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Search Results for: one dish wok meals

Pho Variations

March 21, 2010 By Eleanor Hoh 4 Comments

Pho Variations

Photos above

Left: Pork/Toufu, fennel, carrots, daikon, spinach.
Right: Beef neckbones, daikon, fennel, spinach.
Bottom: Beef neckbones, pork, toufu, carrot, chayote.

Pho Variations is part of the Pho show and tell with some Pho Stars, so do hop over for the full Pho (I couldn’t resist that!) at To Pho Or Not To Pho. You’ll find Steamykitchen and Vietworldkitchen’s links for their full recipes since I don’t write recipes or measure anything. I just use my judgement.

This was a lot of fun to do this blog with other people in many ways. It gave me a deadline, a good thing to light the fire under me. It gave us a chance to get the buzz going about Pho but best of all, I really enjoyed the camaraderie of sharing our Pho creations. You don’t need a ton of ingredients to make this, keep it SIMPLE and you’ll enjoy it the most. Big TIP, make a big pot so you can freeze the pho broth and make variations with it.

I started off with a traditional Beef Pho, once I got that down, I created 3 variations. This is the same approach I teach about wok cooking, once you get my no-recipe technique down, you can make your own variations.

The first variation:
I added fennel and spinach to the beef neckbone pho, very simple.
This time, I used my Chinese claypot to make my pho as I had less bones.

I added in the spinach leaves right before serving.

The second variation was with pork and toufu together with daikon, fennel, spinach and carrots.

The pork was from a pork butt joint I bought to make a roast. This proved disastrous, meat for roasting is definitely not suitable for pho! No, no, no. The pork was tough and chewy.

TIP: I like to use one big cutting board for all my veggies, saves washing all the dishes! Veggies go straight from chopping board into claypot of broth.

Once the broth was ready, I cooked the pork slices and took them out. Then added in daikon, carrots and fennel.

See how the pork looks chewy and tough.

Toufu went in next. Then spinach, cilantro and scallions right before serving.

I made a traditional Vietnamese dipping sauce: Koon Chun hoisin and Huy Fong chili garlic sauce

Freshly squeezed lime and cilantro gives Pho its distinct flavor!

This third and last variation: veggies were carrot, chayote and daikon. Protein were: beef neckbones, pork and toufu.

VEGAN TIP: Vegans can make a vegetable broth and use a different variety of toufu.

What’s the verdict?
I have to say the first traditional pho was my favorite because there were less ingredients so you could really taste the flavors of each ingredient. Lesson learned? Less is more. It’s what I’m constantly suggesting when making your one-dish wok meals and a pho is no different.

Remember to stop over for my first Pho attempt, To Pho Or Not To Pho and get the scoop from 5 other Pho Stars’ fantastic creations!

Love to hear about your Pho creations and what’s your favorite Pho?

Now that I’ve shown you I don’t always cook everything in my wok, here are some dishes I have made in my wok!

One Dish Wok Meals

Malaysian Chicken Curry

Wok Breakfasts

Filed Under: pho, Vietnamese

Pho Variations

March 21, 2010 By Eleanor Hoh 4 Comments

Pho Variations

Photos above

Left: Pork/Toufu, fennel, carrots, daikon, spinach.
Right: Beef neckbones, daikon, fennel, spinach.
Bottom: Beef neckbones, pork, toufu, carrot, chayote.

Pho Variations is part of the Pho show and tell with some Pho Stars, so do hop over for the full Pho (I couldn’t resist that!) at To Pho Or Not To Pho. You’ll find Steamykitchen and Vietworldkitchen’s links for their full recipes since I don’t write recipes or measure anything. I just use my judgement.

This was a lot of fun to do this blog with other people in many ways. It gave me a deadline, a good thing to light the fire under me. It gave us a chance to get the buzz going about Pho but best of all, I really enjoyed the camaraderie of sharing our Pho creations. You don’t need a ton of ingredients to make this, keep it SIMPLE and you’ll enjoy it the most. Big TIP, make a big pot so you can freeze the pho broth and make variations with it.

I started off with a traditional Beef Pho, once I got that down, I created 3 variations. This is the same approach I teach about wok cooking, once you get my no-recipe technique down, you can make your own variations.

The first variation:
I added fennel and spinach to the beef neckbone pho, very simple.
This time, I used my Chinese claypot to make my pho as I had less bones.

I added in the spinach leaves right before serving.

The second variation was with pork and toufu together with daikon, fennel, spinach and carrots.

The pork was from a pork butt joint I bought to make a roast. This proved disastrous, meat for roasting is definitely not suitable for pho! No, no, no. The pork was tough and chewy.

TIP: I like to use one big cutting board for all my veggies, saves washing all the dishes! Veggies go straight from chopping board into claypot of broth.

Once the broth was ready, I cooked the pork slices and took them out. Then added in daikon, carrots and fennel.

