Wondering what to do with 15g soy sauce? Try these quick, healthy, and crowd-pleasing recipes.
Chop the pig's feet into pieces and blanch them to remove the blood foam. Soak the soybeans in advance. Heat the oil and stir-fry the ginger slices. Add the pig's feet and stir-fry until slightly yellow. Add light soy sauce and dark soy sauce for seasoning. Add hot water to cover the ingredients. Bring to a boil over high heat and then simmer over low heat. When the pig's feet are soft and rotten, add the soybeans and continue to stew until the soybean fragrance overflows and the soup is thick. Sprinkle some chopped green onions before serving. The soft and glutinous pig's feet are wrapped in the aroma of sauce, and the soybeans absorb the gravy. It is full of satisfaction in one bite.
- Taste: After frying, the pork chop becomes golden and crispy on the outside, while the meat inside remains tender and juicy. If you choose tenderloin, the taste will be more tender; pork belly will be tender and have a certain oil aroma; the chewiness of pork chop also adds a rich layer to the taste.
Slice the pork tenderloin, mix with soy sauce and starch, and marinate for 10 minutes. Heat oil to fry bean paste, minced garlic, and dried chili peppers, add broth and bring to a boil, add the meat slices and blanch the vegetables. Pour the broth into a bowl, add minced garlic and chili powder, and pour hot oil to enhance the aroma. The meat slices are tender and tasty, the soup is spicy and mellow, and the side dishes absorb the red oil. It is hot and refreshing when you take a bite, and it is perfect with rice!
This dish is made by dicing potatoes and carrots, stir-frying them with minced meat, and coating them with a rich sauce. The red, yellow, and brown colors interweave, making it visually attractive. The potatoes are soft, the carrots are slightly crispy, and the minced meat is fresh and fragrant, with a salty and fragrant taste. It is a delicious dish that goes well with rice and is also homely.
As the stove fire rises, the fried kidney with sour radish cubes is like a warm taste painting. The sour radish cubes cut into dice-sized pieces are golden and translucent, and are stir-fried in hot oil to produce a mellow sour and refreshing taste. Each piece is plump and crispy, and the juice overflows when you bite it; the kidney is cut into fine wheat ears, and is fried at high temperature to curl into an exquisite flower shape. The surface is slightly burnt and shiny, and the inside is fresh and chewy, with just the right chewiness. Red and green chili peppers and scallions are dotted in it, and the spicy and sour taste is intertwined, and the sour and spicy taste rushes straight into the nose. One spoonful of it, the sour, spicy, fresh and fragrant explode on the tip of the tongue, and the crisp and tender taste collides alternately. The rich home-style flavor makes people can't help but eat two bowls of rice.
Let's talk about this steamed taro with chopped peppers. It's absolutely delicious! The taro is steamed until soft and flavorful, melting in the mouth. The spicy chopped peppers and the salty, savory sauce soak up the flavor, leaving you with a soft, chewy, and delicious bite. It's so delicious! The broth is also perfect for rice; add it to a bowl and you'll have two bowls to spare. This dish is common in Hunan and Sichuan restaurants. Chopped peppers are a Hunan specialty, and Sichuan cuisine favors spicy flavors. The fusion of spicy flavors from north and south combined with taro creates a dish that everyone praises, and it's a favorite among diners from Hunan and Sichuan! I'm sure many people love taro, but the difficulty of handling it can be a real hindrance. But with this recipe for steamed taro with chopped peppers and some tips for preparing taro, there's no need to worry!
One bite is so delicious, you can finish half a plate in one go! The method is also very simple, just wash, boil, stew, and it's done in a few steps. The aroma of the stew is wrapped in the chewy eggs, the soy sauce enhances the freshness, the oyster sauce enhances the fragrance, and the five spices add flavor. It is tasty and addictive. It is perfect as a snack or with rice. Even a novice in the kitchen can easily replicate it. Whoever makes it will love it. It is a delicious and quick dish~
"On the left is the non-spicy seafood sauce section: the aroma of freshness hits your nose as soon as it's served. The fish is soaked in the sweet fragrance of seafood sauce, so tender it trembles when you pick it up with chopsticks. My child immediately started gnawing on the fish belly, even chewing the lotus root slices soaked in the sauce with a satisfying crunch, exclaiming, 'Mom, this is even better than what you get at restaurants!'—the seafood sauce gives the vegetables a subtle sweetness, light yet not bland at all. My child even ate rice faster than usual. On the right is our spicy dry pot section: the aroma of the dry pot ingredients fills the kitchen as soon as the sauce is poured on. The fish skin is grilled until slightly crispy, bursting with juice with every bite when coated in spicy oil. Even the celery stalks are infused with the spicy fragrance, becoming more flavorful the longer they cook. In the end, even the last bit of sauce at the bottom of the pot..." It had to be poured over rice and polished clean. The moment this pot of fish was served, the kids on the left exclaimed, "Mmm, this is so tender!" while we on the right were shouting, "Wow, this is so spicy and delicious!" The divider clearly separated the flavors; some were tender, some were fragrant. Even the usually picky kid devoured the lotus root slices. We used a special grill pan for fish that can be heated directly. It bubbled and steamed as soon as the flame was turned on, making it incredibly satisfying to eat and cook at the same time—the kids on the left were plucking at the tender, seafood-flavored fish, while we on the right were enjoying the juicy, spicy pieces of fish, taking a sip of wine, the spicy aroma mingling with the wine's fragrance, enveloped in the warmth—it was so addictive! If you don't have this special pan, a small alcohol stove with a regular grill pan works just as well, filling the air with a smoky, hearty atmosphere. Life is just too good!
Sichuan and Chongqing special cold noodles, both delicious and beautiful. The noodles are chewy and chewy, paired with crisp bean sprouts, sweet cucumber shreds, and crispy peanuts, with rich taste. The sauce is the soul, with bright red chili oil and spicy pepper powder as the base, soy sauce to enhance the freshness, balsamic vinegar to add acidity, minced garlic and chopped green onions to stimulate the aroma, spicy, fresh, fragrant and sour interweaving, with a rich taste. Sichuan and Chongqing tourism is hot, and cold noodles have become a must-try delicacy, especially in the bustling food square, where bowls of cold noodles are placed on the stalls, and the noodles are piled into a small mountain, with red, green, yellow and white staggered, and the appearance is eye-catching. Tourists sit around and taste it, sweating from the spiciness but still unable to stop, becoming a bright business card for Sichuan and Chongqing's food culture.