| Ranee Mueller |
Sticky Coconut Chicken, Rice cooked in Chicken broth, Crunchy Napa
Cabbage Slaw. I cut the chili pepper in half in the marinade for the
chicken, but left it the same in the glaze. I wondered how the kids
would handle it, but they all gobbled it up.
Sticky Coconut Chicken
From_Sunset
6_ to 8 boned, skinned chicken thighs (1 1/4 to 1 1/2 lb. total)
3/4_ cup_canned coconut milk (stir before measuring)
1_ tablespoon_minced fresh ginger
1_ teaspoon_fresh-ground pepper
1_ teaspoon_hot chili flakes
Chili glaze
4_ or 5 green onions, ends trimmed, cut lengthwise into thin slivers
(including tops)
1. Rinse chicken and pat dry. In a large bowl, mix coconut milk, ginger,
pepper, and hot chili flakes. Add chicken and mix; cover airtight and
chill at least 1 hour or up to 1 day.
2. Lift chicken from bowl, reserving marinade; pull thighs open and lay
flat on a lightly oiled barbecue grill over a solid bed of hot coals or
high heat on a gas grill (you can hold your hand at grill level only 2
to 3 seconds); close lid on gas grill. Cook, turning thighs as needed to
brown on both sides, until meat is no longer pink in center of thickest
part (cut to test), 10 to 12 minutes, basting frequently with remaining
marinade (use it all).
3. Transfer thighs to a warm platter and pour the chili glaze evenly
over meat; garnish platter with green onions.
Yield: Makes 6 to 8 servings
Chili Glaze
From Sunset
This recipe goes with Sticky Coconut Chicken
3/4 cuprice vinegar
1/2 cupsugar
3 tablespoonssoy sauce
1 teaspoonhot chili flakes
In a 2- to 3-quart pan, combine rice vinegar, sugar, soy sauce, and
chili flakes. Bring to a boil over high heat and cook until mixture is
reduced to 1/2 cup, 8 to 10 minutes. Use hot. If making glaze up to 1
week ahead, cover and chill; reheat before serving.
Nutritional analysis per tablespoon.
Yield: Makes 1/2 cup
_
Crunchy Napa Cabbage Slaw
From_Sunset
2/3_ cup_slivered almonds
8_ cups_(about 1 lb.) coarsely shredded napa cabbage
12_ ounces snow peas, strings removed, rinsed and thinly sliced
1 1/3_ cups_thinly sliced radishes
1 1/3_ cups_thinly sliced green onions (including green tops)
1 1/3_ cups_lightly packed fresh cilantro leaves, rinsed
Creamy soy dressing
1. Place almonds in a 9-inch cake pan. Bake in a 350° oven until golden,
shaking pan once, 6 to 9 minutes.
2. In a large bowl, combine cabbage, snow peas, radishes, green onions,
and cilantro.
3. Add dressing and almonds to cabbage mixture; mix gently to coat. Pour
into a serving bowl.
Yield: About 14 cups; 14 to 16 servings (serving size: 1 cup)
Creamy soy dressing
From_Sunset
This recipe goes with Crunchy Napa Cabbage Slaw
3_ tablespoons_white wine vinegar
3_ tablespoons_sugar
1_ tablespoon_soy sauce
1_ clove peeled and minced garlic
1/2_ teaspoon_Asian sesame oil
1/2_ teaspoon_ground ginger
1/4_ teaspoon_cayenne
1_ cup_mayonnaise
In a small bowl, combine white wine vinegar, sugar, soy sauce, garlic,
Asian sesame oil, ground ginger, and cayenne; stir until sugar
dissolves. Gradually whisk in mayonnaise, stirring until blended.
Regards,
Ranee
Remove do not & spam to e-mail me.
"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/
http://talesfromthekitchen.blogspot.com/
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| S'mee |
One time on Usenet, Ranee Mueller <raneemdonot@spamharbornet.com> said:
> Sticky Coconut Chicken, Rice cooked in Chicken broth, Crunchy Napa
> Cabbage Slaw. I cut the chili pepper in half in the marinade for the
> chicken, but left it the same in the glaze. I wondered how the kids
> would handle it, but they all gobbled it up.
>
> Sticky Coconut Chicken
> From_Sunset
>
> 6_ to 8 boned, skinned chicken thighs (1 1/4 to 1 1/2 lb. total)
> 3/4_ cup_canned coconut milk (stir before measuring)
> 1_ tablespoon_minced fresh ginger
> 1_ teaspoon_fresh-ground pepper
> 1_ teaspoon_hot chili flakes
> Chili glaze
> 4_ or 5 green onions, ends trimmed, cut lengthwise into thin slivers
> (including tops)
<snip>
That sounds good! I wonder if I can get Miguel (DH) to try it -- he
says he doesn't like coconut, but I think it's just the shreds that
get to him...
--
Jani in WA (S'mee)
~ mom, Trollop, novice cook ~
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| Ranee Mueller |
In article <dohchi$80kk_002@news.zipcon.net>,
jjsworldSPAM@BLOCKERzipcon.com (S'mee) wrote:
> That sounds good! I wonder if I can get Miguel (DH) to try it -- he
> says he doesn't like coconut, but I think it's just the shreds that
> get to him...
Rich doesn't particularly care for coconut, but he likes things
cooked with coconut milk. We've decided it's the sweetened coconut
mixed with savory that he doesn't like. He has come to like coconut in
desserts, sparingly, but he'll eat them now.
Regards,
Ranee
Remove do not & spam to e-mail me.
"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/
http://talesfromthekitchen.blogspot.com/
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| charles381@webtv.net |
sounds like unusal kids. They are usually go or hot dogs or pizza, or
something like that......
EAT MORE BEEF!!!!!
(steaks all day, all the time)
<html><body bgcolor="black"
text="white"></html>
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| Ranee Mueller |
In article <7572-43AC3BA7-29@storefull-3132.bay.webtv.net>,
charles381@webtv.net wrote:
> sounds like unusal kids. They are usually go or hot dogs or pizza, or
> something like that......
They may be unusual, but I think it is the work of the parents more
than the kids. People all over the world eat other food besides hot
dogs, pizza, etc, and it's not that somehow they all just start
spontaneously eating those things when they turn 21.
Regards,
Ranee
Remove do not & spam to e-mail me.
"She seeks wool and flax, and works with willing hands." Prov 31:13
http://arabianknits.blogspot.com/
http://talesfromthekitchen.blogspot.com/
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| Tara |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 13:48:07 -0800, Ranee Mueller
<raneemdonot@spamharbornet.com> wrote:
>In article <7572-43AC3BA7-29@storefull-3132.bay.webtv.net>,
> charles381@webtv.net wrote:
>
>> sounds like unusal kids. They are usually go or hot dogs or pizza, or
>> something like that......
>
> They may be unusual, but I think it is the work of the parents more
>than the kids. People all over the world eat other food besides hot
>dogs, pizza, etc, and it's not that somehow they all just start
>spontaneously eating those things when they turn 21.
I was proud of my almost one-year old boys for gobbling down cheese
quesadillas -- nearly one each -- at the Mexican restaurant last
night. The servers seemed pleased to see children enjoying their
food, too. Cheese quesadillas sound pretty kid-friendly, but there
are always several children in my class who won't eat Mexican food
when we go on a field trip for Cinqo de Mayo.
Tara
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