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Bánh xèo – Vietnamese crepes

28 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by Zoli in breakfast, crepes, gluten free, healthy, peanut free, salad, Sauces, Street food, vegan, Vegetarian, Vietnamese

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

banh xeo, crepes, vegan recipes, vietnamese crepes, Vietnamese food

banh xeo with mushrooms

banh xeo with mushrooms

with tofu

with tofu

banh-xeo-2

banh-xeo-4

banh-xeo-5

Why yes, now that you ask, I AM obsessed with vietnamese food. Especially these babies. I probably make bánh xèo at least once a week. Crispy pancakes that taste of creamy coconut and turmeric, wrapped up with fresh herbs and vegetables and dipped in a savory spicy sauce. YUM!

Traditionally, these are made with shrimp and pork, which I do not eat. I use tofu, mushrooms or sliced vegetable sausage instead. Other important things that you should not forgo are mint, cucumber, and bean sprouts. But the other fillings are flexible.

Ingredients
Makes about five crepes/bánh xèo
1 cup Bánh xèo flour (or rice flour mixed with a tsp of corn starch) from asian market
1/2 tsp turmeric powder
pinch of salt
1 to 1 1/2 cups coconut milk (or more if batter is too thick. the batter should be thin like crepe batter) or coconut cream but this is thicker than coconut milk so add a little water
a splash of light beer or lager (really helps with the crispiness)
a light vegetable oil
1/2 white onion, sliced finely
mushrooms, vegetable sausage or tofu, sliced

For the filling:
bean sprouts
sliced cucumber
fresh herbs like mint, basil, cilantro
sliced carrot (optional)
large lettuce leaves like romaine, green leaf or mustard greens to wrap up everything, (optional)

For the vegetarian sauce (traditionally fish sauce, not soy sauce is used):
3 tbs soy sauce (or vegetarian fish sauce)
1 tbs lime juice
1/2 tsp sugar
1 tsp minced onion, carrot and cilantro
slivers of fresh chili for spiciness
1 clove minced garlic
1 tbs of water (if needed)

To make:

1) Prepare all the vegetables and the dipping sauce first. Then you can fry each crepe and eat it hot as it comes out of the frying pan.
2) Make the batter by whisking the banh xeo flour with turmeric, pinch of salt, coconut milk and splash of beer–about 1/4 cup–until smooth.
3) Heat up a good dollop of oil in a small to medium non-stick frying pan. Banh xeo is named after the sizzling sound the batter makes when it hits the frying pan so you want enough oil to hear it sizzle!
4) Add a few pieces of thin sliced onion and a few of the mushroom or tofu slices. Fry on medium-high heat until starting to cook, then ladle in the batter. How much will depend on the size of your frying pan/crepe. I use a small ceramic frying pan to make fairly small crepes. The trick is the same as normal crepes–ladle in the batter, and then swirl around so that the batter coats the pan evenly. You may need to practice this a few times to get it right.
5) Cover the crepe with a lid to cook the top of it. Keep the heat on medium high to crisp up the edges of the crepe and make the bottom nice and golden brown.
6) When done cooking –only a minute or two–fill half with fresh bean sprouts and then fold over. One crepe is done! Now add more oil and cook the next.
7) To eat: either stuff the crepes with cucumber and herbs and eat with knife and fork (and the dipping sauce!). Or cut in half and use a large lettuce leaf as a wrapper to eat the crepe halves with the fresh herbs and dipping sauce.

Here is one youtube video about cooking and eating banh xeo.
And here is another youtube video to help.
I recommend watching both to get a good idea of this recipe.

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VEGAN HỦ TIẾU – HỦ TIẾU CHAY

24 Monday Oct 2016

Posted by Zoli in comfort food, gluten free, healthy, pasta, rice noodles, Sauces, soup, vegan, Vegetarian, Vietnamese

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Hủ Tiếu Chay, hutieu chay, soup, vegan soup, Vietnamese food, Vietnamese vegan recipe

hutieuchay-8hutieuchay-9

I made Helen’s VEGAN HỦ TIẾU today. I’ve been wanting to make this vietnamese vegan soup ever since @2kismet posted about it on instagram. He is a big inspiration for my continued education about cooking tasty vietnamese food. But please do watch Helen Le’s you tube video if you are–like me–new to cooking this delicious, flavorful HỦ TIẾU CHAY.

