Lentil Dal with Spinach and Tomato

India is by far one of the most memorable trips I’ve taken and a place I’d love to get back to. So naturally, it earns a section on the blog. India is life turned on its head — the scents, sights, and crowds that leave you a little stunned and possibly revolted. I can still recall traveling through Kerala and the taste of coconut sambar and mustard seeds on my tongue, heaped on fresh dosas I consumed daily. 

One day, India will be a chapter in a cookbook I’m sure. For now, I cook through my favorite inspirational role model — Madhur Jaffrey — the Godmother of Indian cuisine. Her memoir “Under the Mango Trees” is a stunning read I highly recommend.

This Lentil Dal with Spinach and Tomato is a favorite of mine. Vegan, hearty, warming, and perfect with rice or naan. Made often to bring the smell of Indian cooking to my kitchen.

Lentil Dal with Spinach and Tomato

Serves, 2–3. I like to double this recipe and have leftovers over the week. Recipe adapted from Madhur Jaffrey’s Vegetarian India

Ingredients

  • 11/2 cup red lentils (masoor dal), rinsed a few times until the water runs clear

  • 1/2 tsp ground turmeric

  • 11/2 tsp salt

  • 3 tbsp olive oil, ghee, or peanut oil

  • 1/2 tsp whole brown mustard seeds* see note

  • 1/2 tsp whole cumin seeds

  • 2 dried red chilies

  • 7–8 curry leaves (I used bay leaves)

  • 1 large onion (8 oz), peeled and diced

  • 2 cloves garlic, peeled and minced

  • 11/2 tsp fresh ginger, peeled and grated

  • 2 medium-sized (10 oz) tomatoes, peeled and diced

  • 5–6 oz spinach, washed and chopped into small pieces 

  • 1/4–1/2 tsp red chili powder, to taste (optional)

  • Freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Instructions

  1. In a medium-sized pot, add the dal with 5 cups of water. Bring to a boil and skim off the bubbly froth as it rises to the top. Careful to not let it boil over! Stir in the turmeric, cover the pot partially with a lid and cook for 20-30 mins until soft. When done, add the salt to taste.

  2. While the dal is cooking, heat the oil (or ghee) in a medium nonstick pan over medium-high heat. When hot, add the mustard seeds and fry for a few seconds until they start to pop. Immediately add the cumin seeds and fry for 5–6 seconds. Add the red chilies and fry until they darken in color. Add in the bay leaves(or curry leaves), stir once, and add the onions. Fry for 7–10 minutes until the onions are softened and browned.

  3. Add the ginger, garlic and cook for another 2 minutes until golden and fragrant. Add the diced tomatoes and fry for 5–6 minutes until soft, mashing them slightly with the spoon as you cook. Add the spinach with 1/2 cup water. Stir and bring to a simmer until the spinach softens and shrinks in size, around 10 minutes.

  4. When the dal has finished cooking, add the spinach mixture and stir well. Add red chili powder, salt to taste with freshly ground pepper. Serve hot with naan or rice and a generous dollop of yogurt. The leftovers keep in the fridge for 2–3 days. If it thickens over time, add a few spoonfuls of water.

Cooking notes:

  1. If the mustard seeds pop crazily, cover the frying pan loosely with a lid.

  2. The original recipe called for 1/2 ground asafetida, which you fry for a few seconds before the mustard seeds. I have omitted it since it’s not an ingredient I can find easily in western shops.

Caramelized Onions with Soy Sauce

I have searched long and hard for an Asian-inspired caramelized onion recipe and I’m quite happy with this one. I love to make a batch of these soy sauce caramelized onions. They go with anything — toast, focaccia, sandwiches. These last for a week or so in the fridge so I like to make a big batch and have them handy. A great way to level up a quick lunch or snack on the go.

Caramelized onions served over toast, cream cheese with a dash of pepper and green onions

Caramelized Onions with Soy Sauce

Ingredients

  • 2 large onions, halved and sliced into thin rings

  • 4 tbsp vegetable oil, for frying

  • 1/2 tbsp sugar

  • 2 tbsp soy sauce

Instructions

  1. In a medium-large pan, heat the vegetable oil over medium-high heat until hot. Add the onions and fry for 2-3 minutes. Lower the heat to medium-low and fry until onions are browned, caramelized, and soft. Around 20-25 minutes. If the onions start to burn, lower the heat.

  2. Add the soy sauce, sugar and cook for another 5 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning if need. Serve warm or store in a container. These last in the fridge for a week or so.

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.

Stir-fried Anchovy with Mushrooms (Myeolchi bokkeum)

Have you noticed that some of the best conversations occur around a dinner table? I am convinced that there is magic in food that melts barriers and form bridges. It truly is the most approachable and simple form of art.

I had the pleasure of inviting chef Taeyoung Chang over for dinner. Over jook (the Korean word for congee) — we discussed our Asian upbringing, the challenges, the dual-identities we re-embrace as adults, and the heritage we are able to express through cooking.

