Chinese BBQ Pork Recipe - Char Siu | Chinese Recipe
Chinese BBQ pork is loved the world over, and it's not hard to make at home! With some key ingredients and a couple of technique, it might even be better than buying, actually, it probably will be :)
Once done, you can slice and have it with rice, noodles, use it in a sandwich or a steamed bun. Or just have it straight up!
Other Recipes That Use Red Bean Curd:
Thai Sukiyaki (Suki Nam):
Yen Ta Fo Pink Noodle Soup:
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About Pai:
Pailin “Pai” Chongchitnant is the author of the Hot Thai Kitchen cookbook, co-host of a Canadian TV series One World Kitchen on Gusto TV, and creator and host of the YouTube channel Pailin's Kitchen.
Pai was born and raised in southern Thailand where she spent much of her playtime in the kitchen. She traveled to Canada to study Nutritional Sciences at the University of British Columbia, and was later trained as a chef at Le Cordon Bleu culinary school in San Francisco.
After working in both Western and Thai professional kitchens, she decided that her passion really lies in educating and empowering others to cook at home via YouTube videos, her cookbook, and cooking classes. She currently lives in Vancouver, and goes to Thailand every year to visit her family. Visit her at
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萝卜焖排骨❤️Braised Pork Ribs with Daikon (White Radish) (简单家常菜 | 非常开胃下饭 | Radish and Pork Ribs Stew)
Braised Pork Ribs with Daikon (White Radish), simple and delicious ❤️. Use ginger, garlic, star anise, bay leaves and other ingredients to braise the ribs. The ribs are stewed so soft, fragrant but not greasy, very yummy. When braising the ribs, add the Daikon (White Radish). While the Daikon releases its own sweetness, it can also absorb the taste of the sauce. The Daikon is sweet, soft and tasty. The soup, mixed with cooked rice, SUPER appetizing!
Simple, delicious and healthy, please try it!
***Please turn on closed captions***
萝卜焖排骨,又简单又美味❤️。用姜、蒜、八角、香叶等材料去焖排骨。把排骨焖得酥烂,香而不腻,很惹味。焖排骨的时候,加入白萝卜。白萝卜释放出自身的清甜味的同时,又能吸入酱汁的味道。清甜的白萝卜,焖得又软又入味。那汤汁,用来拌饭,特别开胃下饭!
用最家常的食材,简简单单地,也能烹饪出这道美食,记得要尝试一下呀!
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Ingredients:
***The weight is just for reference, don't need to follow exactly***
Pork ribs 550 g
Daikon (White Radish) 900 g
Ginger 4 slices
Garlic 5 cloves
Rock sugar 15 g
Star anise 1~2
Bay leaf 2~3
Light soy sauce 1 tablespoon
Oyster sauce 1.5 tablespoon
Cooking wine 2 tablespoon
Some salt to taste
Some oil, chopped green onion
Music: Invisible Beauty - Aakash Gandhi
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萝卜炆排骨,萝卜烧排骨,排骨焖萝卜,白萝卜焖排骨,萝卜炖排骨
Easy big beef stew and roasted garlic mashed potatoes
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Brian Lagerstrom's beef bourguignon recipe that inspired me on this one:
***RECIPE, SERVES EIGHT***
5 pounds thick-cut beef chuck roast (or 4 pounds boneless short ribs)
1 pound carrots
2-3 celery stalks
1 14 oz (400g) bag of frozen peeled pearl onions
5-6 garlic cloves
1/2 oz (14g, two standard packets) unflavored gelatin
red wine (I used about half a bottle)
stock or water (about as much as the wine)
Worcestershire or soy sauce or fish sauce or some such (and/or a couple stock cubes)
tomato paste (buy the stuff in a tube, if you can)
balsamic vinegar
flour (I used about half a cup, 60g)
fresh herbs for garnish (I used the leaves from the celery)
salt
pepper
oil
For the mash...
1 whole head of garlic
5 pounds potatoes (I like a mixture of floury and waxy)
butter (I used a whole pound / 454g, but you could use far less)
milk
salt
pepper
Take a deep roasting pan (at least 9x13 in / 23-33 cm), put it in the oven, and turn on the broiler/grill. While the pan heats up, trim as much of the large, white bands of inter-muscular fat out of the chuck as possible. (No need to trim anything if using boneless short ribs.) Cut the meat into very large chunks, keeping in mind they'll shrink more than half while cooking. Season the meat generously with salt & pepper, and toss it in a thin coating of oil.
Take the hot roasting pan out of the oven and dump in the meat, trying to spread it all into a single layer across the bottom. Put the pan back under the broiler and let the meat brown for about 10 minutes — watch it carefully to make sure nothing burns. Pull the pan out and stir in enough flour to generously coat the meat (I used about half a cup / 60g). Put the pan back under the broiler and let the flour brown for a few minutes. Lay a squeeze or two or tomato paste on top and let that brown for a minute.
