Showing posts with label ginger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ginger. Show all posts

Friday, August 25, 2023

Eggplant Stir-fry with Perilla and Ginger 大葉ナス

Again we got some Japanese groceries delivered from Weee which included some Asian eggplants. Since the delivery included quite a good number of eggplants, I had to come up with a number of different dishes to use them before they go bad. I made this dish which is new to me. I was inspired by looking at a YouTube episode. This was a perfect dish since in addition to eggplant, it uses green perilla which is growing quite well in our herb garden. As usual I treated the recipe as “advisory” and made some modifications. This is slightly sweet due to the oyster sauce and added sugar but it is also somewhat spicy from the ginger. It has a nice perilla taste as well. I think this is good served warm or cold. It’s also another item that goes well with cold sake.




Ingredients:
One asian eggplant (this was a slender long one, which is equivalent to two small Japanese eggplants), cut into quarters lengthwise and then cut on the bias into bite sized pieces.
10 green perilla leaves, finely chopped (left in the picture below).
1 tbs julienne of ginger (center in the picture below).
2 tbs oil (I used light olive oil with a splash of dark sesame oil) (divided 1 tbs each).
1 tbs soy sauce
1 tbs oyster sauce
1 tsp ponzu
1 tbs chicken broth (the original recipe calls for granulated chicken broth or 鶏がらスープの素 which is freeze dried granules of chicken and vegetable broth. This is an ingredient that often appears in Japanese recipes)
2 tsp salt and 1 tbs potato starch (for preparation of the eggplant)

Directions:
Salt the eggplant pieces, mix well and and let it stand for 5 minutes or more (until some moisture comes out)
Wash with cold water to remove excess salt, ring out moisture from the eggplant (left in the picture below), lightly coat with the potato starch



Add the oil to the frying pan on medium flame. When the oil is hot add the eggplant pieces turning until both sides are cooked and browned (3-4 minutes), set it aside (picture below)



Add the remaining oil to the pan on low flame add the ginger and sauté for one minute or until fragrant.
Add the perilla and sauté for one more minute. Add the soy sauce, oyster sauce, chicken broth and mix.
Add back the eggplant and stir and the sauce slightly reduced (1-2 minutes).

This is another flavorful rendition of “eggplant”. I was very careful not to overcook it and have the eggplant dissolve as a result the skin had a slight crunch while the white interior was soft and creamy. It had a surprising bite of hot spiciness which took us a little while to figure out was coming from the ginger. But it added another positive note to the dish.

Tuesday, June 6, 2023

Ginger Cookie Crumb Muffin

This is probably the last muffin my wife will make from left-over cookies; Because she has used them all up. This time it was using thin ginger snaps. As before, she made crumbs from the ginger cookie and used it as part of the batter. She added finely chopped candied ginger and pecan for good measure. The first time I tasted it, I did not taste strong ginger flavor but the next morning when we had it for breakfast, I tasted much more ginger flavor. A good amount of the pecan also did a good job in adding a nutty flavor. Very nice muffn.



This was not quite following the recipe but she  made it very similar to the “Cookie and cream crumb muffin”. I will ask her to take over.

Ingredients: (makes 12 muffins)
For the muffins:
2 cups AP flour
2/3 cup sugar
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
2/3 cup milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup melted butter
1/4 cup sour cream
2 eggs
3/4 cup roughly crushed ginger cookies
1/2 cup finely cut candied ginger (or to taste)
1 cup toasted pecans (roughly chopped)

For the crumb:
1/2 cup butter room temp.
1 tbs. honey
1/4 cup regular sugar
2/3 cup flour
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 cup of crushed ginger cookies.

Directions:
For the muffins: put the cookies in a plastic sandwich bag and using a meat pounder crush them into large pieces. (Otherwise the CuisineArt chopper has a hard time handling whole cookies. We found it’s attempt to do so is quite pyrotechnic.) Add the pieces to a cuisineArt grinder and process until the cookies are small crumb as shown in the picture below. Set aside.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees, and line a 12 -cup muffin pan with liners of choice. Set aside.
In a large bowl, stir together the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Set aside. In a small bowl, whisk together the milk, vanilla extract, egg, melted butter, and sour cream until combined. 
Pour the wet mixture into the dry mixture. Add in the crushed cookies and pecans and stir the whole mixture together with a spatula until there are no dry pockets.



For the topping : 
In a medium bowl, using your hands mix the butter honey, brown sugar, sugar, flour, salt and additional crushed cookies until the mixture is creamy and smooth. 
Evenly and generously cover each tin of muffin batter with the topping. Bake muffins for 18-20 minutes, or until just golden. A cake tester should come out clean. These muffins were very flavorful although it took several days for the ginger flavor to fully mature.

The topping was crunchy and the muffin itself was tender in texture with a bright ginger flavor. The pecans added a nice nutty texture and taste. Another great breakfast addition.