Monday, November 5, 2012

Fried Rice Adventure

Fried rice is something that I, and I'm sure many others, find delicious, but somewhat intimidating to attempt to create. The other night I noticed the weather was horrible and I had 0 desire to leave my nice warm house, but I had yet to eat dinner and didn't have many prospects around the house. I thought about reverting to a childlike state just making a peanut butter sandwich, but that didn't sound appealing at all.

I thought about what food would give me excitement as I prepared it, the anticipation of it being exactly what I wanted, and just not being able to stand having to wait. Christmas as a child all over again. Then I realized a batch of fried rice with vegetables and chicken was what I wanted to make me act like the dog from the "Beggin Strips" commercial; just stupid with my want of food.

I started rummaging through the pantry, looking for long neglected items that could be the delicious attendees to my fried rice party. I became worried that my fried rice would not be, unless I braved the weather, due to my inability to find anything that would be worth a damn in fried rice. After shoving cans out of the way, it was meant to be. I found a can of water chestnuts and bean sprouts hiding in the corner, and took them as my jumping off point. I didn't find hardly anything else though, so my fried rice would be water chestnuts, bean sprouts, onions, and chicken. However, with what I didn't have in ingredient variety I would make up with flavors and spices.

Ingredients:

All of these are the amounts I used in my experimental run at this, feel free to add or take away

About 4 cups cooked rice
2 cups of onion, chopped
1/2 14.5 oz can of bean sprouts
1/2 can of water chestnuts
1 large chicken breast, sliced thin
Safflower Oil
Sesame Oil
1/4 cup soy sauce adding it a bit at a time
3 cloves garlic, minced
Ground ginger to taste (i just sprinkled a bit in until it smelled right)
1/4 cup Sizzling Salads Sesame Ginger Salad Dressing(comes in a pack with a dressing for salad and a dressing for meat. I actually used the salad dressing for this)

Cooking Directions:

I started by cooking my chicken and seasoning it to be added to the rice when it had finished cooking. I used safflower oil since it's better for cooking at high temperatures and added the chicken, Sesame ginger sauce, and a little extra bit of soy sauce. I simply cooked this until the chicken was cooked through and set it off to the side to wait. (Smelled delicious and I had to keep myself from saying "screw the rice, i''ll just eat this chicken")

Moving on to the rice bit, we start by cooking the onions over high until they were about half done. For this I used a mix of safflower and sesame oil and busted out the wok! If you don't have a wok or similarly stupid huge pan to put 4 cups of cooked rice in, then I would suggest halving the recipe or cooking it in separate batches. Once cooked halfway, I added the water chestnuts so they could have a chance to soften just a bit (a few minutes). Now time for the rice to join the party! Dump it in and begin to fry, remember this is on high heat! Make sure you have enough oil in the pan, but not too much that it's all over the place in a bad way.

This will take patience...I kinda failed at this point, lol. My rice still tasted delicious, but it definitely could've gone longer during this stage to make it feel more like fried rice. I kept thinking "is it done now? I don't think so....damn...should I just eat the stupid chicken and forget it? NO, keep cooking damn your eyes!" Anyways, fry the rice, onion, and water chestnuts until a lot of the water has left the rice and it looks more crumbly (you know how fried rice looks when you get it at a restaurant) At this point we're ready to add in about 1.5 Tbsp of sesame oil and the minced garlic. Make a clearing in the rice and put the oil and garlic in the middle, just to let the garlic cook a  little, then begin mixing everything together. You also add the soy sauce and bean sprouts at this time (make sure to add the soy sauce a little at a time to make sure you like the flavor and that the rice needs more. I added mine and then ended up adding a bit more of the sesame ginger dressing and soy sauce at the end to make the flavor really come out) Also make sure to add your cooked chicken and mix it in.

I did notice when i was finished that it wasn't very colorful, and looked rather pale, so I definitely know I should have cooked my rice longer, so I'll know that for next time, but I also thought a way to make it better would be to add scallions and cabbage. I think about 1.5-2 cups of cabbage would work really well. If you want to add it in, put it in and cook it a few minutes to get everything the same temperature. Voila!

In the end, I've learned that fried rice really isn't that hard to make, it's just a game of patience and fighting your laziness of not wanting to go get ingredients and instead rummaging around until you scrape together things that you forgot you owned and decided would make an ok fried rice. I know my second run at fried rice will be less spur of the moment and probably better planned out and I won't be as hungry as a pack of wolves while I make it.


Now go eat it like you're a kid getting home from Halloween and get to eat as much candy as you can in the next 5 minutes.

Not a super great pic, but damn was it delicious!
-Culinary Mage

Friday, January 6, 2012

Awesome craft project 00

So with the holidays everything got crazy busy, but I wanted to post a picture of the present I made for a friend this holiday season. I made 6 pokeballs out of pearler beads and put cork on the back to make them into coasters. I found 8-bit pokeball guides online, and dug through a crazy amount of beads to find all the colors i needed. The end result was totally worth it though!

For those who have never worked with pearler  beads before the process is very simple and you can make a lot of neat projects!
Great ball, pokeball, heavy ball, master ball, nest ball, & friend ball.
You need the plastic pegboard that is sold in craft stores with the pearler beads. I find the best way to do it, is to figure out what your making (either rough plan in your head, a sketch, or pictures online) and start pulling out the specific colors you'll need. Once you have enough of each, I used a pair of tweezers to pick up and place the little beads onto the pegboard.

Once you have your design set, put a piece of parchment paper over the beads and take a preheated iron(set to a lower setting, so you don't melt the beads too much) and set it on the parchment paper and glide it around over the design. Once you start to see the circles of the beads get darker (as if they're sweating) check to see how well everything is melted. If some beads aren't melted together as much as others, put more heat on that area. All the beads must be slightly melted to each other otherwise it all falls apart ( Kind of like making a grilled cheese or a quesadilla, if the cheese isn't melted to  both sides or one another it'll fall apart when you try to eat it)

Once all the beads have slightly melted to one another you can let it cool and take it off the pegboard. This is a great project if you have friends that like 8-bit style! You can make all sorts of projects like video game character magnets to coasters!

Enjoy!
-CulinaryMage