Showing posts with label Mushrooms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mushrooms. Show all posts

Monday, January 21, 2019

Stir-Fried Mushrooms and Peppers

Stir-Fried Mushrooms and Peppers
This is likely to become a favourite vegetable dish in our home because it's so simple and takes no time at all to put together. It's composed of pre-sliced mushrooms, onions, red and green peppers, and seasoned simply with some salt, ginger and garlic paste and black peppercorns that are ground to a powder along with mouri/fennel seeds.

A vegetarian couple a while back spent a week with us. Any longer than that would have caused me to eat heads because I was craving non-veg food so badly! But I picked up a few tips and tricks about cooking vegetables, particularly mushrooms. Because they shed so much water, the trick to cooking mushrooms, I was told, is to fry them first in nothing but oil until al dente. More oil is then added to fry the onions and other vegetables and salt should be added at the very end. This produces a dry stir-fry that is delicious served with steamed rice. It can be had with a variety of Indian breads, too.

Saturday, May 09, 2015

Chicken Lettuce Wraps

Chicken Lettuce Wraps
A favorite among children, this light and simple meal is fun for them to assemble and hold in their little hands. It’s also easy to brown the chicken and mix the sauce beforehand and cook just before serving. For children this works as a main course, but for adults this probably would work better as an appetizer for dinner or as a main course for a light lunch.

Ingredients:
1 lb. minced chicken
2 Tbsp. vegetable oil
2 Tbsp. rice vinegar
2 Tbsp. soy sauce
2 Tbsp. hoisin sauce
¼ tsp. sesame oil
1 can water chestnuts, diced
6-8 button mushrooms, diced
12 leaves Boston or Romaine lettuce
½ cup roasted almonds or peanuts, chopped
2 green onions, sliced thinly
salt & pepper to taste

Directions:
  1. Separate lettuce leaves, rinse and pat dry with paper towels.
  2. Whisk 1 tsp. oil, rice vinegar, soy sauce, hoisin sauce and sesame oil together until thoroughly combined.
  3. Add remaining oil to a non-stick skillet on medium heat, and cook chicken thoroughly for about 20 minutes, until browned.
  4. Add sauce to chicken in pan along with water chestnuts and mushrooms.
  5. Season with salt and pepper to taste and simmer for 2 minutes.
  6. Remove from heat and transfer to a serving dish.
  7. To serve, place 1-2 Tbsp. chicken in a lettuce leaf and garnish with nuts and/or green onions.


Monday, March 23, 2015

Tangy Stir-Fried Spinach & Mushrooms

Faux Chin Baung Ywet
Food is such a nostalgic experience; this stir-fried dish brought back strong memories of our carefree childhood in Yangon, formerly known as Rangoon.

Chin Baung Ywet or
Roselle Leaves

In Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, we often had a naturally tangy spinach called Chin Baung Ywet or roselle leaves. The buds of the roselle shrub are sour and make a lovely chutney and jam/jelly.

Sorrel Herb

The closest taste to roselle that's available where I live in North America is sorrel, an herb, which looks like spinach but has a tangy edge to it. We're just now emerging from a frosty winter and sorrel is not in season, so I decided to use plain spinach and finished it off with the juice of one lime just before taking it off the stove. 

Sliced Mushrooms - 16 oz.
Sliced Mushrooms
This dish using roselle or sorrel is usually prepared with shrimp and it tastes exquisite, but I used a 16 oz. tub of sliced mushrooms instead. We also had some left-over french fries from our lunch, so I threw that in, too.


Stir-Fry the Mushrooms
Heated some extra-light tasting olive oil to a skillet and toasted a teaspoon of fennel seeds before added the sliced mushrooms. I like to stir-fry the mushrooms first to prevent them from releasing all their juices. 

Added Minced Garlic
When the mushrooms softened and began to brown, minced garlic was added to them.

Added Minced Onions
Minced onions, diced green chilies and salt were added to the mushrooms and garlic and stir-fried until onions turned translucent.

Tossed French Fries In
Tossed in the french fries and gave it another good stir.

Topped Off With Frozen Spinach
Added a 16 oz. package of frozen and chopped spinach and salt to taste, covered the skillet and allowed the spinach to cook over medium heat.

Garnished With The Juice Of One Lime
Once the spinach was browned around the edges, the juice of a whole lime was squeezed and stirred into it. Tasted wonderful with hot, steamed Basmati rice. Can also be served with any variety of Indian breads.

Ingredients:
1 lb. frozen chopped spinach (do not thaw)
4 Tbsp. oil
1 tsp. fennel seeds
1 large onion, diced
1 tsp. minced garlic
2 green chilies, diced (optional or to taste)
1 (16 oz.) tub of sliced mushrooms
1 potato, peeled & cut in strips
1 lime, cut in half
salt to taste

Directions:
  1. Heat oil over medium-high heat & toast fennel seeds until golden-brown.
  2. Add mushrooms & stir-fry until all moisture (if any) have been released.
  3. Add salt, garlic, onions and green chilies, & stir-fry until onions soften.
  4. Add potatoes, salt to taste and frozen spinach, cover and cook over medium heat until spinach thaws.
  5. Stir well after spinach thaws, cover & cook over medium heat until spinach cooks.
  6. Squeeze lime juice over contents of skillet and transfer to a serving dish.
Serve with hot Basmati rice or any Indian bread.












Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Baked Mushroom Pilaf

Baked Mushroom Pilaf
Did you know you can bake rice from scratch in the oven? It works really well and combined with a couple of cans of soup and mushrooms, it tastes amazing! Oh, I almost forgot to mention that most of the taste comes from the butter which is the fifth ingredient! No need to add salt because the soups have plenty.

Facebook is my #1 go-to source for recipes these days. A couple of days ago, I came across a recipe called Stick of Butter Rice which I vowed to try as soon as possible. It sounded divine. Today was the perfect time to experiment because I have to take something for a Christmas potluck tomorrow. 

Normally I would just point you to the original recipe, but because I used Basmati rice, baking times were a little different and I added fresh shiitake mushrooms. The umami from the mushrooms and butter make this a winner!

Ingredients:
1 cup Basmati rice, rinsed in several changes of water & drained
1 (10 oz.) can Campbell's Cream of French Onion soup
1 (10 oz.) can Campbell's Beef Broth
1 (1/2 cup) stick of butter, sliced
8 oz. shiitake mushrooms, sliced

Directions:
  1. Pre-heat oven to 425*F.
  2. Place drained rice in a 9X9 inch glass baking dish.
  3. Pour both cans of soup over rice.
  4. Layer mushrooms over top and dot with sliced butter.
  5. Cover baking dish with aluminum foil and bake at 452*F for 30 minutes.
  6. Take foil off & bake for another 20 minutes just until edges crisp & brown.
  7. Turn oven off and take baking pan out of oven.
  8. Cover dish with foil and leave at room temperature for 10-20 minutes.
Serve with a salad or raita such as Fuji Apple Raita. It tastes yummy!




Monday, June 23, 2014

Mushrooms & Peas Pilaf

Mushrooms & Peas Pulao
Here is a vegetarian pilaf that is as satisfying as its meaty counterparts. Mushrooms are the key ingredient that give flavour to this rice dish. Any kind of mushroom will work, including rehydrated shiitake mushrooms which pack a strong flavour punch. Aged Basmati rice is my long-grain rice of choice for making pilaf, but jasmine rice or other long-grain rice are also viable options.