lostbottle.com lostbottle.com
Search:    Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Use >> Add Url >> Add Your Article   
 

A Guide To Candy

Among a wide variety of candies, perhaps one of the most popular is chocolate. This is because when ... - Jason Gluckman
 

Move Over Mr. Coffee! Make Way For The French Press!

Have you ever had a cup of coffee that was naturally creamy? I mean like a heavy cream that sits in ... - Don McKay
 

Human Body Adaptation To Overeating

Calories do count when there is a change in body weight. The human body adapts to both overeating an ... - Wayne Mcgregor
 
 

Grilled Pineapple - The Perfect End to Your Barbecue

Grilled pineapple is a perfect dessert for your barbecue. It is tasty, easy to do, great looking, an ... - Scott Carey
 

Basic Barbeque Safety Tips - Part One

Barbeque used to be a once-per-year, summer activity where family and friends gathered all together ... - John Gibb
 

Global Warming Means no More French Wine!

Global Warming if it happens will mean that climates and regional weather will shift and therefore F ... - Lance Winslow
 

6 Superfoods For Age-Defying Beauty!

Tihs article explores the World's Top 6 superfoods for ultimate age-defying beauty. - Sylvia Riley
 

Chicken Adobo

Chicken Adobo - Peter Lenkefi
 
 

  Home –› Food & Recipe –› Cooking & Preperation
   
 

The Wonderful Wok: Stir Frying Basics

   

Author: D. Marie Giolitto

Want to enjoy the tantalizing taste of Asian food at home? Invest in a wok! Stir-frying is one of the easiest ways to create a delicious, healthy dinner in minutes. Learn to prepare meals the Asian way: light on meat, heavy on the vegetables, and quick-cooked on high heat to retain vitamins and flavors. A few basics is all you need to get cooking!

Purchase your wok. You don't need to spend hundreds of dollars on state-of-the-art cookware. A standard, stainless-steel wok, purchased for less than $50, will serve its purpose well. The heavier the wok, the better it will retain heat. This is important because you must cook at a high temperature to avoid stewing or steaming your ingredients.

Season your wok. Before you use your wok for the first time, you must season it. Seasoning the wok is a way to "break it in" to ensure even heat-distribution during stir-frying, and helps lock in the flavors of the food as it's cooking. When you remove your wok from its packaging, you may notice a greasy film on the surface. Wipe this film away, and wash your wok in warm, soapy water. To season your wok, put it on the stove over medium-high heat for a few minutes. Add a drop or two of oil, and swirl it around to coat the surface evenly. Remove from the stovetop to let cool for a bit, and then use a paper towel to wipe out the oily residue. You may want to season your wok once more before you begin cooking with it.

Gather your utensils. Professional chefs use a mesh ladel to toss meat and vegetables around in the wok, but if you don't have one of these, a wooden spoon will do just fine. Place several large, clean bowls and plates on the counter next to your wok so you can set your cooked items aside as you prepare them in batches. Other items you'll need: a chef's knife, cutting board, and several bowls of different sizes to store liquid mixtures and chopped herbs and vegetables.

Cut and dry food prep. The most time-consuming part of stir-frying is preparing the ingredients. You'll want everything portioned out and cleaned, chopped, sliced and diced in advance. The actual stir-frying is fast and furious (you've probably heard those pans rattling like mad while waiting for your Chinese takeout!) so meat, vegetables, noodles, spices and oils should be ready and within reaching distance so you can grab and get on with it. Chop everything into bite-sized chunks to ensure quick and thorough cooking. Make sure there's no extra water or other liquid in your wok while stir-frying meat and vegetables. As mentioned earlier, liquid in the wok will cause your meal to stew instead of lightly fry.

