HOTSOUR-SOUP-2(SP) USENET Cookbook HOTSOUR-SOUP-2(SP)
HOT AND SOUR SOUP
HOTSOUR-SOUP-2 - Popular Szechuan Chinese soup
I learned this recipe while taking Szechuan cooking
classes.
This soup is very popular in this country. It
comes in a
great many varieties, and can range from very mild
to very
spicy, and from a soup to almost a stew. This
particular
recipe is a medium spicy soup that should be within
most
peoples' tolerance range.
INGREDIENTS (serves 6-8)
1 cup bean curd, cut into small cubes.
1/4 cup bamboo shoot, shredded
1/4 cup golden needles (tiger lily pods)
2 Tbsp wood ear fungus shredded
1/4 cup black mushroom
1 egg, well beaten
4 oz very lean pork, shredded
MIXTURE A
1 tsp light soy sauce
1 tsp cornstarch
MIXTURE B
6 cups chicken stock
1 1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp MSG (optional)
1 tsp sugar
MIXTURE C
3 Tbsp cornstarch
3 Tbsp water
MIXTURE D
2 Tbsp light soy sauce
2 Tbsp vinegar
1 tsp sesame oil
1 tsp chili oil
1/2 tsp black pepper (fresh ground)
1/2 tsp white pepper (fresh ground)
3 Tbsp scallion, or green onion, chopped
1 Tbsp fresh ginger, chopped (Do not use powdered
ginger).
PROCEDURE
(1) Put the golden needles, wood ear, and
black mush-
room to soak in separate bowls of water.
It takes
30 to 60 minutes for them to be ready.
After soak-
ing, the wood ear should be a flexible
and flat
material. It may have a few hard lumps;
cut these
off and discard them. Discard the soaking
liquids.
(2) Meanwhile, prepare mixtures A,C, and
D. Place
their ingredients in bowls, and mix well.
When
mixing with cornstarch, add the liquid
slowly to
the cornstarch. This avoids getting
undissolved
cornstarch balls.
(3) Shred the pork. This pork must be very
lean. The
meat portion of pork cutlets or the center
of pork
chops are good sources. Shredding means
cutting
the pork into pieces about the size of
wooden
matches. (1/4 inch square by 1-2 inches)
This is
most easily done by slicing the pork,
then laying
the slices overlapping each other at
an angle and
cutting these at a reverse angle.
(4) Marinate the pork in mixture A for 15
minutes.
Then use 2 Tbsp oil to stir-fry the meat
until the
color changes. Set the meat aside.
(5) Shred and cube the other ingredients.
(6) Bring mixture B to a boil and add the
black mush-
room, bamboo shoots, wood ear, bean curd,
and gol-
den noodles. Cook for 3 minutes. Add
the meat,
then add mixture C. Add the beaten egg
while
stirring to disperse the egg in sheets
and fila-
ments. Add mixture D, and cook another
minute.
(7) Serve hot.
NOTES
Bean curd must be fresh. If you cannot get it
fresh, omit
it.
You will need at least 6 bowls (soup bowls are
OK), 1 large
bowl, and either a two-handled wok or a large sauce
pan.
Don't attempt this with a one-handled wok because
it will be
filled with boiling soup and is almost certain
to spill.
Hot and sour soup is a generic soup type, so you
can make
many variations on this soup. To control the spiciness,
adjust the ratio between mixture D and mixture
B. Changing
the ratios inside mixture D changes the nature
of the soup.
Finally, you can add a lot more ingredients if
you want.
The critical ingredients are the golden needles,
bamboo
(although almost any variety can be good), mushrooms
(or
fungus of some sort), and pork shreds. Experiment
with dif-
ferent kinds of fungus and bamboo. Adding other
mild veget-
ables is usually a success.
RATING
Difficulty: easy but tedious. Time: 1-2 hours
(lots of
preparation, little cooking) Precision: measure
the
ingredients.
CONTRIBUTOR
Rob Horn
Infinet, Inc., North Andover, Massachusetts, USA
{decvax, seismo!harvard}!wanginst!infinet!rhorn
From: jeff@rtech (Jeff Lichtman)
Newsgroups: mod.recipes
Subject: RECIPE: (Monterey) Jack Jubilee
Date: 16 Jan 86 08:32:16 GMT
Organization: Relational Technology Inc., Alameda,
CA
Approved: reid@glacier.ARPA
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