vietnamese food.Beautiful photography, poorly laid-out design of recipes. The ingredients arelisted at the bottom of each page in a horizontal fashion. The recipes blendChinese, Thai and Vietnamese elements, which how the Bam-bou bills itself. Ah,that explains the use of kaffir lime among the book’s essential ingredientslisting. 

Pleasuresof the Vietnamese Table (2001)
Mai Pham
This second work from Mai Pham, a restauranteur in Sacramento, CA, was verywell received by both the LosAngeles Times and New York Times. The recipeswere developed from her travels and research in Vietnam. She gathered recipesand flavors from street-food hawkers and Viet home cooks. The instructions arewell written and as usual, Pham knows her stuff. For those who've traveled toVietnam, this may be a great book to remind them of their eating adventures. Itdoesn't mirror food from Viet-American kitchens, and that's not its objective.For overseas Vietnamese, this book offers great information on how food andculture are evolving in Vietnam. There's a nice discussion on herbs andingredients. Go to Pham's first book, The Best of Vietnamese and ThaiCooking or check herout at www.lemongrassrestaurant.com 

AuthenticVietnamese Cooking: Food from a Family Table (1999)
Corinne Trang
Not particularly authentic, as the name suggests. The author is CambodianChinese French, not Vietnamese. A lot of work went into this book, and Trang isa capable recipe writer, having worked in the test kitchen at Saveur magazine. Nonetheless, you comeaway wondering about how to best define authenticity. It's difficult tounderstand who the author is. It made me want Trang to pen a book on herexperiences growing up in France and eating/preparing ethnic Chinese-SoutheastAsian food there. 

Café Vietnam (1999)
Annabel Jackson
A nice little paperback with cool photos. The recipes are based on foodsprepared in Vietnam, not what's cooked in America. As a result, theingredients, flavors, etc. are not what you may expect or may have experiencedin Vietnamese American homes, restaurants and delis. This work is part of theConran Octopus 'Café' Cookbook series. 

TheFood of Vietnam: Authentic Recipes from the Ascending Dragon (1997) 
Trieu Thi Choi, Marcel Isaak
Based on 'old world' recipes from a Vietnam-based chef, this book is bestunderstood and used by people who are familiar with traditional Vietnamesecooking. Some of the ingredients, such as pork fatback, would put health-consciouscooks off. Sometimes the proportions for seasoning are heavy handed. My motherlikes the recipes because the Vietnamese author "speaks" to her.However, when Mom tried out one of the recipes, she cut out the fat and halvedthe seasonings. There's a nice history section in this book about traditionalfoodways. This work is part of a Periplus series of ethnic cookbooks. 

TheBest of Vietnamese and Thai Cooking (1996)
Mai Pham
Mai Pham owns Lemongrass restaurant in Sacramento, which offers diners Thai andVietnamese food. She's a competent cook who also does her research. This is anice book with traditional recipes. However, the inclusion of Thai recipes sortof makes things confusing. 

TheFlavours of Vietnam (1995,2002)
Meera Freeman, Le Van Nhan
From Australia comes this work by professional cookbook writer Freeman andrestaurant chef Le. There's little cultural information on the recipes, and themeasurements are in metric. However, if you're familiar with Viet cooking, thiswork is worth exploring. 

TheSimple Art of Vietnamese Cooking (1991) 
Binh Duong, Marcia Kiesel
Out of print but worth having on hand for the recipes, which blends traditionalViet methods with a skilled restaurateur's modern cooking knowledge. Read theinstructions carefully to make sure everything makes sense. No photosunfortunately. 

TheFoods of Vietnam (1989and 1999)
Nicole Routhier
One the first Vietnamese cookbooks in the U.S. Nicole Routhier is VietnameseFrench and was raised in Vietnam and Laos. NewYork Times food writerCraig Claiborne wrote the foreword. One of the oddities of this book is the useof olive oil as an ingredient. Cream is suggested as a substitute for coconutmilk. Perhaps because Routhier wrote the book in the 80s, when Asianingredients were not easily available. Reprinted in 1999 with a new cover, itstands out in terms of beautiful photography. 

Livingand Cooking Vietnamese: An American Woman's Experience (1990)
Paula Tran
For an interesting perspective, try this book of 80 recipes written by anAmerican woman who married a Vietnamese man. 

Cookingthe Vietnamese Way (1985)
Chi Nguyen, Judy Monroe
A very small collection of 24 recipes comprise this title. 

TheClassic Cuisine of Vietnam (1979and 1986)
Bach Ngo, Gloria Zimmerman
Probably the first Vietnamese cookbook printed in America after the massarrival of refugees. For Vietnamese cooks who came during the first wave, thisbook will remind them of the initial trials and tribulations of fixing foods oftheir homeland. Though some of the ingredients have since changed as moreauthentic ingredients are now available at Asian markets, the basic methods andideas for preparing Vietnamese food in an American kitchen still apply. 

