Stir-fried Tomato and Egg / 番茄炒蛋

Amongst all my memories of delicious childhood dishes — this is by far my favorite + most classic of all. Everything Chinese family has a version. My dad makes it, my grandma makes it, all the lunch bento spots we ate at as students make it. It’s ridiculously comforting and easy to make with minimal ingredients. The sweet-sour tang of tomatoes makes the dish so full of umami flavor and brings depth to a simple egg dish. A classic away-from-home dish to make during my years as a college student and while living abroad.

Ripe juicy tomatoes, a handful of eggs, green onions and cornstarch is all you need. Let’s get cooking

Note: If I am making this dish for one— I halve the recipe.

Tomato Fried Egg

Serves 2–3, recipe adapted from Adam Liaw

Ingredients
3 ripe medium-sized tomatoes, roughly chopped
1/2 cup water
2 tbsp vegetable oil
½ tsp salt
¼ tsp sugar
2 spring onions, cut into 5cm lengths
½ tsp cornstarch, mixed with a little cold water
5 eggs, beaten

Instructions

  1. Heat a medium pan over medium-high heat and add a tablespoon of oil. When the oil is hot, add the tomatoes and fry until they are soft around 2 minutes.

  2. Add the salt, sugar, 1/2 cup water, and green onions. When the green onions soften, slowly add the cornstarch mixture, stirring as you go. The tomato mixture will thicken into a saucy slurry. Taste and add more salt or sugar as desired. Remove the tomato mixture from the pan and rinse the pan.

  3. Return the pan to heat and add the remaining tablespoon of oil. Add the beaten eggs and stir every 15 seconds until the eggs resemble the texture of a loose omelet. Add the tomato mixture to the eggs and stir to combine. Taste and adjust seasoning, garnish with more green onions if desired. Serve immediately.

Chinese Egg Tarts Recipe (Whole Egg)

I had some leftover pastry shells in the freezer which I have been itching to put to use. Egg tarts. I never realized how easy it was to make these until I tried. All you need is egg, milk, sugar and some patience. This is a “whole egg” egg tart recipe so you don’t have to worry about coming up with creative ways to use your egg whites.

If you’ve ever been to a Chinese bakery, you’ll know that these are the stars of the show. A simplified version of the Portuguese egg tart — these tarts appear in breakfasts, dim sums, potlucks and brighten many faces with their yellow shade.

If you don’t have pastry shells on hand, the filling is great baked in ramekins as well. Make sure to pass some off to friends as soon as they’ve cooled to avoid eating one too many. My highest record is three a day.

Chinese Egg Tarts 全蛋蛋撻

*Makes 6 egg tarts

Ingredients

5 small pastry shells
5 eggs
80 ml milk
165 ml water
80 grams sugar (I used golden sugar)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract

Instructions

Heat oven to 390 F. In a small saucepan, add water and sugar over medium heat. Stir until the sugar dissolves and set aside to cool. In a large mixing bowl, whisk the eggs until the yolk and whites are combined. Add the milk, vanilla extract, sugar water and mix well. Filter the liquid through a sieve to remove chunky pieces of raw egg. Discard the chunky bits. Fill each shell up to 80%.

Bake for 15 minutes, then reduce heat to 350F and bake for another 10 minutes. Turn off heat, prop the oven door open and let the egg tarts sit for 5 minutes or so. Check on the tarts every so often to make sure the egg filling does not get overcooked. The filling should be soft with just the right amount of gooey in the center. 

How to make Ramen Egg

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I realized I cannot post a Totoro soba noodle recipe with ramen egg without providing a ramen egg recipe. So here it is. I do offer a word of caution before making these as they are highly desired and addictive. In fact, I ate so many of them from the first few batches that I was thrown off ramen egg for a while. Also, as appetizing as they are, ramen eggs do not travel well so if you try (like I did) to take them to picnics, you’ll end up with a sad brown mess.