See how the pork looks chewy and tough.

Toufu went in next. Then spinach, cilantro and scallions right before serving.

I made a traditional Vietnamese dipping sauce: Koon Chun hoisin and Huy Fong chili garlic sauce

Freshly squeezed lime and cilantro gives Pho its distinct flavor!

This third and last variation: veggies were carrot, chayote and daikon. Protein were: beef neckbones, pork and toufu.

VEGAN TIP: Vegans can make a vegetable broth and use a different variety of toufu.

What’s the verdict?
I have to say the first traditional pho was my favorite because there were less ingredients so you could really taste the flavors of each ingredient. Lesson learned? Less is more. It’s what I’m constantly suggesting when making your one-dish wok meals and a pho is no different.

Remember to stop over for my first Pho attempt, To Pho Or Not To Pho and get the scoop from 5 other Pho Stars’ fantastic creations!

Love to hear about your Pho creations and what’s your favorite Pho?

Now that I’ve shown you I don’t always cook everything in my wok, here are some dishes I have made in my wok!

One Dish Wok Meals

Malaysian Chicken Curry

Wok Breakfasts

Filed Under: pho, Vietnamese

Best Ground Turkey Weeknight Dinner Ever!

January 16, 2019 By Eleanor Hoh Leave a Comment

Seriously, this easy Ground Turkey dish for a weeknight is the BEST!  And so EASY.  You can adapt it to whatever diet you’re on…Weight Watchers, Keto, Paleo, South Beach, etc.  Vegetarian or vegan, no problem!  Try with kidney, red or black beans, chick peas, butter beans, lentils or tofu. This delicious Ground Turkey dish was inspired by a conversation I had with my sisters, isn’t it funny the power of association?

Ground Turkey with multi-colored, mini sweet peppers, tomatoes and a handful of peas on a bed of soba noodles. Add some chili oil for extra heat if you like.  I did, yum!

For 2019, I wanted to reintroduce you to my approach to cooking without recipes or measuring and use what you have in your fridge and pantry. It’s what I teach in my cooking classes in Miami and in my online Udemy course (click for your discount!). So, be prepared because I may not include specific measurements.

Cook this way and you’ll be less stressed AND you’ll start enjoying coming up with surprise dishes of your own! It’s a meal that can stretch for big families, for one tray of ground turkey, it gave my hubby and I enough for 3 meals. 
Go wild with variations and combinations! You can keep it even simpler and use only ONE veggie like frozen peas. No need to defrost, just throw in a couple of minutes when you’re doing recombine, easy, DONE!
Try with just one veggie like tomatoes, eggplant, zucchini, yellow squash, you get the gist!
About the meat…
If you stick with using Ground Turkey, don’t use breast cause it’ll be dry and tasteless.  Ground Pork is not common at western supermarkets but it’s very popular in Asia.  Get your butcher to grind the pork for you. The best cuts are pork butt or shoulder, you need marbling of fat so it’s not dry.

Use this cooking process…
– cook soba noodles first
– prep veggies
– make sauce, using TSPC, my 4 basic seasonings for marinade and sauce..
T: San-J tamari; S: Sherry (medium);  P: Pepper (white pepper); C: Cornstarch 
+ 1 tblsp. Koon Chun Brown Bean Sauce + 1 heaped tsp. Huy Fong Chili Garlic Sauce
– marinade meat with same TSPC 

Use same stir fry process…Wok Stars, check your Stir Fry Crib Sheet!
– fry veg
– fry ground turkey in 2 batches, flip over when it’s golden brown one side and cut into crumbles
– heat sauce
– recombine veg + meat in sauce

It”ll be your GO-TO dish you’ll want often!  Don’t forget to invite your kids, family and friends to chip in with prepping and cooking. Cooking together makes it less lonely and you’ll find it’s a great time to bond!  Most of my food memories are of cooking with my mom and sisters and I KNOW those moments have contributed to our close relationships to this day!

Here are my complete step by step process for the BEST Weeknight Ground Turkey dish ever!

 

Drain soba, sprinkle sesame oil to prevent sticking
Prep veg, push trimmings on produce bag, leave on chopping board
TSPC for marinade and sauce
 
Fry onions
Fry mini sweet peppers
Fry ground turkey in 2 batches. Fry one side till golden brown before flipping.
After the flip, let it cook first before breaking up.
 
Heat sauce till bubbles.
Recombine veg+ground turkey, add frozen peas and turn over in sauce.
Save some in glass container!
 
Here’s another great dish using Ground Turkey, my famous, signature Rainbow Lettuce Wrap Appetizer I make this in my cooking class and is a big hit! 

Filed Under: blog, cast iron wok, Easy Weeknight Dinners, healthy eating, wok cooking Tagged With: "easy dinners", "ground turkey", "healthy eating", "one dish meals", "spicy dish", cast iron wok, stir fry, weeknightdinner, wok cooking

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