Happyin My Stomach (1975)
Marjorie Doughty
This small spiral bound community cookbook contains recipes of super fresh Vietimmigrants to the U.S. who were staying at the Eglin Refugee Reception Centerin Florida in the spring and summer of 1975. It's a charming, sweet book thatoffers hand-drawn illustrations, short pieces on Viet and Chinese customs,along with recipes. If you're a cookbook collector or into tracing theevolution of Viet cooking in the States, this one is a must to have. 

VietnameseDishes (1973)
Duong Thi Thanh Lien
I found this book in Viet bookstore in San Jose, CA. The author, born in 1933,was a medical doctor and professor of medicine (pretty impressive for a womanat that time!) in Saigon. It is bilingual, with Vietnamese recipes on one pageand its English version on the other. Dr. Lien discusses life as during thevarious foreign occupations of Vietnam during the 20th century. Her writingoffers insight into how people cooked and ate in the pre-1975 era of Vietnam.Like Miller's book below, this has significant historic value. 

VietnameseCookery (1968)
Jill Nhu Huong Miller
Find and buy this book for its historic value. Born in Vietnam, the author wasa language instructor for the US Armed Forces. There's a certain Hawaiian touchbecause that's where the author conceived the book. Only a few recipes havebilingual Vietnamese English titles, requiring a little extra energy to figureout the original Viet equivalent. 

Where to buy these books? From brick-and-mortar bookstores, online retailers, wherever you find books! The out-of-print ones will take some searching. If you know of some worthy or obscure work that I've missed, shoot me a message.

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Comments Vietnamese Cookbooks List Vietnamese cookbooks

Itprobably doesn’t surprise you to know that Vietnamese cookbooks make up a fairshare of my cookbook collection. I've been collecting them for decades,gleaning them not just for recipes and techniques, but also social history.That’s how I justify owning books written in English, Vietnamese, French,Chinese, and Japanese. (I can barely read Chinese characters and forget about Japanese!)

Partof the original VWK website constructed in 2002 was a page with short recaps of English-languageVietnamese cookbooks that I owned. I pulled down the page when I switched to ablog format in 2007 because I didn’t think people were all that interested. Noone seemed to notice until this year. Rick from the UK and another gal emailedabout the list. “Where did it go? Would you publish it again?” they asked.

Iput their request on my to-do list and finally had time to work on it over theweekend. Here it is, with Vietnamese cookbooks that date back to 1968! I’ll tryto keep this list updated as I review more Viet cookbooks so bookmark thispage. Or, return to VWK and search for “Vietnamese cookbooks.” Hang on to your hat, this is a long list. 

Stay Connected                         Asian Tofu in the News"Informative, engaging, well written and researched, this is also the best book about tofu."
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"A whole cookbook devoted to tofu? Yes, please."
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Serious Eats 2012 Favorite Cookbooks

"Cooking with Tofu (Are You Serious?!)"
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Book info, reviews, radio & TV . . .Classes & EventsHands-on @loveapplefarms, Santa Cruz
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Indonesian Mee Soto Ayam

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Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Xtrema 6-Qt Ceramic Ovenex Pan Giveaway

I am partnering with my friends at Xtrema Ceramic Cookware to give away a 6 Qt 100% Ceramic Ovenex Buffet/Lasagna Pan. There will be one (1) winner whom will receive one (1) 6 Qt 100% Ceramic Ovenex Buffet/Lasagna Pan. The total retail price of the 6 Qt 100% Ceramic Ovenex Buffet/Lasagna Pan is US$129.99.

Serve up the best baked lasagna or casserole to impress your friends and family at your next gathering in the stylish 100% Ceramic 6 Qt Baking Pan. Your dish will be the talk of the party! Our 6 QT Pan is the largest Ceramic Baker in the world.

Features:

Non-scratch: You have the freedom to use any utensils: nylon, silicone and wooden.Versatile: Built to withstand extreme heat and cold, each piece can go directly from oven to freezer. Whether you want to cook on the stovetop, broiler, grill or microwave, you can do it all with Xtrema.Easy to Clean: Spend more time enjoying your food and less time cleaning up after it with Xtrema’s sinfully easy clean up … you can even stick it in the dishwasher!Practical: With Xtrema, your cooking time is reduced and your food will stay hotter longer.Healthy: Your food will not only taste better, it will be healthier as no trace metals or chemicals leach from the non-toxic ceramic glaze surface.100% Green: Not only is cooking with Xtrema healthy for your family, it’s also friendly to the environment. From the earthy-friendly production practices and inorganic natural minerals used in construction to the safe ceramic glaze alternative to harmful PFOA coatings of most other popular non-stick cookware, Xtrema is eco-friendly.Handcrafted: Each piece is handcrafted to uphold the strict quality standards of the world’s finest ceramic cookware.

