Archive for November, 2008

Can anyone suggest a chicken recipe?

Saturday, November 29th, 2008
Frustrated


My youth group is having a banquet as a fundraiser. We’ll be serving chicken and baked potatoes, but I’m not sure what kind of chicken recipe would work best with baked potatoes. Any suggestions?

Powered by Yahoo Answers

Tags: ,

Awesome Sweet and Sour Chicken Recipes

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008
Dede Purneim


I am glad to have shared with you this secret recipe to cooking awesome sweet and sour chicken. Now you can have it to enjoy at home. It’s easy and authentic!

When I wouldn’t be home for dinner, I usually cook it. My children ate it and said it was really good and always ask me to make it again. You’ll be amazingly surprised!

Sweet and sour chicken recipe #1:

Ingredients:

1 tbsp olive oil

2 chicken thighs, bone and skin left on

1/2 onion, chopped

1/2 sweet potato, peeled and chopped

1 tsp grated fresh ginger

1/2 red chili, chopped

2 tbsp white wine

1 tbsp white wine vinegar

2 tbsp tomato ketchup

2 tsp tomato purée

1 tbsp clear honey

1 tsp soy sauce

1/4 green pepper, chopped

55g/2oz fresh pineapple, peeled and cut into bite-sized pieces

3-4 fresh chives, to garnish

Directions:



Heat the olive oil in a non-stick frying pan and add the chicken. Fry the chicken, skin-side down until crisp and golden-brown.

Add the onion, sweet potato, grated ginger and chili to the pan and fry for two minutes.

Add the white wine and white wine vinegar to the pan and simmer until the liquid has reduced to half its volume.

Add the tomato ketchup, tomato purée, honey and soy sauce to the pan. Cover the pan with a lid and simmer for 15 minutes, or until the chicken is completely cooked through.

Remove the lid for the last five minutes of cooking time and add the pepper and pineapple.

To serve, pile on a serving plate and garnish with chives.



Sweet and sour chicken recipe #2:

Ingredients:

2 tbsp Ketchup

1 cup water

1/2 cup white vinegar

1 tbsp soy sauce

1 cup brown sugar packed

1 1/2 lbs chicken breasts Boneless skinless, cubed!

2 tbsp. Cornstarch

2 tbsp water

Directions:



Combine first 5 ingredients in the crock and mix up. Add chicken and cook on low for 6-8 hours OR on high for 3-4 hours.

Combine cornstarch and water in small bowl. Stir into slow cooker. Cook on high setting for about 15-20 min. stirring often, until thickened.

Serve over rice or noodles.





Tags: ,

Successful Microwave Cooking is a Convenience Way to Cook

Saturday, November 22nd, 2008
rupinder.nh2009


Microwave cooking is a convenience way to cook, however knowing the right technique makes you a better microwave chef.

Successful cooking with Microwave oven need to understand the followings points:

Moist, not fat – Choose recipes that are cooked by moisture – steaming, boiling, braising, blanching. For more details www.thanks-giving-recipes.com .Foods that require fat and oil for a change of flavor are not as successful, deep-frying is impossible at all.Browning food – Foods do not brown readily in the microwave oven. You may find the following tips on browning useful.

1. Fat absorbs heat and if you remove foil covering fatty portions of a meat, these will crisp and brown lightly.

2. Baste with oil to give a better crisp to roast. Oil increase the temperature of the meat surface.

3. A browning dish, preheated, will brown food beautifully if you press food down, turning so that all surfaces make contact with the base of the dish.

4. Soy sauce, the ubiquitous flavourer of Chinese recipes, is an excellent browning agent.

Wok aroma – In traditionally stir-fried dishes, sauces are sprinkled round the side of the hot wok. In the microwave oven, we put in the sauce first, giving time for heat to be absorbed and hence release the aroma.

Small – The microwave oven is best therefore for family meals and when entertaining small groups.

Arrange foods – Whether cooking, defrosting or freezing, food should be arranged to take advantage of the principles of microwave cooking. Remember the followings:

1. Microwave activity is greater at the edges, less at the centre. Pieces of food should be placed at the edge of any container. If they are equal size, thicker portions should be placed at the edge or at corners of square containers where they will cook more quickly than the thinner portions in the centre. For more details www.300-chicken-recipe.com.Cook large quantities of food evenly by stopping the cooking cycle halfway, and stirring so that food at edges exchange places with food in the centre.

2. Food cooks quicker in hot spots, so place the container or larger portions of meat in this place.

3. Single layer of food cook evenly. A large lump cooks at the edge first. So freeze in single layers and do not overlap food if you can help it.

4. Raise large portions of roast on a rack for more even distribution of heat. When meat I heated, fat melts to the bottom, and this area will absorb more heat.

Cover – Covering the food will prevent drying of some dishes. The most common cover is cling or plastic wrap. As pressure is build up within a completely enclosed container, however, it is necessary to cover loosely, or leave a gap through which steam my escape.

Shielding food – These part must be shielded with foil to prevent overcooking and drying out. Ensure that foil does not touch the sides of the oven.

Food skin – Food that has a skin or membrane such as liver, tomato and fish, if they are to be left whole, should be pierce or slit, to leave a steam vent.



Tags: ,

Carolina Barbecue Recipe?

Saturday, November 15th, 2008
K T


On an a recent trip to Raliegh, NC I fell in love with Carolina barbeque. Now, I’m looking for a good recipe for the barbeque so that I can make it at now that I’m back home. Also if anyone has a coleslaw recipe that compliments the barbeque I would like to get that too.

Powered by Yahoo Answers

Tags: ,

Would anyone know the recipe for the barbecue served at the University of the Philippines’ Beach House?

Thursday, November 13th, 2008
Strawberry Squeeze


The Beach House is located behind the Main Library, just off of the Sunken Garden. It’s been more than a decade since I graduated, but I’ve never quite forgotten how good their barbecue was. I’m also based overseas now, so chances of eating there are slim. Would like to try and make it at home. Would very much appreciate a similar recipe. =)

Powered by Yahoo Answers

Tags: ,