STIR FRY CHICKEN NOODLES | CHICKEN STIR FRY WITH NOODLES | CHICKEN CHOW MEIN
Stir Fry Chicken Noodles | Chicken Stir Fry With Noodles | Chicken Chow Mein | Chicken Noodles | Stir Fry Noodles | Chicken Stir Fry | Chicken Noodles Recipe | Chicken Chow Mein Recipe | Chicken Fried Noodles Recipe
Ingredients for Stir Fry Chicken Noodles:
(Tsp-Teaspoon; Tbsp-Tablespoon)
- Boneless Chicken , sliced into thin flattish 2” strips- 250 gms
- Noodles, 150 gms pack, sufficient for 2 persons
Chicken pieces to be marinated with:
- Salt-1/2 tsp
- Pepper powder- 1/2 tsp (preferably White Pepper Powder)
- Soy sauce- 1 tsp
- Vinegar- 1 tsp
- Honey- 1 tsp
- Garlic, grated- 2-3 cloves (1 tsp)
Veggies:
- Broccoli florets- 1.5 cups (100 gms)
- Carrots, julienned- 1.5 cups (75 gms)
- Red Pepper, julienned- 1.5 cups (75 gms)
- Spring Onion/Scallions whites, chopped -2 tbsp (around 3 spring onions)
- Spring Onion greens, thick chopped for garnish- 3
Other Ingredients:
- Garlic, chopped- 2 tsp
- Ginger, chopped- 1 tsp
- Refined Oil-2 tbsp
- Salt for seasoning- 1/4 tsp or to taste
- Pepper Powder- 1/4 tsp or to taste
Sauces:
- Dark Soy Sauce- 2 tsp
- Oyster Sauce- 2 tsp
- Red Chilli Sauce- 3 tsp
Preparation-
- Slice the boneless chicken fillets into 2” flattish strips.
- Grate 2-3 garlic cloves to give a teaspoon of garlic.
- Fine chop the peeled garlic cloves and the ginger.
- Take out the broccoli florets and julienne the carrots & red pepper.
- Chop the white and green portion of spring onions/scallions.
- Marinate the chicken strips with the items specified. Mix and set aside for around 20-30 mins.
To boil the noodles, follow the instructions on the packet.
OR
- For 150 gm noodles, heat 1.5 litres of water in a pan on high heat till it comes to a boil.
- Add the noodles and stir it lightly for it to open up.
- Boil it for 2-3 mins, should not be soft but “al dente”.
- Drain it in a colander and wash it with cold water to stop the cooking.
- Add 1 tsp of oil and mix it well to coat the boiled noodles so that they don’t stick.
- Set it aside.
Process:
- Heat 1.5 tbsp oil in a wok.
- Add the marinated chicken and stir fry on high heat for around 4 mins till the chicken pieces are browned. Remove from oil and set aside.
- Add 1/2 tbsp oil to the same wok and heat it.
- Now add the chopped garlic and ginger & stir fry on medium heat for 15 secs.
- Add the chopped spring onion whites and stir fry on medium heat for another 15 secs.
- Now add the julienned carrots and broccoli florets, give a mix and season with a pinch of salt and pepper powder. Stir fry on high heat for 1 min.
- Add the julienned red pepper, mix and stir fry on high heat for around 2 mins till the vegetables are cooked but still crunchy and retain the color.
- Now add the fried chicken and give a mix on medium heat for 1 min.
- Now add the boiled noodles and mix it well with the vegetables.
- Add all the sauces and salt & pepper for seasoning and mix it well on high heat.
- Stir-fry and toss on high heat for 2 mins till the noodles are well coated with the sauces.
- Garnish with spring onion greens and serve hot.
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Chinese Pork Stir Fry Recipe - Chow Mein Noodles Choi Cabbage Ginger
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Asian cuisine styles can be broken down into several tiny regional styles that have rooted the peoples and cultures of those regions. The major types can be roughly defined as East Asian with its origins in Imperial China and now encompassing modern Japan and the Korean peninsula; Southeast Asian which encompasses Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Viet Nam, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and the Philippines; South Asian states that are made up of India, Burma, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Pakistan as well as several other countries in this region of the continent; Central Asian and Middle Eastern.
Asian cuisine most often refers to East Asian (Chinese, Japanese, and Korean), Southeast Asian cuisine and South Asian cuisine. In much of Asia, the term does not include the country's native cuisines. For example, in Hong Kong and mainland China, Asian cuisine is a general umbrella term for Japanese cuisine, Korean cuisine, Filipino cuisine, Thai cuisine, Vietnamese cuisine, Malaysian and Singaporean cuisine and Indonesian cuisine; but Chinese cuisine and Indian cuisine are excluded.The term Asian cuisine might also be used to address the eating establishments that offer wide array of Asian dishes without rigid cuisine boundaries; such as selling satay, gyoza or lumpia for appetizer, som tam, rojak or gado-gado for salad, offering chicken teriyaki, nasi goreng or beef rendang as main course, tom yam and laksa as soup, and cendol or ogura ice for dessert. In modern fusion cuisine, the term Asian cuisine might refer to the culinary exploration of cross-cultural Asian cuisine traditions. For example combining the culinary elements of Vietnam and Japanese, Thai and Malay, or Indonesian and Chinese.
Japanese cuisine is the food—ingredients, preparation and way of eating—of Japan. The traditional food of Japan is based on rice with miso soup and other dishes, each in its own utensil, with an emphasis on seasonal ingredients. The side dishes often consist of fish, pickled vegetables, and vegetables cooked in broth. Fish is common in the traditional cuisine. It is often grilled. Fish may be served raw as sashimi or in sushi. Seafood and vegetables are also deep-fried in a light batter as tempura.