Is there anything more satisfying than the aroma of lasagna or your favorite casserole warming your entire home on a crisp fall or cold wintry day? At Xtrema, we don’t think so either, and with our Huge 6 Qt Lasagna Baking and Roasting Pan you can make your favorite recipes even more delicious.

Imagine having a casserole pan you can put directly into the oven from the freezer, and then to the table, and then to the dishwasher. With Xtrema’s Lasagna Pan, you can do all that and more.

Unmatched Versatility

All of Xtrema’s 100% ceramic cookware is built to withstand extreme and sudden changes in temperature. Ceramic is 100% non-scratch, so you’ll never have to worry about cancer-causing chemicals leaching into your carefully-prepared meals. Plus, our Lasagna Pan’s non-scratch surface is durable — and brilliant enough to enjoy right on your dinner table. Prepare your favorite casserole ahead of time and put it in the freezer for those busy nights when you don’t have time to cook, and enjoy the fruits of your timesaving labor later!

Even better, we make our Xtrema Lasagna Baking and Roasting Pan with a spacious cooking surface but in a compact, easily stored size. Because ceramic is all natural, it won’t make your food taste metallic — even with lasagna’s tomatoes. In fact, we think our cookware helps your food taste even better, because it naturally enhances foods’ subtle flavors. Its superior heat retention qualities help it keep food hot longer. Prepare to wow your family and friends with your delicious, aromatic meals with use-and-transfer ease!

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Eligibility: United States only. No purchase necessary and subject to this official giveaway rules. Closing Date: Dec 8, 2013, 11:59 pm PST. Winner will be randomly selected and contacted via email on Dec 9, 2013. The prize is proudly sponsored by Xtrema Ceramic Cookware. To enter, please follow the steps below.


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Poached Eggs in Tomato Sauce, On Toast {make this now}

Poached Eggs in Tomato Sauce on Toast from WhiteOnRiceCouple.com

I’ve started to use this phrase {make this now} more often on the blog rather than just in conversation. We’ve all experienced this “omg, this is amazing….” type of revelation for particular dishes. When the sensations hit just right on the tongue or when that “wow” moment hits the palette, I can’t help it but to tell everyone to make this now. Thus, the method to my madness when I say {make this now} because when I’m blown away at at how simple and delicious and recipe can be, I can’t help it but scream it out loud. Previously, I said the same thing about this thai iced tea recipe and so many of you really did {made this now}. This makes me so proud.

Simple poached eggs by simmering in bubbly-hot tomato sauce, then smeared over a grilled piece of bread is life changing. I’ve been hitting myself in the head over since I made this because I can’t believe this dish snuck under my hungry-radar all these years.

Poached Eggs in Tomato Sauce on Toast from WhiteOnRiceCouple.com

Where have you been all my life, dear poached eggs in tomato sauce… on toast? You are so freaking good.

How much more perfect can this simple concept be? The rich tomato sauce, nurturing the egg-poached-heaven is a match made in food-perfection. Add the third factor, crispy grilled bread, and all of a sudden, this trilogy now becomes a great breakfast or brunch. Oh what the heck, make it for dinner. Add a salad on the side and you’ll be whimpering like I did and ask, “why haven’t I made this before?!”

The best part about this madness is that you can add so many other ingredients to it to hearty-it-up. I’ve seen versions with kale, chickpeas, and ground chicken. Do what ever you want to it because for now, it’s all yours to play with.

Poached Eggs in Tomato Sauce on Toast from WhiteOnRiceCouple.com

For me, the most important (and hardest) part is timing the egg so that it becomes the poached texture that you like. Walk away from the stove for to long too check email, and what you will have a is a firm, boiled-like, yolk center. Become too impatient and turn off the heat too soon and what you will have are egg whites that are too runny. So make it a few times to get a feel for how long it takes to make your poached eggs perfect.

Alas, I’m already hungry again as I write this post. I’ll have to make it again soon and maybe next time, I’ll just dive my toast (crusty end first) into the tomato sauce and kill the poached egg in one quick swoop. Yum. Yum. YUM.

enjoy!

dianePoached Eggs in Tomato Sauce on Toast from WhiteOnRiceCouple.com

Yield: 4 servings

Total Time: 30 min

The important part is timing the egg so that it becomes the poached texture that you like. Walk away from the stove for too long to check email, and what you will have a is a firm, boiled-like, yolk center. Become too impatient and turn off the heat too soon and what you will have are egg whites that are too runny. So make it a few times to get a feel for how long it takes to make your poached eggs perfect.