Turn off the broiler, take the pan back out, pour in enough wine to come 1/3 of the way up the meat. Pour in enough stock or water so that the liquid comes 2/3 of the way up the meat. Throw in a big glug of Worcestershire or soy sauce or some such, and maybe a couple stock cubes if you used plain water (really not necessary, though). Stir everything up, cover the pan tightly with foil and cook in the oven at 275ºF/135ºC until the meat is almost as soft as you want it, which took me four hours.
For the roasted garlic mash, trim the tips off of all the cloves on a head of garlic, coat it in oil, wrap it in foil and put it in the oven with the meat. At such a low temperature, it should take hours to go soft and golden, so put it in soon after you get the meat going.
While you're waiting you can peel the carrots (or not) and cut them and the celery into large bite-size chunks, and crush and peel 5-6 garlic cloves.
When the beef is almost as fork-tender as you want it, put the carrots, celery and frozen onions in the pan. Get them spread into an even layer and try to get them stirred in with the beef and sauce, but don't stir so hard that you break the beef apart. It's fine if the veg is kinda sitting on top for now. Re-cover the pan with foil, put it back in the oven and cook until the vegetables are as tender as you want them, 1-2 hours.
While you wait, you can peel your potatoes for the mash (I peel floury baking potatoes for mash but I leave the skins of waxy potatoes on), cut them into big chunks and boil them until you can very easily pierce them with a fork, about 20 minutes. Drain out the water, and combine the potatoes in the still-hot pot with the butter, a bunch of pepper, a little splash of milk to start with, and a big pinch of salt to start with. Take the roasted garlic bulb and squeeze its golden guts into the potatoes. Mash or whip the potatoes until they're as smooth as you want them and then taste. Add more salt if needed, and stir in enough additional milk to get you the texture you want, keeping in mind it will stiffen as it cools to eating temperature. Cover and keep warm on a low burner until dinner.
Empty the gelatin packets into a little cup or bowl and stir in just enough cold water to get it dissolved — it'll thicken up (bloom) rapidly.
Take the roasting pan out of the oven when the vegetables are as soft as you want them. Taste the sauce and add more salt and pepper if needed (it should taste a little too salty on its own). I like to add a glug of balsamic vinegar at this point. Drop the bloomed gelatin into the pan in dollops. Use a spatula to gently fold all the ingredients together without breaking up the soft beef chunks. It's ok if the sauce isn't totally homogenous yet.
Put the pan back in the oven uncovered, turn on the broiler and brown the top, which took me 10 minutes. Serve the stew over mash, spoon over extra sauce and garnish with herbs.
Irish Pork Stew Recipe - Pork Stewed with Guinness Beer and Vegetable - St. Patrick's Day Recipe
Learn how to make Irish Pork Stew! Go to for the ingredient amounts, extra information, and many, many more video recipes! I hope you enjoy this easy Irish Pork Stew Recipe!
Huge Mistakes Everyone Makes When Cooking Beef Stew
When the winds start getting chilly and the leaves begin to turn, it's best to warm the soul with a hearty beef stew. Besides warming your body up for the cold months, a well-made beef stew is also packed with healthy carbs, protein, and lots of veggies.
Even though it's called beef stew, a proper pot will actually have more vegetables than meat, and it’s one of those dishes that will trick you into consuming more vegetables. Even the most carnivorous of eaters will not complain about a hearty and rich beef stew in front of them.
So, to keep your beef stew hearty, here are huge mistakes that you will want to avoid the next time you make a pot.
#BeefStew #Cooking #Tips
Using the wrong meat | 0:00
Not searing the meat | 0:51
Not using aromatics | 1:53
Using the wrong liquid | 2:41
Overly thick stew | 3:46
Not skimming the fat | 4:45
Not adding acid | 5:33
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Lamb Stew | Jacques Pépin Cooking At Home | KQED
If you're looking for a winter recipe to take the chill off, nothing beats a nice hearty stew. Jacques Pepin's stew recipe uses lamb breast, chopped vegetables, and fresh herbs. Delicious and inexpensive!
Cut the lamb breast into strips and remove the fat. Brown in a large pot on high heat for 20 to 30 minutes total. When it browns a bit, reduce heat and partially cover for remaining time. Pour out the fat. Stir in one coarsely chopped onion, 4 cloves of crushed garlic, and 1 1/2 tablespoons of flour. Add 2 cups of water, thyme, and bay leaves, bring to a boil and cook for 5 - 10 minutes. Add chopped carrots, turnip, potatoes, salt and pepper. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and cook for 30 minutes.
What you'll need:
Lamb breast, one onion (chopped coarsely), 4 cloves of crushed garlic, 1 1/2 tablespoons of all-purpose flour, 2 cups water, fresh thyme, 2 bay leaves, 2 carrots, one turnip, two peeled potatoes, salt & pepper, 1/2 cup frozen peas.
Jacques Pépin Cooking At Home
Episode 130: Lamb stew
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About Jacques Pépin Cooking At Home:
Jacques Pépin Cooking At Home features short recipe videos that transform readily-available ingredients into exciting new dishes, perfect for newly-anointed home cooks and seasoned chefs alike. Presented by the Jacques Pépin Foundation, an organization dedicated to enriching lives and strengthening communities through the power of culinary education.