Tag: hoisin sauce

Baked Asian Chicken Wings

Baked Asian Chicken Wings

by Pam on April 17, 2014

My whole family loves Asian food so I have been experimenting more with it. I saw these wings on Up Close & Tasty[1] that looked terrific. I adapted it a bit by baking them in the oven instead of grilling. They turned out terrific. The sauce was sticky and flavorful and we all, kids included, loved these wings. There was not a single wing left on the serving plate – I love that! These wings paired nicely with the Spicy Green Beans and Sesame Noodles with Sautéed Shiitake Mushrooms and Kale.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with tin foil.

Make the hoisin sauce – click here for the recipe.[2]

Stir together in a bowl the hoisin sauce, soy sauce, honey, sesame oil, vegetable oil, and cayenne.

If the chicken wings need to be cut into pieces – click this link for instructions.[3] Season both sides of wings with sea salt, freshly cracked pepper, and garlic powder, to taste then place them on a baking sheet in a single layer, skin side up.

Place into the oven and roast for 40 minutes. Remove wings from the oven and place them in a large bowl to toss with the sauce. Place the sauced wings back on the baking sheet and into the oven for 5 minutes. Serve and enjoy.



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Baked Asian Chicken Wings




Yield: 4

Cook Time: 45 min.



Ingredients:

1 tbsp hoisin sauce (click recipe link up above)
1 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp honey
1 tsp sesame oil
1 tsp vegetable oil
1 garlic clove, minced
Dash cayenne
2 lb chicken wings
Sea salt and freshly cracked pepper, to taste
Garlic powder, to taste
Sesame seeds, toasted
2 green onions, thinly sliced

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with tin foil.

Make the hoisin sauce – click the link up above for the recipe.

Stir together in a bowl the hoisin sauce, soy sauce, honey, sesame oil, vegetable oil, and cayenne.

If the chicken wings need to be cut into pieces – click this link for instructions. Season both sides of wings with sea salt, freshly cracked pepper, and garlic powder, to taste then place them on a baking sheet in a single layer, skin side up.

Place into the oven and roast for 40 minutes. Remove wings from the oven and place them in a large bowl to toss with the sauce. Place the sauced wings back on the baking sheet and into the oven for 5 minutes. Serve and enjoy.



Adapted recipe and photos by For the Love of Cooking.net
Original recipe by Up Close & Tasty

References

  1. ^ Up Close & Tasty (upcloseandtasty.com)
  2. ^ Hoisin Sauce (www.gordon-ramsay-recipe.com)
  3. ^ click this link for instructions. (parentables.howstuffworks.com)
  4. ^ Print Recipe (www.gordon-ramsay-recipe.com)
  5. ^ Save to ZipList Recipe Box (www.gordon-ramsay-recipe.com)

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Duck and pancake (sort of)

I spent almost my entire first pregnancy worried about how much harder and worse it would be to be pregnant with a toddler in tow.

Of course, I was right to be worried. It’s absolutely horrible. I have also got much fatter and stiffer quicker this time and am out of breath and feel queasy and faint at any sort of physical effort. Bending down makes me feel dizzy and lightheaded and if I pick Kitty up I feel like my bum is going to fall off.

But in some ways, being pregnant the second time around is easier. No-one pushes you around. No-one lectures you about how shit/marvellous having a baby is. Basically no-one really cares and it is great.

I also now know how long nine months is. It’s a fucking long time. So you might as well take your coat and shoes off and arrange all your stuff around you nicely and get comfy because you’re going to be in this state for a flipping age. My friend AC compares it with flying long-haul, economy. Just when you think you can’t stand it any more, it turns out you’re only in Dubai and you’ve got another huge slog left.

Mistake #1 that I am not going to make with this pregnancy is to look like a horrible slob. Last time around I just slopped around in disgusting denim jeggings and filthy Converse and ugly jersey tops, thinking that money spent on maternity jeans, or tights or new shoes or underwear or anything was a waste.

No fear. Not this time. I went out and bought, on the advice of my wardrobe guru Becky B, a pair of J Brand black skinny jeans for £185, which the nice girl in the shop, (Trilogy in Hampstead), sent off to get turned into a pair of maternity jeans. Then after you’ve had the baby, they turn them BACK into a pair of normal jeans! Let no-one say I am not thrifty. Although frankly they are probably going to be so knackered by next May that won’t be much left to turn back into normal jeans.

And I’ve got a dress from Isabella Oliver, and ankle boots and a Zara tweed jacket with leather sleeves (I know! I AM fashion!), and some smart harem trousers and THREE new pairs of maternity tights and loads of these t-shirts from Top Shop, which are an absolute life saver.

Giles hates all of it. But as Becky B said as she saw me hesitating over the harem trousers “Don’t ask yourself whether Giles will like it. He will only think you look nice if your arse and boobs are all hanging out.” Becky B is Scottish via Blackheath and I always do whatever she tells me.