You can add so many other ingredients to it to hearty-it-up. I've seen versions with kale, chickpeas, and ground chicken.

two - 14 oz. cans of crushed tomatoes or your favorite tomato sauce4 large eggs3 Tablespoons butter1 small onion, minced3 cloves garlic, minced1 Tablespoon Worcestershire sauce1/4 teaspoon cumin1/2 teaspoon sugar1/4 cup chopped parsleyadditional salt and pepper to tastegrilled bread or toastHeat large saucepan on medium heat. Melt butter, then cook onions and garlic till soft.Add crushed tomatoes with juices (or tomato sauce), Worcestershire, cumin and sugar. Stir till everything is combined well. Bring the sauce to a low boil, then reduce heat to low.Stir in the parsley and simmer the sauce on low heat for about 10 minutes on low heat, stirring occasionally.Crack the eggs into the tomato sauce, then cover the pan. Poach the eggs in the sauce for about 5-8 minutes, or until the whites are set and the yolk is still runny.Spoon the egg and tomato sauce over toast. Or serve the egg and tomato sauce in a bowl and dip with the toast. Serve warm.

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Pok Pok preview #2: Khao Soi Kai

Rick_9781607742883_art_p216
Austin Bush © 2013

JJ Goode co-wrote Pok Pok with Andy Ricker. Bon Appétit’s recent nominee for a food-based Nobel Prize, JJ has worked on, both openly and clandestinely, several high-profile cookbooks. But I suspect that the Pok Pok book was, in many ways, not his usual assignment.

JJ flew to Thailand for the shoot — only his second time in the country — which was also seen an opportunity for him to get immersed in the food and observe the dishes being made firsthand. During our month up in Chiang Mai, he maintained a throne-like station in the corner of the kitchen:

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where he sat for hours each day, furiously taking notes and asking questions. When Andy cooked something, JJ was also furiously taking photos, videotaping, asking more questions and prodding Andy to weigh even the most minute ingredient and to explain his reasoning behind every single step.

By the end of the month, I suspect that Andy’s desire to kill me was only overshadowed by his desire to kill JJ.

But his insistence paid off, and the result of their collaboration is a cookbook that is not only clear and patient, but one that’s eminently readable, with a distinct voice and an engaging narrative. With the book due to be released at the end of this month (it’s currently available for pre-order here or here), I asked JJ a few questions about the process of putting it together.

-You’ve worked on quite a few cookbooks spanning quite a few concepts and cuisines. What makes this book different?

The biggest difference was in writing the recipes. Most of the books I work on are with chefs who create food, who come with dishes or interesting takes on classic dishes. Andy, however, does not create dishes. He tries to replicate dishes that he’s had in Thailand. Not only that, the food is totally unfamiliar to most of us. It was really fun to try to figure out a way to introduce the food to readers that wasn’t too filled with facts and dates. So instead of acting as an all-knowing authority or expert (a role in which, to his credit, he’s not entirely comfortable), he acts as a sort of tour guide, one who understands where you’re coming from, because he was once just like us: new to the country and to the food.

-Some of the dishes profiled in Pok Pok are relatively unknown, even here in Thailand. What were the challenges in writing a book about such an obscure cuisine?

The recipes were the big challenge, for sure. Again, he’s not creating food. He’s replicating it. He works really hard to do it with ingredients available in the U.S. and he wants to do it faithfully, so shortcuts or substitutions that change the proper flavor profile are a no go. The recipes have to provide a lot of extra details, because so many of the techniques and ingredients are unfamiliar. Most cookbooks tell you to “peel carrots” or “blend until smooth”; all of us can do that, no problem. In this book, however, we had to consider that people might not just know how to, say, get at the tender heart of lemongrass or to properly pound green papaya in a mortar for som tam (aka much more gently than I initially assumed).  Not only that, but once you get the recipes right, you also have to convince the reader of two seemingly contradictory things: that recreating real-deal Thai food is totally possible and doable at home, but that getting it right takes some real effort.

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-Based on your experiences cooking Thai food at home in New York City, can someone in the US really expect to be able to make all of the dishes in the book?

One hundred percent yes. Some dishes take more work than others. But every ingredient he calls for is available here, and we offer advice on how to find it. For the rare ingredients, like makhwen [prickly ash; a type of dried spice], he provides substitutions that don’t sacrifice flavor.

I’ve done a lot of shopping while working on this book. And I’m always shocked at how much is available, at Chinese and Southeast Asian markets mostly but also at farmers markets and even major supermarkets. For instance, Whole Foods (at least the one on Houston Street in Manhattan) sells not just lemongrass but fresh Thai chiles and fresh turmeric root! Then there are awesome online sources like Temple of Thai, which will ship you ingredients, even fresh stuff like green papaya, chiles, galangal, and hot basil.

And once you build up a pantry, the shopping trips become less frequent and the cooking gets easier and easier. Right now, my pantry has palm sugar and tamarind pulp and black and thin soy sauces and other stuff that will last forever. In my freezer, there’s frozen galangal, kaffir lime leaf, pandan leaf, fresh chiles, and cilantro roots. I barely have to leave the house to make some of the dishes in the book.

