The secret to getting flaky layers is all in the folding. Try out this easy Chinese scallion pancake method along with my go-to dipping sauce.
Read More(Photo by The Crepes of Wrath)
Have you had a chance to check out the Appetite for China cooking videos yet?
A few months ago I started putting together short 'n sweet cooking videos set to music. As a visual learner myself, I personally think cooking videos are great for easing into new or somewhat challenging techniques.
So far there is a small but growing collection. And just this month I did a fun collaboration with Sydney from The Crepes of Wrath, making Sichuan Wontons, in a video shot and edited by her talented husband Kramer. (It really was fun. In the picture above, I'm just seriously concentrating on mixing the ingredients together.) Since my other videos are shot on an iPhone with natural lighting, it was great to see how a fellow food blogger goes about the process differently.
Read MoreThis is one of my favorite Sichuan dishes of all time, with a deliciously spicy sauce that is positively addictive.
Read MoreFor the fourth video in my Chinese cooking video series, I decided to make a family recipe that's also one of the most popular in my new book The Chinese Takeout Cookbook. It's a quick fun video set to American folksy music, a nod to the Chinese cooking culture here in the U.S. dating from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Enjoy!
Along with wonton noodle soup, char siu (Chinese barbecued pork or Chinese roast pork) is the Cantonese people's greatest contribution to mankind. Really, who can resist slices of half-fatty, half-lean roast pork, crisp and dripping with caramelized juices? (I first posted this recipe for Chinese Barbecued Pork back in February 2009 and it became an instant hit.)
You know those enticing pieces of pork dangling in Chinatown restaurant windows? When you get char siu at a Cantonese restaurant, it will most likely be red from a little food dye, used to attract customers. A small amount of dye isn't harmful (think of all those M&Ms and Skittles you've eaten). But sometimes a restaurant will go overboard. My mother still has nightmares of glowing magenta char siu from Boston's Chinatown.
Read MoreLove egg drop soup? For the second video in the new Appetite for China Cooking Videos series, I decided to update this post with a fun visual guide on making egg drop soup with tomatoes. Let me know what you think!
I first made tomato egg drop soup in 2008 while living in Beijing during the Summer Olympics. At the time, I was in desperate need of something light and healthy for lunch to go with a salad, to counteract all the fried food I had been eating at the Olympic venues. And what could be more healthy and comforting at the same time than tomatoes and eggs in homemade chicken broth? Over the years I've tweaked the recipe bit by bit and come up with this revised version.
There are few ingredients in this soup, so it's important that the chicken stock (or vegetable stock) be homemade. (You can use either Chinese or Western homemade stock.) If you must use store-bought, try to find organic stock or broth that does not have too many preservatives in the label.
Read MoreChinese marbled tea eggs are super easy to make at home and the aromas of tea, cinnamon, and star anise are intoxicating.
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