Home
Recipes
Software
Store
Discuss Food!
Video
Help
Log in
and post recipes free!
find
in
Anywhere
Recipe Title
Videos
Discussion Groups
Food Dictionary
Product Support
search
Information: Egg Dishes
Try this Information: Egg Dishes recipe, or post your own recipe for Information: Egg Dishes
tell us
Be the first to
submit a photo
for this recipe.
Win $100.00
by posting the best original food photo this month!
Recipe look good to you?
Information: Egg Dishes Ingredients
No ingredients; help file
Instructions for Information: Egg Dishes
SO VERSATILE are the Chinese with eggs that whole cookbooks have been written on the subject. Eggs are cooked in all possible ways: steamed, stirred or scrambled, pan-fried, deep-fried, boiled, poached, simmered (in soy sauce, gravies and tea); or used in omelets, souffles and egg puddings. Eggs are not usually cooked alone but combined with other ingredients. These may be meat or seafood and vegetables. (If already cooked, the ingredients are cut up fine and combined directly with the eggs. If raw, theyre usually stir-fried first.) Fried eggs, stirred eggs and omelets are all cooked quickly over high heat. In the case of fried eggs, the oil or lard must be nearly smoking. This makes for egg whites that are crisp and crusty; for yolks that retain their moistness. Stirred or scrambled eggs are cooked over medium-high heat. They are pushed about quickly with a spatula while the pan is tilted so that most of the liquid egg comes directly in contact with the hot oil. This puffs up the eggs, makes them light and airy. Stirred eggs are removed from the stove while still quite moist: they cook to the right consistency in their own heat by the time they reach the table. Chinese omelets cooked overhigh heat are characteristically browned on the outside, soft on the inside, with their ingredients or fillings quickly heated through. The original or classic egg foo yung is a light, airy souffle made with egg whites and minced chicken breast. (Its name derives from both a white hibiscus flower and a Chinese bird whose colors resemble pure white jade.) The foo yung more familiar to Westerners is a hearty combination of whole eggs, shredded meat or seafood, and vegetables, cooked together as a thick, solid pancake. There are two versions of the more familiar variety: home-style and restaurant-style. Home-style egg foo yung is pan-fried either as one large omelet or as several small ones. The restaurant version is deep-fried, with the mixture dropped from a ladle into the hot oil to make a nnmber of small omelets. Boiled eggs (invariably hard-boiled) are eaten with a soy sauce dip or else pot-stewed afterward--that is, shelled and then simmered in the sauce of red-cooked meat or poultry until permeated with the savory flavors of these sauces. Poached eggs are used as garnishes for steamed rice and soups. Steamed custard-like eggs have their smooth blandness set off by ingredients that are highly flavored or salty. NOTE: Leftover egg whites can be used in souffles, chicken velvet, birds nest soup and various batters for deep-fried foods. Leftover yolks can be used in omelets, egg puddings, as egg threads; or poached directly in hot soup as a garnish. From
, ISBN 0-517-65870-4. Downloaded from Glens MM Recipe Archive, http://www.erols.com/hosey.
Main Ingredient:
Eggs
Cuisine:
Uncategorized
More like this...
Information: Banquet Dishes
Information: Sweet Dishes
Mix the Healthy Dish with The Heavenly Dish At This Years
Baked Egg Dish
Brunch Egg Dish
Ingredient Insight - look inside this recipe
Help
Eggs
for
flavor
and
categorization
Recent searches:
3 potato sweet potato salad
beef coconut milk curry
elbow noodles
pan-fried liver
starter bread sourdough
dog hot
relish cranberry
pork ginger pineapple
rosh hashan
crab au gratin
veal demi-glace
salad recepies
noodle butter
saute zucchini
corn chili peppers
basil mozzarella beans
christmas plum pudding
pork brine
honey ground almond cake
omlette
O P T I O N S
Rate or Comment
Suggest to Friend
Add to Menu
Email Recipe
Print Recipe
I M P R O V E
Submit Photo
Link to Recipe
Post a Recipe
Invite Friends
Post a Video
R E M E M B E R
Try Soon
Favorite
G R O U P S
log in first
Create your own personal cookbook!
Learn more
Download
our cooking software and
do more
with this recipe!
BigOven for Windows won Best Cooking Software, 2008 from TopTenReviews.com
About Us
Privacy Policy
Leaderboard
Member Directory
Help