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Korean Fried Chicken with Hot Dipping Sauce


There's been a lot of deep-fried wings going on in my house lately. I've been experimenting with different recipes to come up with the ultimate crispiest chicken wings and the best Korean chilli dipping sauce, and so far, nobody's been complaining. I finally got it down to using a batter made with self-raising flour, rice flour and glutinous rice flour to achieve a light and crisp layer on the wings. The double-frying simply maximises the crunch factor (and I think it prolongs the crispiness too). One of our favourite places for Korean Fried Chicken is Stra Pocha in Strathfield, where you can ask for their special chilli sauce for dipping the wings in. We love the sauce, and I'm happy that my version of it comes quite close - sweet and spicy with a lot of heat from the red peppers.
 
Let me tempt you with some photos....


Isn't the sauce looking lovely? You can bet those wings are crispy too!


I prefer to serve the chilli sauce on the side, rather than toss the chicken into the sauce as they are sometimes served. That way, the wings stay crisp and crunchy, and it's less messy too if you're eating with your  hands (that's the only way to eat chicken wings!).

Here's the recipe for these delicious wings. Enjoy!

Crispy-battered Korean Fried Chicken

Ingredients

1kg (2 pounds) chicken wings
Salt
Vegetable oil for deep-frying

Batter:
1/4 cup self-raising flour
2 tbsp rice flour
3 tbsp glutinous rice flour
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 cup water (approx)
1/2 tbsp vegetable oil

Dipping sauce:
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 tbsp Gochujang (Korean red pepper paste), extra hot/spicy
2 tsp soy sauce
1 1/2 tbsp brown sugar (or to taste)
1 tbsp corn syrup (or substitute with sugar)
1 tbsp ketchup
1/2 tbsp sesame oil
2 tbsp water

Method

Prepare the sauce by combining the ingredients in a saucepan. Bring to a boil for about 1 minute until it's thick and glossy. Remove from heat and transfer to a serving bowl. Set aside.

Pat the chicken dry with paper towels. Sprinkle all over with 1/2 tbsp salt and leave for 10 minutes. Use a paper towel to absorb any excess moisture and shake off excess salt.

Combine ingredients for batter in a bowl and mix until smooth.

Heat oil in a wok for deep-frying. Dip wings into batter and let excess batter drip off. Slowly drop it into the hot oil (on medium-high heat), and repeat with more wings. Fry in batches until golden brown and cooked (about 8-10 minutes). Drain on kitchen paper.

When all the wings have been cooked and are resting a plate lined with kitchen paper, turn up the heat to high. Fry the wings a second time for 1-2 minutes to crisp them up further. Drain on kitchen paper, then transfer to a plate. Serve immediately with the dipping sauce for maximum enjoyment.


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Börek or Burek (with spinach and cheese)

 
So, I'm not an expert on Burek, nor do I know enough about its cultural background and history to be able to give an accurate account of how it originated. I'm thinking Wikipedia should be fairly reliable, and therefore I quote a few sections from it which provide some insight into this delicious filled pastry.

"Börek (also burek and other variants) is a family of baked or fried filled pastries made of a thin flaky dough known as phyllo (or yufka). It can be filled with cheese, minced meat, or vegetables. Most probably invented in what is now Modern Turkey, in the Anatolian Provinces of the Ottoman Empire in its early era, to become a popular element of Ottoman cuisine.

Börek is also very popular in the cuisines of the former Ottoman Empire, especially in North Africa and throughout the Balkans. The Northern Slavic cuisines, historically developed by people living in close contact with the Turkic peoples of Asia and Europe, also feature derivatives of the börek. Börek is also part of Mizrahi and Sephardic Jewish traditions. They have been enthusiastically adopted by the Ottoman Jewish communities, and have been described, along with boyos de pan and bulemas, as forming "the trio of preeminent Ottoman Jewish pastries".

Börek has its origins in the Turkish cuisine (cf. Baklava) and is one of its most significant and, in fact, ancient elements of the Turkish cuisine, having been developed by the Turks of Central Asia before their westward migration to Anatolia.

Börek in Turkish language refers to any dish made with yufka. The name comes from the Turkic root bur- 'to twist', (similar to Serbian word savijača (from savijati - to twist) which also describes a layered dough dish)."
 

Alright! Now that we've gotten our history lesson out of the way, it's time to make some Burek. Whenever I discover a new favourite food, my first instinct is to look for the recipe and attempt it at home. I love a good challenge. Some may think it's strange, but I used to look forward to exams when I was in school. It bore different consequences of course, but was a challenge nonetheless.