This dish is inspired by the anchovy banchan dish Myeolchi bokkeum (멸지 볶음 ). Banchan is a collective name for small side dishes served along with cooked rice in Korean cuisine. I love how a bowl of congee is like a canvas where you can add your dishes of choice. It can be as simple as a fried egg with soy sauce or elaborate with fried puffed kombu, anchovies, and garlic oil.

Stir-fried Anchovy with Mushrooms

Serves 2-3. Recipe by Taeyoung

Ingredients

  • 1.5 cups shimeji mushrooms, ends removed and separated into pieces

  • 2 tbsp dried anchovy (12–15 pieces) 

  • A handful of Dasima kombu (8 pieces) *See note

  • 1 tbsp butter 

  • 1 tbsp oil 

  • Juice from half a lemon 

  • TT Black Pepper 

  • TT kosher salt

Instructions

  1. Over medium-high heat, pan-fry the kelp in canola oil until bubbles appear. Remove from pan and set aside.

  2. In the same pan and oil, sear the mushrooms — keep in a single layer and be sure to not overcrowd the pan.

  3. Add in your butter and toss in your anchovies, add 2–3 cracks of black pepper.

  4. When golden brown, remove from heat, season with salt, and a squeeze of lemon. Serve with Basic Chinese Congee or Sweet Potato Congee.

*Note: The correct type of kombu to use here is Dasima, not just soup kombu. If you have trouble finding Dasima kombu, omit it from the recipe.


Yunan Spicy Potato Pancakes

spicy-potato-pancakes-recipe-6.jpg

Most days, after long hours of cooking and photographing food — there are few things I look forward to than potatoes with a dash of olive oil, salt and pepper. The comfort of carbs and refreshment for the over-stimulated taste buds.

This potato pancake requires a fair bit of arm work, a trusty grater, and a passion for spicy Chinese food. In this case — cuisine from the mountainous province of Yunnan. All at once, Yunnan is known for its scenic views, mountains and rivers that run throughout the province. Mushrooms, flowers, fresh river fish, rice noodles (Mi Xian) are key to Yunnan cuisine.

My memories of Yunnan cuisine consist of sensational hot pots I had in Beijing — a visual meal filled with mushrooms of every kind, carnation petals, sesame sauce, jasmine flowers marinated in vinegar and rice wine served in bamboo flasks. Then there was my auntie’s Yunnan restaurant in Taipei — I can still recall the array of fresh fish, red chilis and fungi served with every meal. In Vancouver — the closest conversations I have around Yunnan food are with my designer friend Lisa, whose family hails from the rivers and mountains of Yunnan.

These potato pancakes are an adaptation to a local snack served at street markets in Yunnan. The egg in this recipe was added by Lisa’s grandmother for nutritional purposes. The potato starch that seeps from salted potatoes acts as a natural binding agent. It’s a great side dish for dinner and something I look forward to eating for breakfast. The recipe is adapted (and tested four times) by yours truly, with Lisa suggesting to dip it in a sauce made of vinegar, soy sauce and Yunnan chilli flakes.

Lisa and a potato pancake feast

Lisa and a potato pancake feast

Potato starch separating from potato water.

Potato starch separating from potato water.

The only spicy, sweet and sour dipping sauce you need (recipe below).

The only spicy, sweet and sour dipping sauce you need. Recipe here

spicy-potato-pancakes-recipe.jpg

Yunnan Potato Pancakes

Serves 2 (1 potato makes one pancake)
You will need a box grater or mandolin, two large mixing bowls, and a nonstick frying pan

Ingredients

  • 2 medium-large russet potatoes

  • 1 1/2 teaspoon salt

  • 1/4 teaspoon black pepper

  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce

  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil

  • 1/2 teaspoon chili flakes

  • 2 eggs

  • Green onions, sliced (optional)

Instructions

1. Grate the potatoes into a large mixing bowl. Add 1 1/2 teaspoons of salt and mix thoroughly. Allow the potatoes to sit for 15 mins (or as long as 30 mins) for the water to separate out from the potatoes. Squeeze as much water as you can out of the potatoes into the bowl and transfer the potatoes to a second bowl. Leave the residue water in the original bowl.

2. Let the residue water sit until the potato starch sets in a layer at the bottom, 1-3 minutes. Discard the water on top, using hands or a spoon, and transfer the potato starch into the grated potatoes. This will help bind the pancake together.

3. Create a well in the potato mixture and crack in the eggs. Gently beat until the whites and yolk are mixed. Add the black pepper, soy sauce, and sesame oil to the egg and mix thoroughly.

4. Heat a medium frying pan until medium-high heat. Using a spatula, transfer a quarter of the potato mixture onto the frying pan and press gently to form a pancake. Turn the heat down to medium-low and fry for 4–5 minutes per side.

5. Serve straight from the pan with sweet & spicy dipping sauce. Garnish with green onions. Bon Appétit!

Cooking Tips

*Turning the heat down once potatoes are in the pan will ensure thorough cooking and a crispy outer layer without burning the pancake.



