buttermilk pancake mix
Almond Buckwheat Pancakes
grilling beef ribs
Baby Back Barbecue Ribs
vegetarian recipes
Caeser Salad
sugar free cookies
Chewy Peanut Butter Cookies
rotisserie chicken
Chicken Tequila
mixer bread
Pizza Bread
sausage appetizer
Appetizer Meatballs
healthy vegetables
Fruit Salad

Search Example: Roasted Baby Potatoes    

Chicken  |  Beef  |  Appetizer  |  Fish  |  Dessert

Recipe - Information: Egg Dishes

Categories: Help, Information: Egg Dishes
Ingredients:

No ingredients; help file

SO VERSATILE are the Chinese with eggs that whole cookbooks have been
written on the subject. Eggs are cooked in all possible ways: steamed,
stirred or scrambled, panfried, deepfried, boiled, poached, simmered (in
soy sauce, gravies and tea); or used in omelets, souffles and egg puddings.

Eggs are not usually cooked alone but combined with other ingredients.
These may be meat or seafood and vegetables. (If already cooked, the
ingredients are cut up fine and combined directly with the eggs. If raw,
they're usually stirfried first.)

Fried eggs, stirred eggs and omelets are all cooked quickly over high
heat. In the case of fried eggs, the oil or lard must be nearly smoking.
This makes for egg whites that are crisp and crusty; for yolks that retain
their moistness. Stirred or scrambled eggs are cooked over mediumhigh
heat. They are pushed about quickly with a spatula while the pan is tilted
so that most of the liquid egg comes directly in contact with the hot oil.
This puffs up the eggs, makes them light and airy. Stirred eggs are removed
from the stove while still quite moist: they cook to the right consistency
in their own heat by the time they reach the table. Chinese omelets cooked
overhigh heat are characteristically browned on the outside, soft on the
inside, with their ingredients or fillings quickly heated through.

The original or classic egg foo yung is a light, airy souffle made with
egg whites and minced chicken breast. (Its name derives from both a white
hibiscus flower and a Chinese bird whose colors resemble pure white jade.)
The foo yung more familiar to Westerners is a hearty combination of whole
eggs, shredded meat or seafood, and vegetables, cooked together as a thick,
solid pancake. There are two versions of the more familiar variety:
homestyle and restaurantstyle. Homestyle egg foo yung is panfried
either as one large omelet or as several small ones. The restaurant version
is deepfried, with the mixture dropped from a ladle into the hot oil to
make a nnmber of small omelets.

Boiled eggs (invariably hardboiled) are eaten with a soy sauce dip or
else potstewed afterwardthat is, shelled and then simmered in the sauce
of redcooked meat or poultry until permeated with the savory flavors of
these sauces. Poached eggs are used as garnishes for steamed rice and
soups.

Steamed custardlike eggs have their smooth blandness set off by
ingredients that are highly flavored or salty.

NOTE: Leftover egg whites can be used in souffles, chicken velvet, bird's
nest soup and various batters for deepfried foods. Leftover yolks can be
used in omelets, egg puddings, as egg threads; or poached directly in hot
soup as a garnish.

From The Thousand Recipe Chinese Cookbook, ISBN 0517658704. Downloaded
from Glen's MM Recipe Archive, http://www.erols.com/hosey.


Information: Egg Dishes recipe makes 1 Servings



Prepare a great meal for the whole family with this recipe!




Popular Recipes:


Wow! Cooking is easy!