Showing posts with label brown sugar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brown sugar. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 02, 2013

Hawaiian Shoyu Chicken



Ingredients:

5 lbs chicken thighs, chicken hindquarters, or chicken drummettes/wings rinsed and drained.

Sauce:
2 cups Aloha shoyu
1 cup water
1 cup brown sugar
1-2 inch fresh ginger root halved and pounded.
6-8 cloves garlic smashed and peeled.  Rough chopped.
1 medium round white or yellow onion peeled and sliced    
4-6 star anise
2 bay leaves
1/2 cup shaoxing rice wine or straight whiskey
1/2 tsp Chinese five spice
Dash fresh cracked black pepper to taste
2 Tbsp vegetable or peanut oil


Garnish:
1 bunch sliced green onion
1 bunch cilantro or chinese parsley chopped
Sesame oil


Cooking Instructions:


In a big stockpot, heat oil til hot and add herbs of ginger, garlic, bay leaves,

round onion, and star anise to release aromatics.  Be careful not to burn them, 

then add shoyu, water, and whiskey.  Bring to a boil then add rinsed and drained

chicken pieces.  Bring to a boil then drop heat down to a simmer for 20 minutes.

 Slowly stir chicken and add sugar and black pepper and let simmer another 20

minutes.  Turn off heat and let stand for 15-30 minutes in pot.

Bring chicken to serving dish or pan.  Add garnish herbs over chicken and

drizzle sesame oil over chicken then add shoyu sauce from pot over chicken.

Serve with white or brown rice with Hawaiian Macaroni Salad!

So onolicious let's kaukau now!!

Enjoy!!

Serves 6











Monday, September 26, 2005

Homemade Teriyaki BBQ Shortribs just like L&L Drive Inn!























Ok it's been a while since my last posting. Here is a recipe for everybody on the Mainland USA and beyond that miss local Hawaiian style plate lunches and for those who never had a local Hawaiian plate lunch. Especially the ones made famous from L&L Hawaiian Barbecue which is Hawaii's #1 fast food takeout restaurant franchise with 100 locations from the west to east coast and growing.
This recipe is a clone of their Hawaiian Barbecue Shortribs. After careful trial and error and googling the net for similar recipes, my recipe could put you in the plate lunch business. lol :) Please note that this recipe is for 10-15 people for a potluck bbq cookout party. You may soak a little meat at a time and cook the amount of meat at your preference or whenever you crave Hawaiian plate lunch bbq. You may grill the shortribs over charcoal or propane but the way L&L does it is just on a flat metal griddle or grill with oil. Grilling the meat over a flame is ok if you prefer it that way but oil in a saute' pan keeps the meat moist and tender and a little bit greasy! mmmmmmmmm!! lol :D

Teriyaki BBQ Shortribs

Teriyaki Sauce/Marinade Ingredients:
1 5lb tray USDA Choice beef shortribs thinly sliced
6 cups hot water
3 cups brown sugar
6 cups Aloha Shoyu Lower Salt Soy Sauce
1/4 cup shaoxing wine or straight whiskey
8 large fresh garlic cloves, minced fine
2-3 inch knuckle of fresh ginger root, peeled and minced fine
1 can frozen orange juice concentrate
Canola oil for pan frying
Yields: 1 gallon of sauce

Procedure:
Water must be hot enough to dissolve sugar so heat water in a large saucepan or pot. Combine water, sugar, and soy sauce. Stir to blend with wire whisk until sugar is completely dissolved.
Add the ginger, garlic, wine, and orange juice. Stir to blend well.
Transfer to a container and store in fridge.
Add shortribs to clean container for marinating. Cover with teriyaki sauce/marinade and soak overnight for about 4-8 hours. The sauce isn't overly salty or sweet. The longer the marinade process the more tender, sweeter, and saltier the meat will become. About 6 hours or so is just right.
Cooking Procedure:
Add 1 Tbsp canola oil to a large frying or saute' pan over medium high heat.
When the pan begins to smoke, place marinated shortrib pieces into the pan. Let it cook until seared and lightly charred on both sides.
Serve with steamed hot white rice and macaroni salad just like L&L. :)
Enjoy!!! :D

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Char Siu (Cantonese Sweet BBQ Roast Pork)





Well it's about time... After enjoying all the other food blogs on Char Siu I thought it was about time for my turn to share.