DSC_4330-Edit

-You chose khao soi as the recipe to feature here. Why? Any tips on making the dish?

It’s a dish I’ve made at home many times, even after the book was finished. It shocks me every time I cook it: I’m like, I can’t believe I made this! The key for the home cook is breaking the dish up into steps. You can pound the paste a few days before you want to serve it (or you can freeze it for months!). You can fry the noodles the day or two before. You can even make the curry a day or two before. So when your friends come over, all you really have to do is warm it up, boil the noodles, and accept the inevitable high-fives.

Khao Soi Kai/Northern Thai Curry Noodle Soup with Chicken

Reprinted with permission from Pok Pok by Andy Ricker with J.J. Goode, copyright © 2013. Published by Ten Speed Press, a division of Random House, Inc.

Makes 6 bowls (each a one-plate meal)

Curry paste
1 pod black cardamom (often labeled cha koh, tsao-ko or thao qua)
1 1/2 tablespoons coriander seeds
1/2 teaspoon cumin seeds
14 grams dried Mexican puya chilies (about 8), slit open, seeded and deveined
7 grams thinly sliced lemongrass (tender parts only), from about 1 large stalk
1 (7-gram) piece peeled fresh or frozen (not defrosted) galangal, thinly sliced against the grain
1 (14-gram) piece peeled ginger, thinly sliced against the grain
1 ounce peeled garlic cloves, halved lengthwise
4 ounces peeled Asian shallots, thinly sliced against the grain
1 tablespoon Kapi Kung (Homemade shrimp paste)

Curry
1 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 tablespoons turmeric powder
1/2 teaspoon mild Indian curry powder
2 tablespoons Thai thin soy sauce
3 ounces palm sugar, coarsely chopped
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
6 small skin-on chicken legs (about 2 1/2 pounds), separated into thighs and drumsticks
5 cups unsweetened coconut milk (preferably boxed)

To finish the dish
Vegetable oil for deep-frying
1 pound fresh or defrosted frozen uncooked thin, flat Chinese wheat noodles (sometimes called wonton noodles)
1 1/2 cups unsweetened coconut cream (preferably boxed), gently warmed

To serve alongside
About 1 cup drained, chopped (into bite-sized pieces) Thai pickled mustard greens (stems preferred for their crunch), soaked in water for 10 minutes and drained well
About 1 cup small (about 1/4-inch) wedges of peeled shallots, preferably Asian
6 small lime wedges (preferably Key limes)
About 1 cup very coarsely chopped cilantro (thin stems and leaves), lightly packed
Roasted chili paste
Thai fish sauce

Make the curry paste
Use a pestle or heavy pan to lightly whack the cardamom pod to break the shell. Pry it open, take out the seeds, and discard the shell. Combine the cardamom seeds in a small pan with the coriander and cumin, set the pan over low heat, and cook, stirring and tossing often, until the spices are very fragrant and the coriander seeds turn a shade or two darker, about 8 minutes. Let the spices cool slightly and pound them in a granite mortar (or grind them in a spice grinder) to a coarse powder. Scoop the powder into a bowl and set aside.

Combine the dried chiles in the mortar with the salt and pound firmly, scraping the mortar and stirring the mixture after about 3 minutes, until you have a fairly fine powder, about 5 minutes. Add the lemongrass and pound until you have a fairly smooth, slightly fibrous paste, about 2 minutes. Do the same with the galangal, then the ginger, then the garlic, and then half of the shallots, fully pounding each ingredient before moving on to the next. Pound in the dried spice mixture, then the rest of the shallots. Finally, pound in the shrimp paste until it’s fully incorporated, about 1 minute.

You’ll have about 10 tablespoons of paste. You can use it right away, or store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 1 week or in the freezer for up to 6 months. You’ll need 5 tablespoons of paste for 6 bowls of khao soi.

Make the curry
Heat the oil over medium-low heat in a large, heavy- bottomed pot until it shimmers, add 5 tablespoons of the curry paste and the turmeric powder and curry powder, and cook, breaking up the paste, then stirring frequently, until the paste smells very fragrant and loses the smell of raw garlic and shallots, about 8 minutes. Knowing when it’s done takes experience, but as long as you’re cooking at a low sizzle, the curry will taste great. Some of the paste might brown and stick to the pot, so occasionally scrape it to make sure it doesn’t burn.

Add the fish sauce, soy sauce, palm sugar, and salt to the pot, increase the heat to medium-low, and cook, stirring often and breaking up the sugar once it softens, until the sugar has more or less fully melted, about 2 minutes. Add the chicken, tossing to coat the meat in the liquid. Cook for about 2 minutes so the chicken can absorb the flavors a bit, then stir in the coconut milk.

