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Summer stir fry thread

by: desmoinesdem

Sat Jul 24, 2010 at 17:25:22 PM PDT


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I don't love the heat, but I love the produce of high summer. Tonight's dinner featured a stir-fry with local onions, carrots, kohlrabi, kale, bok choi, broccoli and Iowa-made tofu. Only the soba noodles and sauce weren't local.

Usually I make my own stir-fry sauces. One light version is an Asian marinade from Moosewood Cooks at Home. In a small saucepan heat about 1/4 cup to 1/3 cup dry sherry, the same amount of tamari or soy sauce, half that amount of rice vinegar, a tablespoon or two of brown sugar, and a few slices of peeled fresh ginger. Bring to boil, stir and simmer for a minute before removing from the heat. I soak the cubed tofu in this sauce, then add it to the rest of the stir fry a couple of minutes before serving. I like to toss in a few tablespoons of toasted sesame oil at the end too.

I also like to make a variation on the Spicy Peanut Sauce from Moosewood's Low-Fat Favorites. This can be drizzled over almost any steamed vegetables or added to a stir-fry near the end of cooking. To make it, throw the following in a blender: about 1/4 cup peanut butter, 1/3 cup water, 1 pressed garlic clove, a little fresh chile or dash of hot sauce, 2 Tbsp cider vinegar or rice vinegar, 1 Tbsp honey, 1 Tbsp soy sauce or tamari, 1 Tbsp lemon juice and about 2 tsp chopped fresh ginger root. Moosewood says to throw in 1/4 cup of diced tomatoes, but I leave those out. If you have extra sauce, you can keep it for a couple of weeks in the fridge (tightly sealed).

Share your own stir-fry secrets in this thread.

desmoinesdem :: Summer stir fry thread
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I suck at stir-fry, lol (4.00 / 2)
and me pretty much a vegetarian, too.

I know about some of what you write here; other stuff is news.

I think I'm just a coward about cooking stuff hot and fast enough at the right moments. I get confused between carmelizing and stir-fry...very different activities, I fear.


"If God were to appear to starving people, he would not dare to appear in any other form than food." - Mahatma Gandhi


I am no expert (4.00 / 3)
I don't even use a wok, just a big wide-bottomed saucepan. You don't have to have it at just the right temperature--I call it a stir-fry if I am sauteeing veggies and tofu in some oil and pouring a sauce on at the end! Sometimes I even buy the bottled sauces--super-easy.

[ Parent ]
I did a thing the other day with (4.00 / 3)
summer squash, kale, cauliflower leaves and a whole bunch of amaranth, along with 1/2 pound bacon. It was delish. I'd never had amaranth greens cooked this way. They're my new favorite green. They came out just like spinach, even the big stems were ender. Here's the recipe -

Squash with greens and bacon
by Joanne Rigutto

Ingredients -
1/2 lb bacon cut into 1/2" pieces
1 large bunch amaranth
1 bunch tender kale (or kale leaves destemed if the kale is more mature and the stems are tough)
1 bunch chard
4 small - medium summer squash (crook neck, straight neck, zuchinni, etc.) cut into rounds 1/2 inch thick
Bulbils from 1 garlic "flower" or 2 cloves garlic minced

Method -
* Wash the greens and drain then cut the stems below the main leaves into 2 - 3 inch pieces (keep seperate from leafy part of the greens).
* Cut the leafy portion of the greens into large pieces (2-3 inches).
* In a large hot pan (medium-high heat or 400°F electric skillet) fry bacon until half cooked and it's released a fair amount of grease.
* Add the stems from the greens, the squash and the garlic bulbils or minced cloves and reduce heat to 300°F or medium on your stove, cover and stir every 5 minutes or so.
* When the large stems and squash have begun to soften, add the cut up leaves. Cover and cook, tossing every few minutes until the leaves are tender, about 10 minutes.

Serve with sweet or malted vineagar, soy sauce, or other favorite dressing and a sprinkle of fresh ground pepper.

Sweet pickled vegetables make a nice accompanyment to this dish, the sweetness offsetting the very slight bitterness of the greens and the saltyness of the bacon.

Normal people scare me.... But not as much as I scare them.


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