These eggs are incredibly easy to make. As long as you have nailed down the consistency of the 6 minutes and 50 seconds jammy centred egg. Choose eggs that are similar in size, use a pot big enough to accommodate the eggs, and give the water a gentle stir after you pop them in to even the temperature.

Ramen eggs are a brilliant way to add protein to a meal, salad bowl, or eat on its own. I enjoy serving it to friends when they visit and bask in the delight of their oohs and ahhs.

You will need:

6 medium/large size eggs (get the best eggs you can, with orangey centres)
Soy sauce, 1/4 cup
Mirin, 1/4 cup
Water, 1/2 cup
Apple cider vinegar, a dash (optional)

To make:

  1. Bring a big pot of water to boil. Adjust it to simmering and gently lower the eggs into hot water with a slotted spoon. Do this in procession as fast as you can. Immediately set a timer for 6:50. Gently stir the eggs. I like to turn the heat up until it comes to a simmer again.

  2. Prepare a large bowl of iced water. You will need ice cubes. When the timer goes off, lift the eggs out of the water with a spoon into the iced water. As fast as you can. Leave the eggs in iced water for a few minutes until the temperature has cooled.

  3. Peel eggs. Give the eggs a firm tap on the counter and peel away. You’ll have a chewed look to some of the softer ones but they do get better with experience.

  4. Mix soy sauce, mirin, water, apple cider vinegar (if you are using any) and soak the eggs in the marinade using a snug bowl. I like to cover the eggs with plastic wrap (or paper towel) to make sure they are fully submerged. Soak the eggs overnight, or 4-5 hours at least.

  5. Serve sliced in half, add a sprinkle of sea salt, green onions, sesame seeds, or enjoy on its own.

*You can double the egg marinade. I follow the 1:1:2 ratio for soy sauce, mirin, water. It keeps well and you can use it to marinate more than one batch of eggs.

*Omit the apple cider vinegar if you’re not feeling as adventurous. I have come across many recipes that call for 1/4 cup of sake and will try a version with that. I like this recipe as it’s simple to make with basic ingredients from the kitchen.



How to make Totoro Soba Noodles

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I came across this idea on @iamafoodblog’s post and cannot look at these photos without feeling overwhelming happy on the inside. These Totoro’s were eaten with most reluctance and they were a ton of fun to make. If you’re hosting, it’s a great way to entertain your guests by handing them a pair of scissors, a nori sheet, a slab of mozzarella cheese and setting them to work.

I love the simplicity of Japanese recipes made with few but good ingredients. These soba noodles take less than six ingredients to put together but are so satisfying and light. Paired with ramen egg — it’s going to be a repeat meal in my kitchen.

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Totoro Soba Noodles

You will need:

Noodles/Totoro Body:
Buckwheat soba noodles
White somen noodles
Sliced mozzarella cheese (for eyes)
Nori sheet

Dashi sauce:
Green onions, sliced
Dashi powder 1 tbsp ( i use Hondashi, found in T&T)
Soy sauce 1 tbsp
Water 1/4 cup
Mirin, 1 tsp
Sesame oil, to taste

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1. Prep the Totoro eyes, nose, whiskers.

2. Cook noodles. Follow cooking instructions on the package or here.

Somen: Bring 6 cups of water to boil. Throw in a bundle of noodles, stir and set the timer for 3 minutes. Taste test them for doneness. Drain hot water with a strainer and rinse repeatedly under cold water until the water runs clear. This will prevent your noodles from sticking together.

Buckwheat soba: Same instructions as somen but set the timer for 6 minutes.

3. Combine and stir dashi powder, soy sauce, water and mirin in a bowl. Taste for flavour. The sauce should be very salty.

4. Form Totoro body with buckwheat noodles, using white somen for the abdomen, cheese for eyes and nori to top.

5. To serve: drizzle dashi sauce over noodles. Add a sprinkle of sesame oil, sesame seeds. Garnish with green onions. Serve with a ramen egg if you have one on hand. Enjoy.

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If you have a lot of time on your hands, here is an old recipe for Totoro Rice cakes.

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