Increase the heat to medium high. Bring the liquid to a simmer (don’t let it boil), then decrease the heat to maintain a gentle simmer. Cook, uncovered, stirring occasionally, until the meat comes easily from the bone but isn’t falling off, about 45 minutes. You’ll see droplets or even a layer of red oil on the surface. This is good. The broth will taste fairly salty and intense. Keep in mind that it will dilute slightly after you add the coconut cream later. You can keep the curry warm on the stove for up to 3 hours or in the fridge for up to 3 days. (It’ll get even better as the flavors meld and the meat soaks up some of the curry.) Bring it to a very gentle simmer right before serving to make sure the chicken is heated through.

Finish the dish
Pour enough oil into a wide medium pot to reach a depth of 2 inches and set the pot over medium-high heat. Heat the oil to 350°F (or test the temperature by dropping a piece of noodle into the oil; it should turn golden brown in about 20 seconds). Put 3 ounces of the noodles on a plate and gently toss them so there are no clumps. Fry them in 6 portions, turning over the nest of noodles once, just until the noodles are golden brown and crunchy, 20 to 45 seconds per batch. Transfer them to paper towels to drain. You can let them cool and store them for a day or two in an airtight container kept in a dry, cool place (not in the fridge).

When you’re nearly ready to serve the curry, bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil. Add the remaining noodles and cook, stirring occasionally, just until the noodles are fully tender (you’re not going for al dente here, but not mushy either), 2 to 3 minutes. Drain them well and divide them equally among 6 bowls.

To each bowl, add a thigh and drumstick, ladle on about 1 cup of the curry, spoon on 1/4 cup of the warm coconut cream, and top with a nest of fried noodles. Serve the bowls with a plate of pickled mustard greens, shallots, lime wedges, and cilantro; a bowl of the chile paste; and a bottle of fish sauce. Season your bowl and stir well before you dig in.


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Pok Pok preview #3: Laap Meuang

Rick_9781607742883_art_p109
Austin Bush © 2013

In late 2007, I was pointed in the direction of a New York Times piece on the dining scene in my hometown of Portland, Oregon. Among the restaurants highlighted was a place called Pok Pok. Unlike most restaurants in the US doing Thai food, Pok Pok wasn’t serving green curry with bell peppers or phad Thai with beef, but rather, stuff that Thai people actually eat: yam khai dao, hearty soups, obscure chili-based ‘dips’ and other rustic, regional Thai dishes. My interest was piqued, and I shot off an email to the restaurant’s chef/owner. He replied almost immediately, and to my surprise, was familiar with the very blog you’re reading now. He was coming to Thailand in a few months, and we arranged meet up.

Six years later, that guy and I are friends and collaborators.

I’m terribly excited for Andy’s success. Yet I dare say that his soon-to-be-released book, Pok Pok  (currently available for pre-order here or here), may endure longer than his restaurants. Simply put, unless you can read Thai, there’s no other comparable resource for regional Thai recipes. And best of all they’re good, real recipes: Andy learned them from talented home and professional chefs in Thailand, and from decades of eating and cooking across the country, and over the years has subsequently honed them in his restaurants. At this point he’s a pro at introducing obscure ingredients and dishes both to diners and to his staff, and it’s this unique sensibility and authority that he brings to the book. I recently asked Andy a few questions about the process of writing Pok Pok:

-Many of the recipes in Pok Pok can appear pretty time-consuming and/or involve obscure techniques and ingredients. At the same time it’s quite readable and has an engaging narrative flow. Did you approach it as a functional cookbook that people will actually cook from, or more as a reference (or perhaps even entertainment)?

Both; these days cookbooks need to be more than a volume of recipes, they also need to have a story and lots of pretty pictures to sell well. Having said that, it was really important to me that this be a working cookbook, something that you could get dirty.

-For those familiar with Thai food, a glance at the list of recipes alone seems to indicate that Pok Pok doesn’t pull any punches. In a general sense, what kind of allowances did you have to make for an American audience?

Very few. Basically, we left out recipes that had ingredients that are hard or impossible to find in the West.

-Are these Thai recipes or your recipes?

These are recipes I have learned over 20 years of traveling, eating and cooking in Thailand. Most are my attempt to make a version of the dish that would be acceptable to the folks who come from the region the dish originates in.

_DSC3269
Austin Bush © 2013

-Quite a few of the recipes have their origins in northern Thailand. What is it about this region’s food that appeals to you so much?

It’s my first true love when it comes to the food of Thailand. There is just something about the flavor combinations and style of cooking that appeals to me more than any other region’s.

-You chose to profile the recipe for northern-style laap. It’s also one of my favourite Thai dishes, but at its core it’s essentially just minced meat and spice. What is it that’s so special about this dish?

To me it is emblematic of the cuisine of northern Thailand. It is highly fetishized in the north, with variations in every province, city, town and even house to house. The way it is eaten, shared with lots of fresh herbs and vegetables along with sticky rice, often alongside beer or booze in a convivial atmosphere is at the core of of how Thai people eat: it’s not just what you eat, it’s how and (maybe most important) why you eat.