Stir Fry Lotus Root

In Chinese culture, lotus root is described as “the lover’s vegetable”. There are strands of fibre that connect every piece as you take a bite. In short, a sentimental vegetable that is unwilling to part with itself. Stewed in broths, thrown in stir-fries and pickled for salads — I’ve loved poking my chopsticks through the holes to eat as a child. It’s a vegetable that is rewarding to work with and fun to introduce to your friends.

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Caramelized Black Pepper Chicken

A chicken rice dish. One of the first chicken recipes on the blog. I don’t cook a lot of meat these days but dating an Australian boy means meat is bound to show up on the table at least once a week. I am also excited to share Dad’s two-ingredient chicken soup over here at some point.

I attended a Thai cooking class in Australia last winter and loved the chef’s observation of the Asian versus North American diet. The average meat portion in America being 120 grams/person while being 30 grams or so in Thailand. I like the idea — small amounts, shared plates. Growing up, my parents didn’t get to eat a lot of meat as it is more expensive. Mom would get a single hard-boiled egg (dyed pink) on her birthday as a special treat. Oftentimes a meal would be soy sauce with lard poured over a bowl of rice. But if you were to attend any meal hosted by family or friends, you can be sure there will be at least one meat dish on the table

This dish is delicious and easy to whip up. I added some purple onions to give it colour and will try adding vegetables next. Substitute the chicken with tofu or whatever protein you have. Hold back on the red chilies if you need them, they were the perfect amount of almost-too-spicy for me.

Vietnamese Black Pepper Chicken

Serves 2

Ingredients

  • 1 pound chicken breast, cut into 1-inch pieces (sub chicken thigh or protein of choice)

  • 2 tbsp oil

  • Sprinkle of salt

  • 1/2 cup dark brown sugar

  • 1/4 cup fish sauce

  • 1/4 cup water

  • 3 tbsp rice vinegar

  • 1 medium shallot, thinly sliced into rings

  • 1/2 purple onion, sliced thinly(optional)

  • 1 tsp fresh ginger, finely chopped

  • 1-2 cloves garlic, minced

  • 2 dried red chiles (sub fresh Thai chilli, chopped into pieces)

  • 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper

  • Cilantro for garnish

  • Steamed jasmine rice for serving

Instructions

  1. In a bowl, combine chicken, half of the oil, and a sprinkle of salt. Mix to combine. 

  2. In a small saucepan, add the water, rice vinegar, fish sauce, and brown sugar. Give it a stir. Heat until the sugar dissolves, and then turn it down to a simmer.

  3. In a skillet, heat the remaining oil over medium heat. Add the shallots (and onion, if you are using any) and cook for one minute. Add the ginger, then garlic, and fry until aromatic or until the shallot is lightly caramelized. Add the chicken, red chile, and cook for two minutes, flipping the chicken halfway.

  4. Add 3/4 of the fish sauce from the saucepan into the chicken along with the black pepper. Cook over medium-high heat for another 6-8 minutes, until the sauce reduces and the chicken is done. Taste and add more fish sauce if you’d like. If you do, bring the skillet to a simmer again. 

  5. Transfer contents of skillet to a bowl, serve over rice with cilantro.

*Recipe adapted from Charles Phan

Spicy Smashed Roasted Potatoes

Every day is brunch day when you have smashed roasted potatoes. Crispy and dredged in flavour, these are the perfect size to consume in one bite. They are easy to make, excellent for entertaining, and bring delight to all potato lovers. I had these at a summer potluck and have rarely gone back to normal baked potatoes since.

I highly recommend making these with Sichuan Peppercorn Salt. Sichuan peppercorns add much flavour and a fragrance normal peppercorns do not yield. If you do not have time, normal salt and pepper will do. The trick with potatoes is to roast until they are crispy, on the edge of burning, and eat them while they are hot.

Spicy Smashed Roasted Potatoes

Spicy Smashed Roasted Potatoes

Ingredients
1 pound small potatoes 
3 cloves garlic, peeled and minced
Olive oil
Sichuan Peppercorn Salt
Chives, parsley or green onions

Instructions

Preheat your oven to 425 F. Wash potatoes and put in a large microwaveable bowl. Fill a bowl with water until potatoes are 80% submerged. Cover with saran wrap and poke a few holes in it. Microwave at 5-minute intervals or until potatoes are soft and easily pierced with a fork. Some potatoes may explode, which is to be expected. Drain potatoes and set aside.

On a large baking sheet, spread potatoes evenly and firmly press with your hands or spatula until smashed and flat. Try not to overcrowd the pan. Drizzle with olive oil, peppercorn salt. Roast for 25-30 minutes or until brown and crispy, flipping after the 15-minute mark. For extra crispiness, turn the broiler on high and cook for another 3 minutes, keeping a close eye on them so they do not burn.

Garnish with chopped herbs, sprinkle with more peppercorn salt if you wish. Serve immediately.