But I am, basically, doing all this for Giles. Because the person who really suffers during my pregnancy frump-outs is him. But it’s not for him, him – if that makes sense – because he is a bit wary of all these rather @ManRepeller new clothes, but for other people, looking at him. I don’t want people in restaurants to go “Oh look, there’s Giles Coren and there’s his…. really frumpy… dowdy…. fat… wife… urgh,” I want them to say “Wow Giles must be really cool to be married to someone who wears harem pants!!!”

Mistake #2 I am going to try not to make this time is to get incredibly fat. I’ve already put on a stone, in the first trimester sugar/carb/neausea feeding frenzy – but I am wondering if all the eating I did last time in my 2nd and 3rd trimesters wasn’t done out of self-pity and boredom, rather than actual hunger. I don’t mean going on any sort of diet, I just mean when I’ve got a raging thirst I might try to quench it with sparkling water first, rather than a giant thing of Coca Cola.

(I once read in a pregnancy magazine, by the way, a thing that said “By five months, your jeans might be feeling a little tight.” A LITTLE TIGHT??! Fucking hell, in both pregnancies I was in stretchy waistbands at EIGHT WEEKS. I wanted to set fire to the magazine but it would have made a terrible smell.)

What gives me hope is that I’m not as in to full Sunday roasts and lots of carbs as I was first time. All I really want is sushi. Sashimi, nigiri, california rolls, spicy tuna rolls. Maybe a seaweed salad? Cheeky little hot sake? It’s all I can think about. Large bits of roast meat, creamy things, sticky, rich things all turn me green.

But that’s still what my husband likes to eat, so I bought for his dinner the other day some duck breast. And then it sat in the fridge for days as I found excuse after excuse not to cook it because I just couldn’t face it.

Then I came up with an idea, which was to use it in a sort of ersatz duck-and-pancake thing. I didn’t hold out much hope for this as I only had fajita wraps for the pancake and a bottle of bought hoisin sauce for the sauce and duck breasts for the duck rather than leg.

But it basically worked. Which makes me think that if you could actually get some duck pancake pancakes from somewhere (one of you smartarses must know where?) you’d be really sorted.

I also discovered a very good way of cooking duck breasts, which gives you a really crispy skin and doesn’t fill the kitchen with blue smoke.

1 Score the skin of the duck in a diamond pattern and then place on some kind of grill or grid suspended over the skin then pour 1/2 a kettle-full of boiling water over them.

2 Dry the duck very well and then put in the fridge to dry out completely – all day is great but 45 minutes will make a difference.

3 When you are ready to cook the duck, season with salt and pepper and five spice (if you want) and then put in a dry frying pan skin side down.You don’t need any oil or anything because the duck is going to leak a lot of grease. If you have a skillet that will go in the oven use this. Cook this very gently for about 10 minutes, until the skin is brown and the pan is full of duck fat. Then turn the duck over and cook the bottom for 4 mins.

4 Now put in a 180C oven for 8 mins for medium and 10 for well done.

And that’s it. Eat with your sliced up cucumber and spring onion with plum or hoisin sauce on whatever pancake type thing you can lay your hands on. Close your eyes and you could almost be in Chinatown.

 

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Hoisin Sauce

Hoisin Sauce

by Pam on April 14, 2014

I was making an Asian themed dinner and realized the marinade for the chicken required hoisin sauce and of course I didn’t have any. Thankfully, the site I found the marinade recipe on, Up Close & Tasty[1], also had a hoisin sauce recipe[2] which I happened to have all of the ingredients for! It’s not a traditional hoisin sauce but it’s delicious just the same. This sauce can be used in marinades, sauces, vinaigrettes, and dips. Store the extra sauce in a sealed container in the refrigerator.

Combine the soy sauce, peanut butter, honey, rice vinegar, minced garlic, sesame oil, and sriracha together in a bowl. Whisk until well combined. Set aside for 10-15 minutes before using to allow the flavors to combine.

Store remaining sauce in a sealed container in the refrigerator.



Print[3]

Save[4]



Hoisin Sauce




Yield: 3/4 cup

Total Time: 5 min.



Ingredients:

4 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp creamy peanut butter
1 tbsp honey
2 tsp seasoned rice vinegar
1 garlic clove, minced
2 tsp sesame oil
1/4 tsp sriracha (more if desired)

Directions:

Combine the soy sauce, peanut butter, honey, rice vinegar, minced garlic, sesame oil, and sriracha together in a bowl. Whisk until well combined. Set aside for 10-15 minutes before using to allow the flavors to combine.

Store remaining sauce in a sealed container in the refrigerator.



Adapted recipe and photos by For the Love of Cooking.net
Original recipe by Up Close & Tasty

References

  1. ^ Up Close & Tasty (upcloseandtasty.com)
  2. ^ hoisin sauce recipe (upcloseandtasty.com)
  3. ^ Print Recipe (www.gordon-ramsay-recipe.com)
  4. ^ Save to ZipList Recipe Box (www.gordon-ramsay-recipe.com)

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