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My Chinese Kitchen: Weekend Breakfast

June 20, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

One of the interesting aspects to life here is sunrise. Since the entire country is on a single time zone, and we are on the eastern side, it makes for a rather early morning. Today, the longest day of the year, the sun rose at 4:29 a.m. That’s why our first purchase priority when we arrived was a good set of curtains for all the bedrooms!

The early sunrise makes for a culture of early risers. We know plenty of people who are up with the sun. Some of them live in our house :(

Which makes you feel really weird about sleeping in on a Saturday morning. I know I shouldn’t care about what others think, but when people have a four-hour edge on your day, it feels like you just might be missing something.

What’s more, we’re hoping to restart our Saturday morning English club soon. We can effectively say goodbye to leisurely Saturday mornings anyway.

Last Friday I had the urge to be organized for the weekend. JavaMan was away in Beijing meeting coffee people and arranging for the purchase of his first Chinese coffee roaster (yay!), so it was just me and the kids, and I experimented. I’ve gotten a lot more free in the kitchen since coming here. I still measure for important things like bread, or if the inspiration strikes me, but I cook for feel a whole lot more, and with all the gluten-free experimentation, I’ve gotten much braver about making things up all on my own without a recipe.

I wanted to make a breakfast casserole in the crockpot–something I could fix and forget the night before and wake up to something yummy and savory. But all the breakfast casserole recipes I found used hashbrowns, and even if I could bring myself to serve those on our table, I couldn’t buy them here.

Here’s what I ended up with. Because the potatoes aren’t hashbrowns, they turned out a little soggy for our liking (but yummy all the same). Everyone agreed that for that reason, the little bit left over was even better the next day.

Breakfast Casserole

Crockpot Breakfast Casserole

Ingredients:

  • 2-3 large potatoes, cubed
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 1 green or red bell pepper, chopped
  • 1/2 lb. bacon (this is what I had, feel free to use more, but it was yummy as is)
  • 1/2 c. to 3/4 shredded cheese (We had mozzarella on hand, and it’s a somewhat precious commodity here, plus our family tries to go easy on the diary, so I used 1/2 cup)
  • 10 eggs (or up it to a dozen)
  • 1 c. milk (I used whipping cream because I had it and it needed to be used)
  • 1/4 tsp dry mustard
  • salt and pepper to taste
Procedure:
  1. Combine onions, bacon, potatoes and green peppers in frying pan (I used my wok) and cook in butter until potatoes are just tender and bacon is cooked.
  2. Pour into crockpot and layer with the cheese: one layer of potato mixture, then some cheese, another layer of potato mixture, more cheese.
  3. Combine eggs, milk, dry mustard, salt and pepper and whisk together until combined. Pour over potato mixture.
  4. Cook for 8-10 hours on low setting.
  5. Wake up and enjoy!
- Carey Clark

 

My Chinese Kitchen: The Crockpot

April 4, 2012 by Carey Jane Clark

{Note: Too much time in the Chinese kitchen this week, so Hold the MSG will post tomorrow instead.}

As I mentioned in another post earlier this week, life in China has some challenges. Things take a little longer to accomplish. We use public transit, there are crowds just about everywhere, and we’re just not in Kansas anymore, Dorothy–or Toronto, for that matter.

I’ve been experimenting with gluten-free baking here. I think I just about have a handle on it (victory report forthcoming). We also have a historical issue with oatmeal. In the supermarket, it’s possible to buy instant and quick-cook oats, but I’ve never been a fan. In the market, you can by large flake oats, but they’re thicker than we’re used to, and the texture is chewier–like eating quinoa–which would be fine if it were quinoa, but it’s not. It’s oats, and we don’t like our oats chewy.

When we first came to China back in 2008, I brought along my grain mill. At the time, we were already eating flours with less gluten, like spelt. I brought a significant quantity of spelt groats with me (so they’d stay fresher than pre-ground flour) and used the mill I had bought back home to grind them.

grinder

We discovered this week that buying oat groats and grinding them makes a lovely consistency of oatmeal that everyone’s happy with. They’re not like steel-cut or rolled, so I don’t know what to call them exactly, but we’re happy with them.

ground oats

But that’s just an example of something that takes a little bit longer here. There’s also the dishwasher. It takes a little longer here too.

My sink

All of that to say, I’m always looking for kitchen shortcuts, like my Deluxe Crockpot Oatmeal. I originally found this recipe at A Year of Slow Cooking. Stephanie O’Dea who blogged and cooked in her crockpot for an entire year AND cooked gluten-free was a source of inspiration, and I looked forward to her every post.

I can’t find this recipe on her site anymore, but I’ll include it below. I made some adjustments to the original because it called for the oats to be cooked overnight, but what I found was that they cooked in about half the time, so if you truly put them on when you went to bed and you went to bed at a decent hour, you’d have partially burnt oats the next morning. I remedied this situation by setting an alarm for the middle of the night and turning on the crockpot. But really. Who else but me is going to do such a crazy thing?

Since returning (and perfecting my oat-grinding), I found the perfect way to make them “just right.” (I feel like Goldilocks.) I cook them for an hour on the high setting prior to going to bed and turn them down to “keep warm” overnight. Perfection!

Except if you forget to turn them down.

Which is precisely what happened to me last week, and which is the real reason for this post. My poor crockpot was toast. Burnt toast. Layers and layers of it. There was a solid, stuck-on mass of charcoal in the bottom of the pot and I thought I’d NEVER get it out.

But then I discovered this amazing solution. I am huge believer in baking soda and vinegar. They clean anything. If vinegar won’t do it, baking soda will. Vinegar for mirrors, baking soda to scrub the scum out of bathtubs. You can even use baking soda for laundry detergent and vinegar as a softener. Really. Love the stuff. Perfectly natural, things smell and look clean afterwards, with no heavy smells of chemicals.

But now I’m even more impressed with the power of baking soda. I turned my poor crockpot on and added my faithful baking soda (which is good for a post all on its own, don’t you think? I brought this home from the store and was already using it before I discovered something was not quite right…)

Armandhatchet

I let the crockpot come to a boil then turned it down and let it simmer overnight. This is the result. Nothing short of amazing! All the burned-on charcoaly stuff just peeled off, leaving my lovely crockpot behind, just like new.

Clean Crock

And now I can make my oatmeal again:

Deluxe Crockpot Oatmeal

  • 1 cup oats
  • 2 cup milk
  • ¼ cup honey (or less, to taste)
  • 1 tablespoon butter – melted
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • ½ teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 cup finely chopped apple
  • ½ cup raisins and/or dates
  • ½ cup chopped walnuts or almonds (I omit these–not everyone in our family is a nut fan)

Grease the inside of Crockpot. Throw all ingredients inside Crockpot and mix well. Cook for one hour on high and turn to keep warm overnight. Stir before serving. Enjoy! (And don’t forget to turn it down overnight.)

- Carey Clark

 

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