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Chinese Cooking: Unknown Greens!
I never cooked at home in Chicago. I loved my apartment, but a kitchen needs to be clean. There was an element of carelessness that I am both guilty and intolerant of that can slowly creep into a kitchen that is shared by many different people making different types of things. Not only clean, but a kitchen needs to be conducive to cooking. While having a big kitchen can be great, having a poorly laid out kitchen is not inviting to people who have no idea how to cook. A large open linoleum-floored room with refridgerator 12 feet away from the 2 feet of counter space, and cupboards too high for me to reach is an intimidatingly inappropriate place to cook.
Squishing some garlic to open it up |
peeling garlic |
slicing garlic |
knife action shot! |
slicing red pepper |
garlic and red pepper ready for the pan |
I can spend about 21RMB (less than $4.00) on a bag of veggies per week. I have mostly been making stir-fry's with many different types of greens, a few peppers, chili sauces, and sesame paste. Sometimes I'll put it all over rice or with rice noodles. Even though I seriously have no idea what I'm doing, everything usually tastes good.
The next few images are of things I put into a stir-fry and need help identifying:
A nice big green pepper, not very spicy at all |
sliced into ovals at an angle |
Identify these leaves:
I then diced that unknown green pepper up and I also sliced and diced up a regular green pepper. |
Is the image below of spinach? I had never bought food from a farmer's market in the states, so seeing vegetables without labels is new to me. Spinach, right?
What is this amazing leafy green? As you can see I have no idea how to cut these greens up either. I basically just cut into 1-2 inch sections, including stems, and put it into a pile on the cutting board.
I usually start with some sesame oil and sauteed the vegetables.
sesame oil |
sauteeing red pepper, garlic, and 2 different types of green pepper |
Then I add sesame paste, some water to thin the paste, chili garlic sauce, and slowly toss in the greens.
I then put the mixture over some rice noodles.
I don't know if this looks good to anyone else, but it looks pretty to me... and it tastes really good. I'd love to know what I'm eating!
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