Apart from rice, staples include noodles, such as soba and udon. Japan has many simmered dishes such as fish products in broth called oden, or beef in sukiyaki and nikujaga. Foreign food, in particular Chinese food in the form of noodles in soup called ramen and fried dumplings, gyoza, and western food such as curry and hamburger steaks are commonly found in Japan. Historically, the Japanese shunned meat, but with the modernization of Japan in the 1860s, meat-based dishes such as tonkatsu became common.
Chinese cuisine includes styles originating from the diverse regions of China, plus styles of Chinese people in other parts of the world. The history of Chinese cuisine in China stretches back for thousands of years and has changed from period to period and in each region according to climate, imperial fashions, and local preferences. Over time, techniques and ingredients from the cuisines of other cultures were integrated into the cuisine of the Chinese peoples due both to imperial expansion and from the trade with nearby regions in pre-modern times as well as from Europe and the New World in the modern period.
Styles and tastes also varied by class, region, and ethnic background. This led to an unparallelled range of ingredients, techniques, dishes and eating styles in what could be called Chinese food, leading Chinese to pride themselves on eating a wide variety of foods while remaining true to the spirit and traditions of Chinese food culture.
Thai cuisine is the national cuisine of Thailand. Blending elements of several Southeast Asian traditions, Thai cooking places emphasis on lightly prepared dishes with strong aromatic components. The spiciness of Thai cuisine is well known. As with other Asian cuisines, balance, detail and variety are of great significance to Thai chefs. Thai food is known for its balance of three to four fundamental taste senses in each dish or the overall meal: sour, sweet, salty, and bitter.
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JUICY MEATBALLS PORK AND BEEF | MEATBALLS RECIPE
HOW TO MAKE DELICIOUS EASY JUICY PORK AND BEEF MEATBALLS PERFECT MEATBALLS RECIPE FOR THAT SUNDAY LUNCH OR DINNER.
50g Leftover bread or fresh bread
Sauce
1/2 of a Medium onion
400g Tomato purée
1/2 tsp Black pepper
Salt
1 Cup of water
1/2 Cube of beef or chicken stock or 1 tsp powder form
2 tsp Parmesan cheese
40g Red wine
2 1/2 tbsp Olive oil
Mince Mixture
300g Ground beef
150g Ground pork
1 tbsp Parsley
1 tbsp Parmesan cheese
1 Medium clove of minced garlic
1 tsp Black pepper
Salt
1 Whole egg
METHOD
-Chop the onion and set aside.
-In a pan heat olive oil on medium-low.
-Add the onion fry for 3 minutes, add wine allow the alcohol to evaporate 3 minutes.
-Add the tomato, black pepper, salt, mix well and then cover and cook for 10 minutes on low.
-In the meantime remove the edges from the bread, soak the bread in water for 5 minutes.
-Chop the parsley and chop the garlic set aside.
-In a big bowl put the pork and the beef mince.
-Squeeze out water from the bread, add to the mince, parsley, black pepper, salt, 1 tbsp Parmesan cheese , and the egg, mix thoroughly, make small meatballs put on a tray.
-To the sauce add water, stock, 2 tsp parmesan cheese, mix well and then add the meatballs cover and cook for 30minutes on medium - low heat.
-10 minutes into the cooking time, gently turn them, cover and cook for the remaining time, stir every now and then.
-They are ready, serve with pasta or with bread.
-Enjoy.
SPICE UP your weekly menu with this quick + easy Noodles Recipe
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LEARN HOW TO MAKE AN EASY AND QUICK SWEET + SPICY NOODLES RECIPE TODAY!
LAY HO LAY HO! If there's noodles, I'm game! Join me in this episode and learn how to make an easy, quick, and tasty sweet and spicy noodles stir fry recipe right at home! Let's begin
Ingredients:
4 pieces garlic
small piece ginger
5 sticks green onion
1 tbsp doubanjiang
1/2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp dark soy sauce
1 tsp black vinegar
splash toasted sesame oil
1/2 tbsp maple syrup
1/4 cup peanuts
1 tsp white sesame seeds
140g dry ramen noodles
2 tbsp avocado oil
1 tsp gochugaru
1 tsp crushed chili flakes
Directions:
1. Bring some water to boil for the noodles
2. Finely chop the garlic and ginger. Finely chop the green onions keeping the white and green parts separate
3. Make the stir fry sauce by combining together the doubanjiang, soy sauce, dark soy sauce, black vinegar, toasted sesame oil, and maple syrup
4. Heat up a nonstick pan to medium heat. Add the peanuts and white sesame seeds. Toast for 2-3min, then set aside
5. Boil the noodles for half the time to package instruction (in this case 2min). Gently loosen the noodles with chopsticks
6. Place the pan back to medium heat. Add the avocado oil followed by the garlic, ginger, and the white parts from the green onions. Sauté for about 1min
7. Add the gochugaru and crushed chili flakes. Sauté for another minute
8. Strain out the noodles and add to the pan followed by the stir fry sauce. Add the green onions, toasted peanuts, and sesame seeds but save some for garnish
9. Sauté for a couple of minutes, then plate the noodles. Garnish with the remaining peanuts, sesame seeds, and green onion
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Hong Kong born Canadian, Wil Yeung is an international photographer, filmmaker, entrepreneur, violinist, and YouTube chef. He immigrated to Canada when he was a young boy carrying with him his ability to speak Cantonese and some broken English. Much of his culinary aspirations stem from his background in the visual and musical art spaces. Whether you're plant based or plant based curious, Wil believes that learning how to make food can really change your life and of those around you.
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