Although Japan is not currently on any sort of lockdown or strict order to stay indoors, I think we are all starting to realize that we need to take matters into our own hands and self-isolate as much as possible. For those of you who are dealing with your first "crisis" in Japan, I wanted to provide a little bit of a guide to help you make sure you're as prepared as you can be, for spending time indoors.
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●Curry
- Meats: Pork, Beef, or Chicken. Whatever you have.
- Vegetables: Potato, Onion, Carrot, Mushrooms, Spinach/Komatsuna/Kale, Asparagus, Sweet Potato, Pumpkin (Kabocha), Eggplant, Okura, Renkon (Lotus Root)
Quick Tutorial on How To Make Curry @ 4:53
●Instant Miso (for reference, this is the kind I usually buy https://www.amanofd.jp/amano/shop/goods/index.html?ggcd=B4741&cid=miso)
You can buy any kind, some instant miso comes with a paste, which some people may prefer but I like the freeze-dried type. It is said that certain nutrients are preserved when you freeze-dry vegetables, so I think they're a bit healthier.
●Cook Do (for reference: https://www.ajinomoto.co.jp/cookdo/lineup/)
These are usually found in the Chinese seasoning section of your Japanese supermarket (as the majority of the boxes are Chinese.) Similar simple-meal kits with Japanese recipes are sometimes stocked in the same aisle.
●Canned Tomatoes
- Good for curries (add one can of diced tomatoes to your curry to make it more tangy and acidic)
- Pasta (sautee veggies, garlic, onion, and bacon, add your diced tomatoes, stew, taste, and season, add to pasta)
- Soups (lightly sautee your favorite soup veggies in oil and garlic, pour diced tomatoes into the pot, then fill the empty tomato can with water and add one cube of soup stock of your choice, throw in your desired seasonings, bring to a boil and simmer. you can add rice, quinoa, gains, shredded chicken to make it a hearty meal.)
- Stews (for beef, lamb, and pork, I cut my vegetables large, season them first with cumin, curry spice, cinnamon, salt, pepper, paprika, etc to make a fragrant mix, then add tomatoes and water, and simmer until liquid has dissolved and the mixture is thick enough to be a stew.)
- Salsa (Use half a can, pulse in a mixer with red onion, cilantro, garlic, green pepper, red chiles, lemon, salt, pepper, and a bit of cumin for a more tex-mex flavor)
●Spices:
I didn't show them in the video but I actually prefer S&B's herb packets, you can see what they look like here:
https://www.sbotodoke.com/shop/c/cB51210/
Most supermarkets have them, and they are very versatile, cheap, and easy to use.
●Yakiniku Sauce:
You can choose any kind you like! When in doubt, the popular Yakiniku chain "Gyukaku" has a sauce in the supermarket that's pretty good. Use this on "grilled" and "charred" meats. Tastes great over rice. Make a "Yakiniku Bowl" with charred carrots, cabbage, onion, green pepper, and slices of beef or pork.
●Ponzu: I prefer Yuzu, but you won't be missing out on too much if they don't stock it. Regular Ponzu works. Use this on steamed veggies with lighter flavors, or in sautees with Asian veggies (bok choy with garlic topped with ponzu, baked white fish with salt and ponzu, or daikon and pork sauteed with ponzu is great!) Can be mixed with olive oil, salt, and pepper to make a salad dressing too!
●Veggies - Try to pick a few greens, and then one veggie of each color. I try to plan for one raw-green (for salads), one wilting-green (for soups and stir-fries), and one firm-green (for baking grilling) per shop.
Green: Lettuce, Baby Leaf, Spinach, Bok Choy, Komatsuna, Asparagus, Zucchini, Green Pepper, Kale, Cucumber, Cabbage, Avocado
Purple: Red Onion, Eggplant, Purple Turnip, Satsumaimo (Sweet Potato), Purple Cabbage (great for adding color).
Red: Tomatoes, Red Peppers, Beets, Beni Daikon (Red Radish)
Orange: Carrot, Pumpkin, Orange Pepper, Orange/Yellow Fruit Tomatoes
White: Daikon, Turnip, Cauliflower, Renkon (Lotus Root), Bean Sprouts, Potato, Onion, Sato-Imo, Yama-Imo,
Brown: Gobo (burdock root), Mushroom
●Buy & Freeze:
- A loaf of bread or two (Japanese bread tends to come in slices instead of loaves so buy accordingly.)