-Any tips for people who want to make it?

Have patience, try it more than once, and do not skip the fresh herbs and vegetables, nor the sticky rice; they are an essential part of the dish.

Laap Meuang/Northern Thai Minced Pork Salad

Reprinted with permission from Pok Pok by Andy Ricker with J.J. Goode, copyright © 2013. Published by Ten Speed Press, a division of Random House, Inc.

Serves 6 to 12 as part of a meal

Naam phrik laap (laap seasoning paste)
1 ounce stemmed dried Mexican puya chilies (about 12)
1 tablespoon makhwaen, black Sichuan peppercorns, or whole black peppercorns
1 tablespoon coriander seeds
1 teaspoon fennel seeds
1/2 teaspoon ground dried galangal
1/2 teaspoon ground dried lemongrass
1/2 teaspoon black peppercorns
1/4 teaspoon cumin seeds
1/8 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
4 cloves
2 dried Indonesian long peppers (called pippali in Indian and Malay markets, dippli in Thai markets, tie^u l?p in Vietnamese markets)
1 star anise
1 whole mace
1 cardamom pod, preferably the white, rounder Thai variety
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 ounce peeled garlic, halved lengthwise
2 ounces peeled Asian shallots, thinly sliced against the grain
1 tablespoon Kapi Kung (Homemade shrimp paste)

Img6536
Austin Bush © 2013

Offal
1 ounces pork small intestine, cut into a few pieces
2 ounces pork skin, cut into a few pieces
1 (2-ounce) piece pork liver
1 teaspoon Kapi Kung (Homemade shrimp paste)
1 (14-gram) piece unpeeled fresh or frozen (not defrosted) galangal, coarsely sliced
1 large stalk lemongrass, outer layer removed, halved crosswise, and lightly smashed with a pestle, pan, or flat part of a knife blade
3 1/2 cups water

Pork
1 large stalk lemongrass, outer layer removed, halved crosswise, and lightly smashed with a pestle, pan, or flat part of a knife blade
2 cups fresh or defrosted frozen raw pork blood
1 pound boneless pork loin, trimmed of any large fat deposits if necessary and cut against the grain into approximately 1/2-inch-thick slices

Img6470
Austin Bush © 2013

To prepare the laap for cooking
1/2 cup reserved offal cooking liquid
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
2 tablespoons thinly sliced green onions, lightly packed
2 tablespoons thinly sliced sawtooth herb, lightly packed
2 tablespoons coarsely chopped cilantro (thin stems and leaves), lightly packed
2 tablespoons coarsely chopped Vietnamese mint leaves, lightly packed
2 tablespoons fried shallots
1 tablespoon fried garlic

To serve the laap
2 tablespoons fried-shallot or fried-garlic oil
1 1/2 cups reserved offal cooking liquid
3 tablespoons thinly sliced green onions, lightly packed
3 tablespoons thinly sliced sawtooth herb, lightly packed
3 tablespoons coarsely chopped cilantro (thin stems and leaves), lightly packed
3 tablespoons coarsely chopped Vietnamese mint leaves, lightly packed
3 tablespoons fried shallots
3 tablespoon fried garlic
3 tablespoons very coarsely chopped (about 1/4-inch pieces) unseasoned pork cracklings, preferably with some meat attached

Make the naam phrik laap (laap seasoning paste)
Put the chiles in a small dry pan or wok, increase the heat to high to get the pan hot, then decrease the heat to low. Cook, stirring and flipping them frequently to make sure both sides of the chiles make contact with the hot pan, until the chiles are brittle and very dark brown (nearly black) all over, 15 to 20 minutes. Remove the chiles from the pan as they’re finished. (Discard any seeds that escape the chiles, because they’ll be burnt and bitter.) Set the chiles aside.

Combine the makhwen, coriander seeds, fennel seeds, ground galangal, ground lemongrass, black peppercorns, cumin seeds, nutmeg, cloves, long peppers, star anise, mace, and cardamom in a small pan, set the pan over low heat, and cook, stirring and tossing often, until they’re very fragrant, about 5 minutes. Turn off the heat and stir for another minute. Grind them in a spice grinder (or pound them in a granite mortar) to a fairly fine powder.

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Austin Bush © 2013

Combine the dried chiles and salt in a granite mortar and pound firmly, scraping the mortar and stirring the mixture once or twice, until you have a fairly fine powder, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and pound, occasionally stopping to scrape down the sides of the mortar, until you have a fairly smooth paste, about
2 minutes. Do the same with the shallots. Next, add the ground spice mixture and pound until it’s well incorporated into the paste, about 2 minutes. Finally, pound in the shrimp paste until it’s fully incorporated, about 30 seconds.

