I really love Chinese food!
But.. there is NO Chinese food in the sticks.
I have done a really good job learning how to make my favorite restaurant foods at home.
Not only can I control exactly what goes into our foods,
It's WAY cheaper to make it myself!
I can usually make a meal for my entire BIG eating family, including left-overs, for less than one or two servings would cost at a restaurant!
My burgers are better than any burger joint.
My steaks are better than any fancy steak house steaks.
I am the queen of deli-style sandwiches and Paninis!
I am thrilled with my Vietnamese spring rolls!
My Pizza is getting close!
But Chinese food always kind of intimidated me.
I didnt' even know where to start!
Until NOW!
I could never figure out what spices and seasonings made Chinese food taste like Chinese food.
I tried soy sauce.... nope.. something else.
I tried 5-spice.. good but not the taste I was craving.
then.. BINGO!!
Enter sesame oil & fresh ginger!!
DING DING DING!!! We Have a Winner!!
the combination of-
soy sauce
sesame oil
fresh ginger
and garlic
IS the Chinese food taste!
Now... don't let the fresh ginger scare you.
I have always said I didn't like ginger.
But.. I do!
as the subtle taste in the background that brings Chinese dishes together and makes them sing to your soul!
I did the work..
and Now.. I'm gonna show you how!
Here we go!
I tried soy sauce.... nope.. something else.
I tried 5-spice.. good but not the taste I was craving.
then.. BINGO!!
Enter sesame oil & fresh ginger!!
DING DING DING!!! We Have a Winner!!
the combination of-
soy sauce
sesame oil
fresh ginger
and garlic
IS the Chinese food taste!
Now... don't let the fresh ginger scare you.
I have always said I didn't like ginger.
But.. I do!
as the subtle taste in the background that brings Chinese dishes together and makes them sing to your soul!
I did the work..
and Now.. I'm gonna show you how!
Here we go!
Shrimp Lo Mein.
- 2 lbs medium shrimp, peeled and deveined
- 1/2 cup soy sauce
- 3 Tablespoons cornstarch
- 3/4 Tablespoon fresh ginger, peeled (using a knife or vegetable peeler) finely chopped or grated.
- 6 cloves garlic, minced
- 4 teaspoons sesame oil, divided
- 12 ounces snow peas
- 1 1/2 cups shredded carrots
- 1 head bok choy
- 1 (14-15 ounce) can chicken broth
- 7 green onions, sliced
- 1 small can water chestnuts, sliced
- 1 bell pepper, sliced into thin strips
- 12 ounces spaghetti noodles, cooked al dente and drained
Directions-
- Combine first 5 ingredients in a bowl and set aside to marinate while you get the other ingredients prepped.
- In large skillet or wok, heat 2 tsp sesame oil over high heat.
- Drain shrimp, reserving marinade.
- Over high heat, cook shrimp until pink, 2-3 minutes.
- Remove shrimp from skillet into a large bowl, set aside.
- Add 1 tsp sesame oil to the skillet, then add snow peas and carrots, and cook approx 2 minutes.
- Remove from skillet add to the bowl with the cooked shrimp.
- Cook cabbage, water chestnuts & pepper in skillet with the remaining sesame sesame oil for approx 2 minutes.
- Remove cabbage mixture to a large clean bowl combine with cooked/drained spaghetti noodles & green onions, set aside.
- Combine chicken broth and reserved marinade, stirring well to stir up the settled corn starch, add to the skillet, along with shrimp mixture.
- Bring to a boil, over high heat, and cook until thickened, 2-3 minutes.
- Remove from heat and pour over the noodle/veggie mixture, toss to coat.
- Enjoy!!
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