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Quick and Easy
Tips for cooking Chinese food on those busy weeknights 
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Ah, the joys of cooking dinner during the week. 

You've finally arrived home, having battled rush hour traffic to transport the children to and from various sports and music classes. You're tense and exhausted, but instead of resting, you dash madly about the kitchen, trying to get dinner
on the table.  

At tim
es like these, eating Chinese food may be the last thing on your mind (unless this involves nothing more demanding than driving to the local take-out for an order of Almond Chicken and Spring Rolls). When your challenge is to put a meal in front of the family in twenty minutes, the thought of peeling ginger, mixing sauces, and marinating meat can seem overwhelming. Speed, not quality, is what counts at these times.   

However, culinary masterpieces featuring twenty ingredients aside, it is possible to prepare Chinese dishes on a tight schedule. The actual act of stir-frying takes only five to ten minutes - it's preparing the ingredients that can be so time consuming. Here are a few tips to help you prepare quick and easy meals with an Oriental flavor: 

  • Store peeled ginger
    Ginger is one of the key ingredients in Chinese cooking. Peeling ginger takes time, but you can peel it ahead of time and store in the refrigerator.  Place in a jar, cover with sherry, and seal - as the flavor of the ginger fades you have the sherry taste to compensate.

    Better yet, why peel the ginger at all? Simply cut off a slice and stir-fry until aromatic. 

  • Use Pre-seasoned instead of freshly seasoned oil
    I found this tip in Deh-Ta Hsiung's Chinese Cookery Secrets - just add 2 - 3 pieces of ginger to heated oil, and cook until the ginger rises to the surface and turns brown.  Cool the oil and store. The oil can be reused several times.

  • Use canned chicken broth instead of homemade chicken stock
    There is nothing like homemade stock, but chicken broth works fine in a pinch, as in this recipe for Egg Drop or Egg Flower Soup.  Calorie Counting tip: substitute low-fat chicken broth where water is called for in stir-fries to add extra flavor. (Vegetarians can add soaking liquid from vegetables such as dried mushrooms).  

  • Prepare the meat and vegetables ahead of time 
    Cutting meat and vegetables is not something you want to do while rushed or distracted, particularly in stir-fry dishes, where it's important that the pieces of food are a uniform size.  Before leaving for work in the morning, cut the meat, cover with plastic wrap and leave in the refrigerator until you come home from work. With vegetables, wash, drain, cut and refrigerate, covered. That way, when you return home in the evening, most of the work is already done! 

  • Cook with instant noodles, such as Ramen
    They're quick and easy to prepare
    . Better still, the flavor packet can be used as a sauce, as in this recipe for Beef Lo Mein, where the flavor packet from the Ramen noodles is combined with oyster sauce to lend flavor to marinated beef and broccoli. Alternately, you can discard the flavor packet and stir-fry them with a sauce.

  • Wash fresh vegetables about 30 minutes ahead of time 
    This gives them plenty of time to drain before cooking. 

  • Use frozen vegetables  
    A good option if you don't have time for slicing and dicing. Many frozen food manufacturers carry "Oriental" or "Stir-fry" Blends, containing an assortment of Asian vegetables. Just toss them in the heated wok with oil and stir-fry.  

  • Use canned vegetables
    Another option is to use canned Chinese vegetables, such as water chestnuts and bamboo shoots. Bamboo shoots and mushrooms make a nice combination (they're even featured in a dish called "Fried Two Winters"), while water chestnuts go well with snow peas. Just rinse in warm water to remove any "tinny" taste.  

  • Boil and bag it
    Look for boiled bamboo shoots in the refrigerator section at the Asian market - all you need to do is soak them in hot water to remove any salinity before cooking.  

  • Use favorite sauce or marinade combinations in more than one recipe. That way, you won't be experimenting with new ingredients or different combinations of familiar ingredients every time you cook dinner. One of my favorite stir-fry sauces for vegetables is something I came up with while trying to spice up a bean curd dish (the "secret formula" is 2 tablespoons dark soy sauce, 1 tablespoon oyster sauce, 1 1/2 tablespoons sherry, and 1 teaspoon sugar). 

  • Try a ready made stir-fry sauce or marinade 
    Many local supermarkets carry a selection of
    stir-fry sauces and marinades.  Most can be used with meat, seafood or vegetable dishes.  

  • A Busy Cook's Mecca - the Asian market
    The convenience section of most Asian markets has exploded in recent years.  You'll find a wide assortment of sauces, marinades, dry seasonings, curry mixes and soup bases, all designed to help you create your favorite dishes on busy weeknights. For example, Asian Home Gourmet has a dry chili stir-fry for Kung Pao Chicken - just add chicken, nuts and sherry.  Meanwhile, McCormick has a seasoning packet for deep-fried pork and Mama Sita has a Calderata seasoning packet which will add a taste of the Philippines to soups or stews. But go find out for yourself!

  • When all else fails, simplify the recipe
    As a regular poster on my forum recently pointed out, just because a recipe calls for shredded pork with ginger doesn't mean you can't serve sliced pork with ginger instead. Also, on nights like these it pays to stick to ingredients that will pass muster with family members - this is not the time to discover that your son thinks sesame seeds are gross, or that your husband shares the widely-held view that cilantro tastes like soap. 
    For best results, stick with the tried and true.  


"Our lives are not in the lap of the gods, but in the lap of our cooks."
(Lin Yutang, "The Importance of Living", 1937)

**New to the Chinese Cuisine Site? You'll find a complete guide to help you find your way around here.  

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