I have always loved char siu since I was a kid. We'd go to Honolulu's chinatown and buy vegetables, fish, and meat but the thing I looked forward too most was sampling a taste from one of the char siu vendor stalls. My grandpa would speak to the chinese man and ask for $5.00 worth of char siu. The vendor would then take the meat off of the meat hook hangers and weigh them on the scale carefully. My grandpa would then nod "yes" when the guy would ask, "you like chop?". While the meat was being chopped on the big round wooden cutting board, the vendor would offer a piece of char siu to me, my brother and my grandpa then wrapping the meat in pink butcher paper. The pink paper would always symbolize char siu or crispy skin roast pork to me and my siblings. Ahhh those were the wonder years. I learned to cook at 7 years of age cooking our daily steamed rice on the stovetop. At that time we didn't have a electric rice cooker. I learned the old fashion style measuring the rice with the lines on my finger to get the perfect rice water level.

My greatest influence in cooking was from my grandpa. He was known in the filipino community in the 1950's-1970's as a great cook of huge filipino weddings, baptisms, and birthday parties. Grandpa would take me with him to these parties and I would watch and help him prep and cook for the given occasion. Grandpa owned about 6 huge carbon steel woks and cooked on empty 50 gallon steel barrels cut in half. There was no propane tanks so it was the old fashion outdoor wood fires. He'd use the Hawaiian keawe wood tree logs which they say is actually mesquite wood. The heat for the woks had to be regulated by moving the keawe charcoal around. Either taking some out or adding in to the flame. Grandpa would stir-fry huge batches of meat, cook steamed rice, boil vegetables, deep fry and steam all simultaneously in the six woks. Now thinking back to that time it was actually an amazing feat to juggle cooking in all those woks. Today I have 3 of the surviving woks from Grandpa in storage. I have graduated to hi-pressure propane gas burners now. A very big difference in cooking times. My late Grandpa would have been thrilled to use gas. :)

The first time I made char siu was probably in the early 80's while I was learning to cook chinese from reading cookbooks and watching TV cooking shows. The first IBM PC had just come out and the internet was in its infancy with only the military, government, and major universities utilizing it. Also there was no such thing as the Food Network! I would go to our local regional public library and I would stay for hours reading about ethnic cuisine especially chinese. I watched lots of cooking shows with master chinese chefs like Martin Yan and Titus Chan. I also watched a lot of the late Jeff Smith of Frugal Gourmet fame. He was a pleasure to watch. Before graduating from high school I had the pleasure to meet Martin Yan at a cooking demo and book signing at Liberty House in the Ala Moana Shopping Center. I met master chef Larry Chu of San Francisco in another book signing and cooking demonstration at the centerstage also in Ala Moana Center.

My family thought I was going to become a chef. I thought so too but the computer bug bit me instead and my interests went toward electronics and automotive technology in high school. I have always wanted to own my own restaurant, to feed people and have them enjoy my creations. Well enough said for now. Here is my recipe for Cantonese Sweet BBQ Roast Pork or Char Siu. Other blog sites spell it Char Siew and to me it makes it feel more exotic and ono when looking at the beautiful shots by fellow food bloggers.

Here is my basic recipe for Char Siu.