- Meats (Chicken Breasts are the most versatile AND cost-effective IMO.)
- Frozen Seafood (S&B has a paella seasoning! if you can find it, this is a nice way to utilize rice, veggies, and seafood)
- Frozen naughty snacks like pizza, dorayaki, frozen fried rice, emergency instant meals, etc can go here too.
●Pasta and Rice are good to have, but if you don't have a rice cooker in your apartment, you can buy a few microwavable instant-packs from your supermarket or convenience store and store those instead.
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Let me know what you'd add! I'm out of space and can't write more :'(
dried fish snacks chinese 在 Spice N' Pans Youtube 的最佳解答
Bak Kwa is one of the snacks that we Singaporeans always must have at home for Chinese New Year. I dunno when this became a tradition but i guess it's because bak kwa is expensive so usually families will only eat this during festive period.
Bak kwa, also known as rou4 gan1 in Chinese, is a savoury and sweet dried meat product that is similar to jerky. In Singapore, it is usually made of pork. Bak kwa can also be found in Malaysia.
If you like to buy a Magimix food processor, head up to Robinsons, Tangs, Metro, Takashimaya, OG, BHG etc in Singapore to get one for yourself or your loved ones. Those staying in Malaysia can also get the pan from most leading departmental stores in the country. If you are not staying in Singapore or Malaysia, you can also get Magimix from Amazon. Here's the link for your easy convenience: https://amzn.to/2CDHlV8. Happy shopping!
Hope you can recreate this easy recipe in the comfort of your home. Thanks for dropping by our channel.
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Ingredients:
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600g of minced pork collar butt
100g of sugar
1.5 tablespoons of oyster sauce
1 tablespoon of fish sauce
2 tablespoon of Chinese cooking wine (Shaoxing huatiao wine)
1 teaspoon of dark soy sauce
3 tablespoons of honey
Honey water(mix 1 tbsp of honey w/ 1 tbsp of water)
Marinate for at least 4 hours in fridge
Bake at 160C for 15 mins
Let meat cool after baking. Cut into small pieces then baste one side with honey water.
Bake again at 230C for 2 mins using top heat - this time place the meat side baste with honey water up. Then remove, baste the other side of the pork with honey water and bake again at 230C for another 2 mins.
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If you like this recipe, you might like these too:
Singapore Chicken Satay
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xe9_ihBpvbI
Singapore Satay Sauce
https://youtu.be/uxQw4-8W8xc
Disclaimer:
Spice N' Pans is not related to these products and cannot guarantee the quality of the products in the links provided. Links are provided here for your convenience. We can only stand by the brands of the products we used in the video and we highly recommend you to buy them. Even then, preference can be subjective. Please buy at your own risk. Some of the links provided here may be affiliated. These links are important as they help to fund this channel so that we can continue to give you more recipes. Cheers!
dried fish snacks chinese 在 GoGreenGoLean - Susana Tsang Youtube 的最讚貼文
Hello my subbies!
I'm bacckkk with a cooking video because you guys seem to enjoy watching me cook ? (definitely did not see that coming).
So tonight I'm making dinner, chicken and rice for the bae, fish for me and lastly vegetables to share.
Ingredients:
- Fish
- Chicken drumsticks/thigh
- Lettuce (I used 2 whole ones)
- Ginger
- Garlic
- Chilli Flakes
- Black Pepper
- Dried Shrimp
Chicken Marinade For Bae
- Low Sodium Soy Sauce
- Low Sodium Oyster Sauce
- Pepper
- Garlic
- Ginger
- Chilli Flakes
- Sesame Oil
Cook on high heat then pour in some water and cook off in med-low heat
Steamed Fish
- Fish
- Chilli Flakes
- Black Pepper
- Ginger
- Garlic
De-gut and clean the fish, lay and stuff with ginger/garlic slices
Steam for approximately 15 mins on med-low heat (highly dependent on the size of your fish!! So watch it)
Sautéed Lettuce (Chinese Style)
- Lettuce (I used 2 whole ones)
- Ginger
- Garlic
- Chilli Flakes
- Black Pepper
- Dried Shrimp
Lightly brown the garlic and ginger, then pour in the dried shrimp (along with the liquid), cook off for a minute then add in the lettuce!
Season to your taste!
Hope you guys enjoy!
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