Vegan Thai ginger gravy

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There are some recipes I’ve discovered over the years that are just so so so very good. People, this tofu and mushroom ginger gravy is one of them. A dinner staple in my house for two reasons, it is 1) easy and cheap to make and 2) fricking delicious. It is probably one of the gingery-est things you will ever eat and undeniably delicious even to ginger haters.

First let me honor one of my favorite food blogs, High Heel Gourmet, for turning me onto this home-cooked Thai dish. This lovely lady is an amazing talent and resource and if you want to learn how to cook real Thai food, please check her out. Here is a link to her original recipe for Khao Na Gai, which uses chicken and oyster sauce and fried eggs and sausages. I’ve taken her recipe and adapted (also simplified!) it to make it vegan for my family.

Ingredients
Serves 2 as large portion or 4 as a small portion
3-4 fat garlic cloves, minced
3 tbs sliced ginger and 3 tbs minced ginger (or more! the more, the better)
6 tbs good quality, aged soy sauce (or 3 tbs sweet dark soy sauce and 3 tbs light soy sauce)
2 tbs Chinese wine
White pepper
1/2 tsp sugar
Sesame oil
1 block of extra firm tofu (if you don’t like tofu, use extra mushrooms)
1 box of mushrooms (or 1-2 cups assorted mushrooms)
Olive oil
2-3 tsp corn starch (or potato starch)
1/2 vegetable boullion cube and 2 cups water (or 2 cups veggie stock)

Serve with rice or noodles and any of the following:
Sliced cucumber
sliced green chili
fresh cilantro

1) Chop the garlic, ginger, mushrooms and tofu. If you do not like to bite into a large piece of ginger then mince all the ginger instead of leaving half of it sliced.
2) Put the mushrooms, tofu and half the garlic and ginger into a bowl. Add the soy sauce, chinese wine, 1 tsp white pepper, sugar, 1 glug of sesame oil. Mix and leave to marinade for 30 minutes.
3) While that is marinating, make the rice or noodles according to their directions and set aside. Use asian noodles or jasmine or sticky rice.
4) Heat up 3 tbs of olive oil in a frying pan or wok and fry the remaining garlic and ginger. Do not brown. After a minute, add in the marinated tofu and mushroom, including all the sauce.
5) Fry on high heat while stirring occasionally for about 10-15 minutes or until all mushrooms are cooked.
6) Add in the half veg stock cube and 1 cup of water and simmer.
7) Mix the corn starch or potato starch with another cup of water till blended and add that in. The gravy will thicken and turn glossy. Cook for another few minutes and taste. Add more soy sauce or white pepper if needed.
8) Add another tsp of sesame oil just before serving.

Eat with chili for heat and cucumber for cooling.

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Korean Vietnamese spring rolls

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Sadly, I’m down to my last jar of kim chi. I started with five jars, but when you put kim chi on everything it tends to disappear pretty quickly. Recently I’ve made kimbap, kim chi eggs with goat cheese, kim chi quesadillas, kim chi and avocado toast, kim chi pizza bagels, kim chi tartine, kim chi on tomato barley stew (gross), and kim chi in my ramen (well, naturally). This morning it was kim chi in my spring rolls. YES!

These are so light, fresh and tasty it’s like biting into a salad of nutritious goodness. I felt like every bite was doing my body good. And really so needed after the wintery, snowy weekend of excess. I had to shield my eyes from all the empty wine bottles in the recycling bin. Oh dear.

I used my homemade vegan radish kim chi for these, but any kim chi will do.

Ingredients
Spring roll skins
rice, glass or mung bean noodles
tofu
kim chi
soft lettuce

Vietnamese dipping sauce
soy sauce (or fish sauce if not vegetarian)
vinegar or lime juice
sugar
red onion
red chili
fresh garlic
cilantro (optional)

First make the dipping sauce

1) I’m sorry I make these sauces so often that I don’t measure anything. Start a small portion and add more ingredients to make it to your taste.
2) Add some soy sauce to a small bowl (perhaps 1/4 cup) and then about half that of rice vinegar or a tsp of fresh squeezed lime juice.
3) Add 1/2 tsp sugar, one thinly sliced chili, about 1 tsp of minced onion and 1 clove of minced garlic.
4) Stir to combine and taste. Should have a nice balance of salty/sour/sweet/spicy. If it’s not quite right, add more soy or vinegar or chili to correct it. There’s no cement rule about these sauces.

To make the kim chi spring rolls

1) Cut the tofu into thin slices and shallow fry in oil until crispy and golden.
2) Wash lettuce and cut away any hard stems. I used the green soft parts of gem lettuce.
3) Soften the noodles according to the recipe on the packet. I used mung bean threads which only had to be soaked in hot water for 10 minutes. Then drained.
4) Prepare a small plate of cold water and a clean flat area for rolling.
5) Take a spring roll skin and dip it into the cold water briefly. Shake away excess water and lay on rolling surface. It will start to soften very quickly.
6) My technique is to start with lettuce, then a pile of noodles, the tofu and then the kim chi. Carefully and as tightly as possible, roll up the sides. Then fold the bottom of the spring roll skin over. This may take a few tries to get right. I have made probably a hundred spring rolls and I’m still crap at rolling. The main thing is you don’t want them too baggy or it will all fall apart when you take a bite.

Serve with the dipping sauce and enjoy!!
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