Saturday, 1 January 2022

Editor's January Pick #2 - The back catalogue – what to do with the Asian Plum Sauce

Editor's note: Well, I can't say I'm surprised - I think I'm being original and then find out that there's a MiamMiam blog post that beat me to it. When I picked the plum sauce post all the way back from 2017 I hadn't stumbled onto the follow-up that talked about adding to chicken or Quorn. I didn't want to leave this out as there's a brilliant tip about thickening sauces using something that again - I read about here first!


The back catalogue – what to do with the Asian Plum Sauce

I know it's not rocket science – but the sauce screams stir fry so here it is :


Serves 2

300g chicken fillet, cut into thin strips

Use quorn fillet for a veggie option

1 dessertspoon of rapeseed oil

200g of julienne veggies – of your choice

spring onions, finely chopped

carrots

sweet peppers

sweetheart cabbage


1 tsp ginger

100ml of plum sauce

40g of cashews – chopped

1 tbsp soy sauce


Serve with a side of kecap manis – aka sweet soy sauce


Before we begin – just in case you're not sure – julienne is a term that means your veggies should be cut into short thin strips – 1/8” wide if you want to be specific! You could use your trusted julienne peeler – that way you're certain to get a uniform “strip”.

Heat the oil in a wok or large frying pan on high, add the chicken and stir fry for 3 minutes or until golden. Transfer to a heatproof bowl.

Stir fry the veggies in the oil and ginger for 2/3 minutes, add the chicken and the plum sauce, cashews and soy and stir fry for a further 2 minutes until the sauce thickens.

You can serve with rice or noodles, in either case they should be cooked and ready to serve. Place a portion in each bowl and then top with the stir fry.

Two notes :

If you've made your own plum sauce you may find it's a tad thin. You can thicken it, ahead, with arrowroot then set aside. Arrowroot thickens well – it also gives you a glossy shine and it has no taste so will not interfere with your sauce. Mix 1tsp with a drop of water, heat 100ml of sauce and then gradually add the arrowroot to thicken. Ready to use.

If you've not made your own sauce you could of course buy a ready made version!

Your julienne veggies are available in the supermarket so if you're feeling lazy then you can buy them ready to use. You might want to check – without being too finicky – that they are all of a similar size.

Next up … a treat that's not in the back catalogue - other than it contains damsons - so it qualifies!

No comments:

Post a Comment