Ingredients:

10 lbs of boneless pork shoulder butt

Marinade:

1 Tbsp Hawaiian salt or coarse sea/kosher salt
1/4 cup soy sauce
4 slices ginger, crushed, peeled and minced fine
1/4 cup warmed honey or maltose
1/4 cup white or brown sugar. Splenda may be used as a substitute.
2 cloves garlic, crushed, peeled and minced fine
1/4 cup Shaoxing wine or straight whiskey
2 Tbsp Chinese 5-spice powder
1/4 cup oyster flavor sauce
1 Tbsp paste red food coloring
1 Tbsp MSG optional

Instructions:

Cut pork lengthwise into 2 x 8 inch long strips.
Mix marinade well in large metal bowl.
Add pork to marinade and mix through. Use thongs or very clean hands.
Marinate for 8-12 hrs overnight in refrigerator, turning occasionally.
Preheat oven to 400° F. & place a roasting pan filled w/ 1/2 inch of water.
Place pork pieces flat on a wire rack set high in oven. You may even rig your own meat hooks from metal hangers to hang in your oven.
Roast 30 minutes. Turn over & brushed with warmed honey or maltose. Continue to roast 15 min. Turn & brush again with honey. Roast another 15 minutes. Meat should have nicely charred edges with strands of glistening honey oozing and dripping.

To serve, slice finely thin across the grain. Char siu strip slabs may be frozen for convenience with other great chinese dishes.

In my kitchen I have a Ronco Showtime Rotisserie Grill and BBQ to make my char siu and other roast meats I love to make. The rotisserie is self-basting so just brushing the honey on the meat is easy while its turning. The meat is cooked faster and more evenly. My char siu took exactly 1 hour and 30 minutes to cook with about 15 minutes to rest before slicing.

Maltose is the secret ingredient Chinese restaurants use instead of honey and plain sugar. I had a hard time finding maltose syrup but finally found it in chinatown. After finding it I didn't even buy it because I had already bought a huge bottle of honey from Sam's Club. Some char siu recipes call for hoisin or sweet bean sauce, I find it unnecessary since I already have enough sweeteners added. I sometimes substitute sugar or brown sugar with Splenda then add the honey for the nice sticky glaze. It works out fine and nobody knows the difference. I make a big batch of sauce and store them away in jelly jars in the fridge. The consistency of the sauce is exactly like Lum's Char-Siu Sauce. Hmmm... I could sell my own and make a bundle!! :D




















Here is some of the pics of the heavenly sweet roasted pork!!! :9










Marinaded Char Siu in Showtime Rotisserie Grill!










Close up of raw meat...










The rotisserie work horse of my kitchen!










Meat about 1 hour later...










Meat about 1 hour 20 minutes...










Close up of meat starting to char.










1 hour 30 minutes done! I didn't want to go longer. Last time I did, some parts got over cooked and burnt because of the sugar content.










Finished product in plastic bin.
















Sliced Char Siu on plate... Onolicious!!! :9 mmmmmm!!!

Get my rice ready!!

Enjoy! :)

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Filipino Style Spaghetti!!



Ingredients:

Minced garlic
Minced onions
Minced red bell pepper (optional)
Tomato sauce/spaghetti sauce or just use Ragu Spaghetti Sauce
Lean ground beef
Hotdogs, cut in little pieces. Use red jumbo hotdogs
Jufran banana sauce (see the nice picture above)
Cooked spaghetti about 1 lb "al dente"
Shredded cheddar cheese
Sugar or Splenda
1 can Pineapple chunks and juice if you want to be hardcore!
1 block Butter to make the sauce smooth.

Saute minced garlic, onions.
Brown ground beef, season with salt and pepper.
Add hotdogs.
Add jufran.
Add spaghetti sauce, sugar, pineapple chunks and juice.
Add more cheese and butter to make it richer!
Cook on simmer low heat for about 45 minutes.

Serve over cooked spaghetti, top with cheddar cheese.
Then mix it if you like... and also bake it!
Tastes even better the next day!!

Remember Filipino Style Spaghetti is supposed to be sweet and cheesy. The sauce isn't sour like Italian. Eat and enjoy this carbo load fave of the pinoys! lol :)
Adjust the recipe to your liking. The more spaghetti and sauce and you can feed an army! lol :D
No need go Jolibee!! Make your own espeghetti! :9 mmmmmmmmmm