Fried rice is a representative Chinese dish, at least in the old days. It has rice, it uses stir fry, it is cooked in the Cantonese style. I have heard people use fried rice as a symbol of Chinese cooking. While there are literally thousands of other Chinese dishes out there, fried rice may very well be the first thing that comes to some peoples' minds when the word Chinese cooking is mentioned.
Fried rice is always good, because you can toss just about anything in it and it will still taste good. I never eat it with soy sauce, because I think it ruins the taste sometimes. Never fry it for too long, or it will be burnt (like toast) and taste horrible. I eat it with tea or coke.
There is no set recipe, because this dish is so very flexible. However, these are my favorite ingredients.
You can also have Chinese sausage, chicken, ginger, vegetables, or anything else you may fancy. Just make sure you add it at the right time, or some of the stir fried ingredients will be over-cooked and some under-cooked. This is the template for fried rice.
Here's how to cook it:
Heat up the oil, add some ginger to sweeten, if desired. Stir-fry the cold rice until the grains are seperated. Then add the salt and peas, then stir fry some more. Toss in everything else, depending on the degree that those ingredients need to be cooked. For example, frozen peas need more time than already cooked meat, and scallions go last. Anyways, toss it around a bit, and serve it up. Don't heat it for too long. This dish can usually be prepared very quickly, as rice doesn't take too long to burn.
East to cook, tastes great. An excellent lunch dish.
Source: original experiment Preparation time: Under 10 minutes Cooking time: About 25 minutes Yield: Four entrees or eight side servings
CloudStrife Fried Rice
This is my own recipe, and is mainly based on ingredients I found lying around my kitchen. As DMan mentions above, "you can toss just about anything in it and it will still taste good", so this is what I generally do. Another reason this dish is so versatile is that it can be made practically vegetarian; except for the eggs. I personally feel that the dish just isn't the same without the egg in it.
Ingredients:
Method:
Other Ideas: Other tasty ingredients to add include chopped peppers, spring onions (aka scallions), prawns, chopped carrot; anything you fancy yourself, basically. Proper Chinese vegetables, like bean sprouts, oriental mushrooms or bamboo shots would make an excellent addition. Schwarz do an excellent Chinese five-spice mixture, as well as a nice garlic ginger and chili powder, which is a lot more convenient than buying raw ginger, chillies, etc., yourself. Especially when you come home from work hungry and just want something tasty and filling without too much fiddling around.
You can eat this as an accompaniment to chops or grilled chicken breasts, or as a meal itself, if you added about a pound of prawns, pork, chicken or whatever meat/meat substitute you like most, and some extra soy sauce. The amounts listed above should provide two to three servings as a side dish.
I present to you my fried rice recipe. Personally, I think it's pretty good. Remember, though: The most important thing is to be creative! Don't like an ingredient? Take it out! Don't have one? You can substitute it! In particular, you won't have many problems substituting dried spices for fresh ones. The world would be boring without variety, yes? That said, let's start out with the ingredients. For the most part, these are things you'll find in your kitchen. Sorry these measurements aren't precise, because I don't really measure when I cook. Find the amounts you like.
The fun part: The recipe
printable version chaos
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