You’ll have about 1/2 cup of paste. You can use it right away, or store the paste in the fridge for up to 1 week or in the freezer for up to 6 months. It helps to freeze the paste in small portions. You’ll need about 6 tablespoons of paste for enough laap to serve 6 to 12 people.

Cook the offal
Combine the intestines, skin, liver, shrimp paste, galangal, lemongrass, and water in a small pot. Set the pot over high heat and bring the water to a strong simmer. Check the pork liver. Once it’s cooked through (firm and just barely pink in the center), transfer it to a cutting board. Decrease the heat to maintain a gentle but steady simmer, skimming off any surface scum.

Keep cooking until the skin is translucent and soft enough to easily slice, about 20 minutes. Transfer the intestines and skin to the cutting board with the liver and reserve 2 cups of the liquid. When they’re all cool enough to handle, slice the intestines and liver into small bite-size pieces. Slice the skin into thin 2-inch- long strips.

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Chop (“laap”) the pork
Clear your appointments for the next 45 minutes.

Combine the lemongrass and blood in a mixing bowl and use your hand to squeeze and squish the lemongrass stalk for about a minute. You’re helping to release the essence of the lemongrass, which tones down the flavor of the blood and keeps the blood liquid. Leave the lemongrass in the blood for now, but avoid it when you spoon out the blood later.

Put the pork slices on a solid wood chopping block or cutting board. Use a heavy knife or cleaver to chop the pork, lifting the knife off the block with each chop and working methodically from one side of the expanse of meat to the other, then working your way back. (How hard should you chop? Pretend you want to hack a medium-size carrot into two pieces with each chop. Rely on your wrist for motion and the weight of the knife for most of your power.) Every 15 seconds or so, use the knife to scoop up some of the meat and fold it back onto the rest. Make sure you’re not neglecting any spots.

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Once the meat is coarsely chopped, after about 5 minutes, drizzle on 2 tablespoons of the blood (leaving behind the lemongrass), and keep chopping and folding as before to incorporate the blood and to continue chopping the meat more and more finely. Keep at it, adding another 2 tablespoons of blood every 5 minutes but stopping once you’ve used a total of 1/2 cup, until the blood is completely incorporated (the meat will be a deep purple reminiscent of beets), and the meat is very finely minced (you’re shooting for a level several times finer than that of store-bought ground meat). After 15 minutes, you’ll have reached hamburger texture. Keep going. It requires about 30 to 40 minutes of chopping, depending on your facility for it.

Discard the rest of the blood. (Don’t worry, blood isn’t expensive.) Transfer the minced meat mixture to a bowl. You’ve just spent more time and expended more energy than most people do preparing and eating an entire meal, so it should go without saying that you don’t want to leave any of your hard-won mince on either the chopping block or your knife. Do, however, discard any waxy fat that might have collected on your knife blade.

Prepare the laap for cooking (“yam” the laap)
In a medium mixing bowl, stir together the 1/2 cup of reserved offal cooking liquid with the 1/2 teaspoon of salt and 5 to 7 tablespoons of the laap seasoning paste, depending on how intensely flavored you want the final dish to be, until they’re well mixed. Add all of the raw meat mixture and cooked offal, then stir gently but well. Add the salt, green onions, and herbs, stir well, then add the fried shallots and garlic and stir well.

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At this point, the average Northern Thai cook would taste the mixture and adjust the seasoning, adding salt (or less typically in the North, fish sauce) if it isn’t salty enough and more naam phrik laap if it is not spicy or intense enough. If you’re brave, go ahead. (If not, you can season it later, as it cooks.) Raw laap is delicious and rich. Northern Thai men of a certain generation would say it is superior to the cooked version. And I agree.

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Austin Bush © 2013

Cook and serve the laap
Heat a wok or large pan over high heat, add the oil, and swirl it in the wok to coat the sides. When the oil begins to smoke lightly, add the meat mixture, stir well, then add 11/2 cups of the reserved offal cooking liquid.

Cook, stirring constantly and breaking up the meat to ensure that it doesn’t clump, until the meat is cooked, the liquid begins to simmer vigorously, and the mix- ture looks slightly soupy as the meat gives up its water, about 5 minutes. Taste and season with more salt or laap seasoning paste.

Keep cooking at a vigorous simmer, stirring often, so the flavors have a chance to meld, about 3 minutes more.
Spoon the laap onto a large plate or platter in a low mound. There should be some liquid pooling at the edges. Let it cool to just above room temperature, then sprinkle on the green onions, herbs, fried shallots and garlic, and pork cracklings, and serve.

[Ricker suggests making a meal of laap by serving it with sticky rice and "...fresh herbs on the stem, such as Thai basil, sawtooth, cilantro, and Vietnamese mint (rau ram); and raw vegetables, such as wedges of cabbage, quartered Thai apple eggplant, cucumber spears, and 3-inch lengths of long bean."]


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