Anyway, I first made this interesting discovery while I was browsing for new dining options. The review on Balkan Oven Burek Bakery Café (what a mouthful!) on Grab Your Fork grabbed my attention. Apparently, burek is the speciality there. Unfortunately, when I made the trip down to Rockdale, the shop was closed for renovations, until the following week! Imagine my dismay! Well, anyway, there was a signboard outside the shop, pointing to restaurant Korzo up the street, and read "We sell Burek" (or something to that effect). It was either that or we head home defeated and empty-stomached. So, we made our way there, and passed by a few people carrying what looked like stacks of pizza boxes. I later found out that they contained whole bureks that they bought from Korzo. We went there and settled for some coffee and a slice of spinach and cheese burek. I was pretty excited trying it for the first time. It's sort of like a flaky layered pie, round in shape and filled with spinach and cheese. It was tasty, with crisp layers outside and soft billowy layers in between the fillings. I would have preferred the pastry to be thinner though, as I found it a little "hard and crunchy". Maybe I could have had the perfect burek if Balkan Oven was open! Oh well, another time perhaps.


Here's a round burek that I made

As I embarked on my quest for the perfect burek recipe, I learnt that the burek (or other name it's known by) comes in different forms and versions depending on which country or region it's from. In Serbia, Macedonia, Croatia and Slovenia, burek is made by alternating layers of dough with other fillings in a circular baking pan. Traditionally it may be baked with no filling (prazan), with stewed minced meat and onions, or with cheese. Based on my sources (Wikipedia), the recipe for "round" burek was developed in the Serbian town of Niš. In 1498, it was introduced by a famous Turkish baker, Mehmed Oğlu from Istanbul. Eventually burek spread from the southeast (southern Serbia, Kosovo and Macedonia) to the rest of Yugoslavia. Most bakers who offer burek in Serbia, Macedonia, Croatia, Montenegro and Slovenia originate from the Niš area of southern Serbia, Kosovo or Macedonia.

Preparing the pastry is similar to making Malaysian roti canai, where dough soaked in oil is stretched until it's silky thin, then folded to form layers. I've included a link below to a video which shows how the pastry is made. It's not as difficult as it looks. What you really need is patience, gentle hands and a large stone countertop to stretch the dough on.

Börek or Burek
(makes one 10-inch Burek)
Source: Various
 
Ingredients
 
250g plain flour
1/2 tsp salt
150ml water (approx.)
3/4 cup vegetable/canola oil
 
Filling:
1/2 cup feta
1 cup cooked and chopped spinach, drained
1/2 egg, beaten
 
Method
 
1. Place the flour and salt into a large mixing bowl of a stand mixer. Attach the dough hook, start the mixer and gradually add the water and until the dough comes together. Let it knead for about 7 minutes until the dough is soft and elastic. Divide into five and flatten slightly into a disc. Take a bowl/saucepan big enough to hold all five pieces of dough. Pour a little vegetable oil into the bowl, place one piece of dough into it, pour a little more oil over the it and repeat until all five are in the bowl. Pour enough vegetable oil over the top to virtually cover the stack of dough. Set aside for half an hour while you make the filling.
 
2. Place cheese and spinach into a bowl and stir through the egg.

Preheat the oven to 200°C (400°F).

3. Grease your marble/stone workbench with a thin layer of vegetable oil all. Take one disc of pastry from the oil, scrape off the oil, then place it onto your oiled work bench. Flatten the disc from the inside to outside, then place your fingers under the edge, gently lift, pull and stretch the dough outwards until it's thin, about 2 feet diameter. Fold in the edges (like an envelope) to form a pentagon (or circle) about 10 inch in diameter. Set aside.

4. Start with another disc of pastry from the pot of oil. Stretch it again to form a thin round sheet. Place the first layer (from step 3) in the middle. Sprinkle the cheese filling in the middle, sprinkle some oil over the pastry, and fold in the edges again. Repeat until you have 5 layers of pastry enclosing each one.

At this stage, it's probably easier to refer to this video to get a better idea how it's made: Click on the link here Balkan Burek Party.

5. Place the prepared pastry on a baking pan and pour some of the oil over the top of the burek. Place in the preheated oven and bake for 30 minutes or until golden brown and crispy. Remove and drain off excess oil, or blot with a paper towel. Slice or cut into wedges and serve hot.

Stretching out the dough as thin as possible - be careful with those sharp nails!


Rectangular "burek" with spinach and feta

A bastardised version of the "burek" made with minced lamb and potato curry


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Singapore Fried Carrot Cake (Chai Tau Kuih)

 
This is the crispy pancake version of Singapore fried carrot cake, though there's some debate over whether it should be called radish cake instead since it uses radish, and not carrot. But then again, sometimes it does not contain radish, so should it be just called rice cake? The radish (or daikon - I think they are similar) gives it a subtle sweetness and flavour. I do like the radish cake to be soft, so the proportion of water to rice flour I've used is about 2:1. After it's fried, the carrot cake will be crispy on the outside, soft and smooth inside. This is a popular dish in Singapore and Malaysia, and is usually eaten for breakfast, lunch, dinner or supper. Look out for it when you're visiting a hawker centre there!