Stir-fry in batches. Properly stir-fried food retains its crisp, firm exterior and tender, juicy inside by cooking small portions at a time. Heat the wok, drizzle in enough oil to coat the surface, and add enough small cuts of beef, pork or chicken to just cover the bottom. Fry on medium-high heat, tossing the entire time. When your first batch of meat is thoroughly cooked, remove from the wok and drain on paper towels. Fry the second batch in a little more oil, and then set aside. Oil the pan once more, toss in a few cloves of crushed garlic and/or ginger, and stir-fry the vegetables, adding the thicker ingredients like potatoes and carrots first, and then tossing in quicker-cooking ingredients like scallions and mushrooms at the end. When the vegetables are done, return the meat to the pot with the vegetables, and finish with your liquid sauces and seasonings. Give everything a quick toss, simmer for a few minutes and then remove from heat.

Learn the flavors. Thai cooking is immensely popular right now; similar to Chinese, but with its own exotic spices and flavorings, some of which take their cue from Indian cuisine. Malaysian, Japanese, Vietnamese and Korean fare all boast their signature recipes as well. With practice, you'll learn which spices and sauces go with what and how to identify their flavors. You can buy most of what you need at an Asian specialty store.

Always have some Asian cooking staples on hand: soy sauce, oyster sauce, hoisin sauce, fish sauce. Fresh ginger, garlic, chillies, galangal, Asian shallots, scallions, kaffir lime leaves, cilantro and lemongrass. Green or red curry paste, shrimp paste. Noodles and rice. And of course... plenty of fresh meat, fish, tofu and vegetables. Pork, chicken, beef, shrimp, prawns, scallops. Onions, carrots, broccoli, snow peas, bok choi (Chinese cabbage), mushrooms (regular, oyster mushrooms, shitake mushrooms).

There really is no limit to what you can do with a wok, an assortment of meats, vegetables, spices and sauces. If you're the creative chef, feel free to experiment. If you're a "by the book" cook, go out and purchase a stir-fry cookbook which will explain each technique in detail as well as familiarize you with the exotic ingredients. Above all: know that stir-frying is a healthy way to prepare and enjoy the foods you love in the comfort of home.

Copyright 2005 Dina Giolitto.

Author Bio:

D. Marie Giolitto

Dina Giolitto provides exceptional copywriting direction, creation, support and implementation for a host of corporate and small business clients throughout the country. She is the author of "ARTICLE POWER: Create Dynamite Articles and Watch Your Sales Explode," now available for download at Article-Power.com.

Visit the home for Dina's online copywriting and marketing services, Wordfeeder.com.

Do you aspire to launch your own copywriting business on the internet or write your own web marketing materials? If so, the Wordfeeder.com ezine may be just the motivation you need to get started writing great copy that converts readers to paying customers and trips the search engines for better rank and a steady stream of targeted visitors.

Corporate clients and work-at-home business owners alike will appreciate the generous amount of free information, resources, tips and tools we offer with "Word Food: The Copywriting and Marketing Ezine" from Wordfeeder.com.

To sign up and receive your first free ezine copy instantly, click BUSINESS URL #2 above, or visit:

Wordfeeder.com/kickstart-signup-priority-1.htm

You can also reach this article by using: cooking recipes, chinese cooking, solar cooking, cooking light recipes, microwave cooking
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Full Throttle Energy Drink: A Coca-Cola Creation
 
Sugar Free Desserts For Everyone
 
Italian Bakery
 
Chicken Adobo
 
Starbucks Product Review
 
How To Barbeque | Easy Steps For Success
 
Global Warming Means no More French Wine!
 
Beef up your Coffee Collection with Braun 4 Cup Espresso Carafes
 
Grilling Hamburgers and Sittin' on an Old Ice Cream Freezer
 
Benefits of Using a Wine Rack
 
 
 
Add Url
 
 

Medical Care

 

Fitness & Health

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Entertainment

 

Fashion & Lifestyle

 

Self Help

 

Shopping Online

 

Law & Politics

 

Garden & Home

 

Food & Recipe

 

Indoor Games

 

Realty & Property

 

Employment & Careers

 

Banking & Finance

 

Creative Arts

 

Technology & Science

 

Academics & Education

 

News & Events

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Business & Commerce

 

Teens & Kids

 

People & Society

 

Computers & Networking

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 
Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Use  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.lostbottle.com - All Rights Reserved.