I forgot the tofu skin–sniff. Soup was yummy anyway and made me feel really good after a weekend of partying and my son giving me his cold. Thanks G, you’re the best.

Recipe adapted from Helen Le’s blog

Ingredients

  • 1 pear cut into large pieces
  • 1 apple cut into large pieces
  • 2 cobs corn, cut into thirds
  • 1 daikon radish, sliced
  • 1-2 leek cut the white part into thin strips; chop finely
  • 3-6 garlic cloves minced
  • 2-3 salted radish cut half into 1 & 1/2 inch pieces and soak in water for the toppings; cut the rest into thin strips for the broth
  • 200 g tofu puffs cut in half
  • 300 g mushrooms (straw, oyster, etc) minced
  • chinese celery
  • cilantro
  • red chili
  • lime
  • bean sprouts
  • 500 g dried Hu Tieu noodles (These are thinner than pho noodles.)
  • rock sugar, salt. pepper
  • light soy sauce Always have varieties of soy sauce around. Cheap soy sauces like kikkoman or even Trader Joe’s are worthless! If you are gluten free and don’t have gluten free soy sauce, you can leave it out of this recipe.
  • mushroom seasonings (optional). I used mushroom seasoning and it was delicious but it does have msg in it. However, the recipe only calls for a couple tsp or so.
  1. Fill a large pot with 4 liters or 16 cups of water. Add the cut pear, apple and green part of the leeks. Also add 2 small cubes of rock sugar, 1 tbsp salt (1 tsp mushroom seasoning optional) and the cubed preserved radishes. Bring to boil, then turn down heat and simmer the broth for 1 hour.
  2. While broth cooking, start the toppings. Add some oil in a frying pan and fry the minced white part of the leek. When it turns golden brown, transfer to a small bowl. Also fry 2 tbsp of minced garlic till golden brown and transfer to a separate bowl. With a little bit oil left in the pan, quickly stir-fry the minced radish. Lower the heat and season with 1 tsp sugar, then transfer to another small bowl.
  3. Then add some oil in the pan and stir-fry the mushrooms. Season with 1-2 tbsp light soy sauce and 1 tsp mushroom seasonings (optional). Stir-fry for about 1 minute and you’ll see the mushrooms produce some liquid. Throw in the fried tofu puffs to suck up all the juice. Season to your taste with salt, pepper and mushroom seasonings.
  4. Dip some pieces of dry tofu skin into hot oil to turn them into cracker. Take out of the oil immediately as it will burn quickly. (I forgot tofu skin so don’t have a picture of it!)
  5. Before cooking the noodles, soak them in water for about 15 minutes.
  6. When the broth has cooked for 1 hour, taste and adjust seasoning if needed. It should be delicious already with a mild sweetness from the fruit and rock sugar and the flavors of leek, radish, mushroom, etc. Strain the fruits and vegetables from the broth as these will not go in the soup.
  7. Have everything ready to assemble before you cook the noodles as you don’t want them sitting in the bowls getting cold.
  8. Insert a handful of noodles into the noodle strainer and submerge into the boiling water. Cook until it reaches your desired softness and transfer to serving bowl. You don’t want them too mushy.
  9. Blanch some bean sprouts for a few seconds in the boiling water and place in the serving bowls with the noodles.
  10. To serve, top the bowls of noodles and bean sprouts with the stir-fried mushrooms and tofu, add the fried leek and garlic, and the stir-fried minced preserved radish. Ladle the broth over the noodle bowl and garnish with some cilantro, chili slices, chinese celery leaves and crispy tofu skin. And a lime wedge!

hutieuchay-1hutieuchay-4hutieuchay-5hutieuchay-6hutieuchay-3hutieuchay-7

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