Showing posts with label weeknight meal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weeknight meal. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 July 2014

Chinese snow Peas and Chicken Minced Stir Fry



Stir fry is one of the best weeknight meals to make, you can cook everything from start to finish within 30 minutes. This is one of the recipes I head to if I am at lost with what to cook for the night, and it's so so good with rice.







Snow Peas and Chicken minced Stir fry

Serves: 3-4 people with rice
Cooking time: 20-30 minutes

What you would need 

200 grams of snow peas, trimmed and halved 
250 grams of chicken minced 
50 grams of dried shiitake mushrooms,rehydrated and sliced
3 cloves of garlic, minced 
1 bird eye chilli (optional), sliced
2 cm piece of ginger, finely sliced 
Splash of vegetable oil
salt and pepper 

Sauce 
1 tablespoon of soya sauce 
1 tablespoon of Chinese rice wine 
1 tablespoon oyster sauce 
1 teaspoon sesame oil
1 teaspoon sugar 
splash of fish sauce 
2 teaspoon of cornflour, mixed with cold water(to thicken sauce)


1. Premix the sauce in a bowl excludes the cornflour

2. Heat half the vegetable oil in the wok, stir fry the chicken minced season with salt and pepper till lightly golden brown. Remove from the wok and set aside.

3. Heat the remaining oil in the wok and toss in the ginger, garlic and chilli. Fry for 1 minutes or until garlic is lightly golden but not brown. 

4. Add the snow peas and fry for 2 minutes, return the chicken minced to the wok and add the rehydrated shiitake mushrooms, stir to combine. Add the sauce mixture and stir fry for another 2 minutes.

5. Add cornflour and stir till sauce thickens. Dish up and served with rice.

Thursday, 19 June 2014

Braised Beef Stew with Red Wine and Vegetables



As most of you guys know, winter well and thoroughly in Sydney.  The wintery weather always make me crave for something soupy, something hearty. Something that you can feel the warm glow in your tummy after eating and beef stew never seems to fail. 

One-pot dishes are my favourite for winter, you just leave them on the stove stew for hours. The longer they stew the better they are. Leftover you ask? Oooh. They taste so good.

Don't ask me why or how but stews that are left overnight somehow always seems to develop a more hearty and rich taste profile. So give me leftover any day! 


I always have some sort of alcohol in my stew be it red wine, sherry or port. Cause I believe it adds a depth of favour that's essential for the dish. Whatever I have in the pantry, so each time I make these babies they come out tasting slightly different. Good still but different. But you are not comfortable with alcohol, feel free to omit it, just remember to use a good stock.

I experimented with browning the meat and not browning the meat and i found that not browning makes the stew taste, how should I put this, taste cleaner. I know it sound weird, but give it a go and you would understand what I mean.  



You can choose to have this with mash potatoes or even put a puff pastry on top and pop in the oven for a few minutes. The latter is my favourite, writing about this is making me hungry for stew again! 








Braised Beef Stew with Red Wine and Vegetables

Serves:4-6          
Cooking time: 3 hours

1 tablespoon olive oil
1.5kg of Chuck beef, cut into large bite-size cubes
2 tablespoon of flour 
2 onions, roughly diced
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 large rosemary sprig, coarsely chopped
1 large thyme sprig, coarsely chopped
1 tin of crushed tomatoes 
1 1/4 cups red wine

3 cup beef stock or chicken stock
3 celery sticks, peeled, cut into 3cm pieces
3 carrot, peeled, cut into 3cm  pieces

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

4-6 Potatoes if you are making mash 
4-6 Sheets of puff pastry 

1. In a large pot or heavy casserole pot, heat the oil over medium-high hear until very hot. Sprinkle the beef with flour and season well with salt and pepper. Add onions, rosemary and thyme fry until translucence and fragrant. Add the beef and cook for 3mins until beef is slightly browned and cook off the floury taste.

2. To the same pot add the carrots and celery to the pot and cook for 1 min. Add wine, stirring to scrape up any browned bits on the bottom of the pot. Simmer for about 8 mins, or until wine has reduced by about half. 

3. Add the stock and tin of crushed tomato, bring to a gentle simmer. Cooking liquid should be jus covering the beef. Decrease the heat to medium-low. Cover slightly and cook. The stew should be simmering very very gently, stirring occasionally for about 2.5 hours. Cook until beef is tender enough to cut with a fork.

4. If there is too much cooking liquid left, use a slotted spoon, transfer the beef and vegetable into a bowl. Boil the cooking liquid over high heat for about 20 minutes, or until it is reduced by half. Return the beef and vegetable and heat until they are heated through.

5. Spoon the beef stew into 4 serving bowls,  served with mashed potatoes. If you like the puff pastry option , cover the serving bowl with puff pastry and baked according to the instruction on the package.

*Note: The stew can be made up to 1 day ahead, cooled and refrigerated. Rewarm the stew, covered, over medium heat.