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froginsocks t1_j5r0b0f wrote

Recipe please!

7

No-Transition9064 OP t1_j5ukecb wrote

it's pretty basic stuff but I'd say the star of the recipe is Char Siu sace by Lee Kum Kee. I'll marinate that pork belly for 12 hours at least and then I roast it at 250 degrees and when it reaches safe internal temp, I'll throw it under the broiler and allow some char and color to develop all the while brushing it with honey+more char siu sauce with each flip of the pork belly. I try to get at least 1" to 1.5" slices of pork belly. once it's charred on each side, slice it, or chop it however you wish and then you can start on a simple fried rice consisting of this. mix together the honey and the sauce in a little bowl and if it's too thick add some water and make it a little more workable :)

2 cups of jasmine rice

4 eggs

1 whole bundle scallions

half a yellow onion or shallotsome frozen peas at the very end of the cook because they'll stay vibrant and cook from the residual heat.

2 teaspoons of garlic

dark soy sauce + light soy saucesugar + saltfew dashes of white pepper powderfew dashes of black pepper powder

the amount the soy sauce, sugar, salt and pepper powders is going to be up to you. depending on how dark you want the rice, or sweet, or salty or spicy. You're going to have to ask your taste buds that and taste.

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cook your eggs first and get set them asidesaute half of the scallions along with the onions and the garlic get those nice and soft.add in your cut/chopped porkbelly and then your rice and mix all that around after a while add in your eggs and then you're going to add in the two soy sauces mix around the wok and let it sort of cook around the edges and then start your fried rice flipping and wok'n skills :)

I'd say the biggest challenge for me is getting the oil amounts just right-- it's very easy to end up with OILY fried rice so you must absolutely be careful about the amount of oil you're starting the eggs with and the vegetables with.

before adding in the rice you almost want to see no oil in the wok, and rely on the oil that's sort of lingering from the veggies.

good luck! forgot to mention -- I end up cooking this in two batches if I'm using 2 cups of rice... It's just too large for my medium sized wok

2

iTranceYou t1_j5ps4ey wrote

Best use of leftover meat and rice

5

No-Transition9064 OP t1_j5pu97g wrote

I go out of my way to buy meat + rice specifically for this dish lol it's my favorite ever and my whole family enjoys it

5

Jahnknob t1_j5qqq9n wrote

Yes... yes.......yes!

5

pewterpetunia t1_j5riefy wrote

Looks great. I’ve never had success with homemade fried rice. It’s good but not great.

3

No-Transition9064 OP t1_j5ulak3 wrote

rice cooker is the first step. letting the rice sit in the fridge for 12 hours is the second step. making sure those rice grains are dry and spread out on a baking sheet before frying really helps too. and the most important tip that i can give you from experience is just to watch the oil level when frying. Nothing ruins fried rice more than having the rice be too OILY.

Alexthecookingguy on youtube has a great slew of fried rice videos that really helped me.

dark soy sauce and light soy sauce really helps too.

1

UrUsualAsianBrainiac t1_j5sbf0f wrote

Looks fantastic but are u using long grain? If so short grain tastes alot better!

1

No-Transition9064 OP t1_j5ugzm6 wrote

>32.2kTotal Views98%Upvote Rate158

using Jasmine rice. I may try to use some short grain rice but isn't that more for a Japanese style fried rice? not that it matters too much, but I'm aiming for a more new york / boston style of chinese pork fried rice

1

UrUsualAsianBrainiac t1_j5vmy1w wrote

Ya I guess haha it's just I'm Chinese and that's how my family makes fried rice haha I don't think it matters much tho haha but u should try making duck fried rice its much better

1

No-Transition9064 OP t1_j5x5sao wrote

oooh! that does sound amazing-- but being in united states it's not so available as chicken or pork is. Duck can pretty much only be bought at the Asian supermarkets... and even at that, I haven't seen much of them available

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joanlojo t1_j5tg27d wrote

How do you do the pork belly, i have char siu sauce ready to use, i always do the fried rice with chicken or shrimps

1

No-Transition9064 OP t1_j5ukoo1 wrote

>it's pretty basic stuff but I'd say the star of the recipe is Char Siu sace by Lee Kum Kee. I'll marinate that pork belly for 12 hours at least and then I roast it at 250 degrees and when it reaches safe internal temp, I'll throw it under the broiler and allow some char and color to develop all the while brushing it with honey+more char siu sauce with each flip of the pork belly. I try to get at least 1" to 1.5" slices of pork belly. once it's charred on each side, slice it, or chop it however you wish and then you can start on a simple fried rice consisting of this. mix together the honey and the sauce in a little bowl and if it's too thick add some water and make it a little more workable :)

1