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Cooking Techniques
Stir-frying
Stir-frying is the classic Chinese cooking method; quick
cook over high heat in a small amount of oil, toss and turn
the food when it cooks. In stir-frying, the food should always
be in motion. Spread it around the pan or up the sides of
the wok, then toss it together again in the center and repeat.
This method allows meats to stay juicy and flavorful, vegetables
to come out tender-crisp.
There
are variations, of course, but the basic pattern for many
Chinese dishes is to pre-heat the pan or wok ( a drop of water
will sizzle when it's hot enough), add the oil and heat it,
stir- fry the meat, remove it, stir-fry the vegetables, return
the meat to the pan, add sauce and seasonings, thicken the
sauce and serve. Since stir -frying is a last-minute operation,
don's plan one more than two stir -fry dishes in one meal.
Steaming
The Chinese steam food in woven bamboo trays that stack one
atop the other. The beauty of this system is that several
foods cook at one time , saving fuel. All sorts of foods are
steamed:meats, fish, dumplings, buns stuffed with meat or
a sweet bean paste-bread! For best results, the water should
be boiling when the food goes into the steameer and the flame
should be high enough to keep it boiling. Have a kattle of
boiling water nearby so if water in the steamer evaporates
you can add more without reducing the heat. (Be cautious;
steam is hot. ) Try to keep moisture that condenses inside
the lid from dripping on the food when you remove the lid.
See that the water level stays an inch or so below the food,
or you will boil it.
Deeping-frying
Some of the most delectable Chinese horsd'oeuvres are deep-
fried. Certain main dishes also call for meats to be deep-fried
for a crunchy coating, then stir-fried to combine them with
vegetables and flavorings . The oil must be at the right temperature---360!ato
375!a--- to cook food properly. The most food-proof method
is used to a thermostatically -controlled electric fryer.
If you deep-fry in your wok or pot, use a frying thermometer,
or test the oil before adding food by dropping in a small
piece of meat or vegetable. If it sizzles and skates around
the surface of the oil, the temperature is right. If it sinks,
the oil is not hot enough. If it browns too quickly, and the
oil smokes, the temperature is too high. Oil can be reduced
if you strain it and add fresh oil each time. Keep a separate
batch for frying fish and seafood.
from chinavista.com
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