• pork for the week

    by emily • January 12, 2011 • Jamaica Plain, Meat/Poultry, Uncategorized, cookbooks • 0 Comments

    Thanks to an awesome cookbook bestowed onto me by my mother-crow called “The thousand recipe Chinese cookbook” by Gloria Bley Miller, I’ve committed myself (at least temporarily) to a one-meat-a-week diet. This book teaches cooks how to start the week with one type of meat, cooked __ way, and then use that already cooked meat in the rest of your meals until it is gone.

    thousand recipe chinese cookbookMeat
    Roasted Pork Shoulder
    275 Degrees
    6 hours
    Dry spice rub of your choosing
    –>I used a certain spice rub created by Ms. Maureen S. last xmas

    When I started reading through this cookbook I realized that I would need a wok. My first wok was non-stick, and rusted after about 6 months where the Teflon peeled away. (gross!) When I lived in San Francisco there was this awesome store in Chinatown called The Wok Shop. I always went in there, but never bought anything- even though it is freakishly reasonably priced. Once I moved and started looking for woks online, I realized I had missed a great opportunity- this store is considered one of the best wok shops in the country, if not THE wok shop. Luckily for me they have a fairly straight-forward online ordering system.  I ended up with 1 handmade iron wok, a gas oven ring (yay! no more electric stove!), a two tiered bamboo steamer, and a Chinese-style pickling jar for my main squeeze all for under $50, including shipping. What a steal!…I appreciate the big warning on the ordering page “our products do not have lead.” Did they previously?!?

    wok-our-hand-hammeredDinner
    Roast pork stir fry with kale
    and julienne veggies
    Place the wok over high heat, drizzle oil into the hot pan
    Add julienne veggies, stir fry 1 minute
    Add pork and kale, stir fry until warm
    add a 1/4 c or so broth, cover and steam- serve with rice

    We’ve had a tub of plan greek-ish (thick, but not quite thick enough to count as strained) yogurt in the fridge for about a week. We also had some cucumbers and some dill, along with a few lemons to boot. So, I made a little tzatziki sauce to eat with my Chinese food, and it was delicious.

    Lunch/Dinner
    Pulled pork sandys
    We used Fornax sliced sourdough boule, but just about any hearty bread would do
    smear mustard on one side of the bread and BBQ sauce on the other
    place pulled pork on sandi, put pickles, or jalapenos, or any other treat on the pork
    Slice cheese (we used Moz.) and make sandwich
    Toast for 5 minutes until warm through and the bread is crispy

    Dinner
    Pork Chili
    Chop: onions, carrots, potatoes and soften over heat with oil S & P
    Deglaze the pan with some red wine, hopefully less crappy than the wine I chose
    Add pork, cumin, chili powder, oregano, and full head of garlic, pressed
    cook until the liquid is absorbed
    deglaze with broth and bring to a boil
    add tomatoes- simmer 30 minutes
    Add red and white kidney beans- simmer 30 minutes

    Who knows what creation will result from the leftover chili!

    About emily

    The Story of Miz Emily

    Told by VBar

    Miz Emily, crow extraordinaire, hails originally from Connecticut and moved to Boston for college in 2004. She and Vbar met their first semester freshman year at Northeastern University and bonded immediately over their love of fresh food, the middle east and the likelihood that they will never get decently paying jobs. In the proceeding years, Emily lived first in the Mission Hill area of Boston before moving out to Jamaica Plain to roost. In the summer of 2008 Emily migrated west to San Francisco she still lives with her man Billy. Emily loves global travel and has spent time backpacking around Europe as well as in Turkey and Brazil.

    Emily’s cooking style can be described as clean, natural and adventurous. Never one to back down from a challenge, can-not-do is not a phrase in her pantry. A master of substitutions, she rarely follows a recipe exactly, often with deliciously innovative results.  Always one to be inspired by her surroundings, she enjoys shopping for new and inexpensive ingredients in farmers markets and ethnocentric neighborhoods, in particular Chinatown. Emily’s meals are strongly tied to the seasons particularly since she is lucky enough to have access to fresh California produce. Emily’s strong caw and yummy mowables make her a truly upstanding west-coast representative for the Crows.

    http://crowsinthekitchen.com

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