Carrot (or radish) cake
 
Ingredients
 
500g radish/daikon, grated/finely shredded
300g (3 cups) rice flour
50g (1/3 cup) tapioca starch
1 1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp white pepper
1 1/2 tbsp sugar
5 cups water
 
Method
 
Grease a 10 inch round pan and set aside. Prepare a steamer.
 
Take the grated radish and squeeze out as much water as you can. Discard the water.
 
In a large bowl, mix the rice flour, tapioca starch, salt, pepper and sugar together with 6 cups water. Stir to get a smooth runny batter.
 
Place the radish in a large pot and heat on medium flame. Stir it around for a few minutes to let any excess liquid evaporate. Add the batter and stir to mix evenly. Let it heat up and keep stirring until it starts to thicken into a starchy consistency. Turn off the heat and stir until evenly mixed. Pour into the greased pan and level the top.

Steam for 45 minutes until cooked. It will firm up upon cooling. Refrigerate the cake so that it's easier to cut into cubes for frying.
 
Fried carrot cake
 
Ingredients
 
2-3 tbsp vegetable oil
1 1/2 cups cubed (1/2 inch) pieces of steamed carrot cake (as prepared above)
1 tbsp chopped preserved salted radish
2 tsp chopped garlic
1 tsp light soy sauce + 1/2 tsp fish sauce + 1/2 tsp sugar
1 large egg, beaten with 1/4 tsp soy sauce and dash of pepper
1/2 tsp sambal chilli (I used Glory Nonya Sambal)
2 tbsp chopped scallions

Method

In a non-stick wok/pan, add the vegetable oil and place on high heat. When hot, add cubed carrot cake and spread them out in the pan. Be careful of oil splattering. Let it fry on one side for 1-2 minutes before turning them over to fry the other side. When sides are crisp, push the cubes aside. Let the oil come to the centre and add garlic and radish to fry for 1/2 minute. Mix through with the carrot cake. Drizzle in the soy, fish sauce and sugar mixture and mix it through evenly.

Arrange the carrot cake in the centre of the pan in one layer. Slowly pour the beaten egg mixture over the entire surface to ensure even coverage. Use your spatula to gently move the carrot cake so that the egg settles in between the pieces. Leave it for a minute to crisp up. Then cut into quarters with the spatula and flip each one over to cook the other side for half a minute. Take the sambal chilli sauce and smear it over the top of the carrot cake (which is now covered with egg). Flip over again for a few seconds, then flip back. Turn off the heat and transfer the to a serving plate. Sprinkle with chopped scallions and serve hot.

Note: Alternatively, break up the egg with the carrot cake and mix in the sambal chilli. Stir fry briefly and just before serving up, mix through with chopped scallions.

 
Steamed radish cake
Black version of carrot cake (with sweet soy sauce)
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Chocolate Frozen Yogurt

 
My kids love ice-cream, and so when my three-year-old whizzed past (as quickly as I tried to push the trolley) the freezer section of the supermarket last weekend, his "ice-cream-and-lolly-and-all-things-sweet-sensitive-eyes caught sight of the tubs of ice-cream on display, as he instantly called out "Mummy! Ice-cream! Can we buy ice-cream?". I already had my pre-crafted response ready in times like these, and I said "Mummy will make you some ice-cream at home. Do you like chocolate ice-cream?", and quickly proceeded towards the checkout. I wasn't about to buy a 2-litre tub of rainbow ice-cream, firstly because there's no space in the freezer, and secondly, frozen yogurt is a much healthier alternative and it's a breeze to make too, if you have an ice-cream maker at home.



I've adapted the recipe for my Strawberry Frozen Yogurt and substituted the strawberries with cocoa powder instead. Don't expect it to taste like a rich and creamy chocolate ice-cream though. This "healthy" frozen treat has a light chocolate flavour with a slight tang from the yogurt. Quite refreshing actually. And it's great if you're looking for a low-fat alternative to ice-cream.
 
Chocolate Frozen Yogurt
 
Ingredients
 
2 cups full-fat Greek-style plain yogurt
4-5 tbsp cocoa powder
1/2 cup caster sugar (or to taste)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 tsp salt
 
Method
 
Combine everything in a bowl and mix until sugar is dissolved. Taste and adjust the sweetness to your preference. Churn in an ice-cream machine according to manufacturer's instructions. Transfer to a chilled freezer-safe container and freeze for a few hours until firm. Serve plain or with your favourite toppings. If you're feeling indulgent, try it with some chocolate fudge sauce - click here for recipe. Enjoy!
 

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