25 August 2008

Char Siu (Chinese Style Barbecue Pork)


Description:
Just moving an old recipe from my blog section.

Char Siu Pork is one of my favorite foods. I remember that my nanny used to buy some for me at the market nearby the house when I was a little girl. Those small strips of red pork meat with sweet and savoury taste.
In Australia, however, I find the pork sometimes having quite a strong smell. Kind of the piggy's body odour. So... when I get it here, I have to be selective where I get it from. The char siu from Sunny's in Carnegie is nice. My husband said the taste was always the same, nice and it is his favorite.

I also had a nice experience having char siu chicken in KL, Malaysia a long time ago. I bought it at a halal food court in a shopping mall. I cannot remember the name of the mall but it is opposite Sungei Wang mall. At first, I ordered for char siu pork to the sale assistant because I did not know that it was a halal food court. He said that he only had chicken there. I was quite sceptical about the taste at first but I was totally wrong. The chicken pieces were very delicious and moist.

Anyway, I am trying here to make my own using pork shoulder. I combined Ci Stella's recipe at http://cikciks.multiply.com/recipes/item/18 (TFS :)) and the recipe from Women's Weekly Chinese Cooking book. For those who do not consume pork, you can use chicken thigh and you may want to replace the wine with apple juice. Here are the ingredients that I put in my version of Char Siu Pork with a kick.



Ingredients:
1 kg pork shoulder, trim the skin and the excess fat or use chicken thigh fillet

2 Tbsp Shao Xing wine
2 Tbsp honey
1.5 Tbsp light soy sauce, Kikoman
1 Tbsp hoisin sauce or charsiu sauce, Lee Kum Kee
0.5 Tbsp fermented soy bean paste, Korean DS brand (tauco)
3 tsp mince garlic
1 tsp sesame oil

1.5 Tbsp caster sugar
3/4 Tbsp salt
1 tsp five spice powder
0.5 tsp white pepper
0.25 tsp cayenne pepper (omit if you don't like chilli)

1/3 tsp red food colouring, Queen Pillar Red Box (Put 2-3 drops if you don't want it too red), optional

Glaze:
Honey


Sauce:
Hoisin sauce : Choy Sun Sauce (Oyster Sauce) : Soy Sauce = 2 : 2 : 1
Add a bit of water to slightly thin the sauce



Directions:
1. Slice pork shoulder into strips about 3-4 cm width
2. Mix all seasonings in a bowl until well combined
3. Put the meat in a container, coat the pork meat and marinade for 30 minutes in the fridge
4. Preheat the oven to 200 deg C
5. Take the meat out of the fridge and leave it to room temperature, about 30 minutes
6. Put the meat on the meat rack. Reserve the marinade for basting
7. Roast the meat until done about 30 minutes. Baste the meat with the reserved seasoning every 10 minutes and turn the meat.
*However, do not baste with the reserved marinade once the meat is not to be returned to the oven and cooked.*

8. Glaze with honey and grill for another 5-10 minutes each side.


12 comments:

  1. Bumbunya lengkap banget ya Re. Looks yummy.

    ReplyDelete
  2. pengen sayang bumbuku ga kebanyakan yg ga ada

    ReplyDelete
  3. takut kurang bumbu sih hehehehe

    ReplyDelete
  4. pakai yang ada aja lia... kalau proporsinya seimbang pasti ok jg koq :D

    ReplyDelete
  5. wah ... boleh dicoba nih Re ... yummmmm

    ReplyDelete
  6. Shao Xing wine bisa dapet di toko bule gak ya Reg? pingin juga nih bikin char siu...

    ReplyDelete
  7. di sini sih di supermarketnya ada aisle yg isinya asian ingredients tapi si Shao Xing winenya belum pernah lihat sih. kalo nggak ada jg gak papa koq atau kl bisa diganti dgn dry sherry.

    ReplyDelete
  8. rasanya mirip ya Reg? Maklum aku rada gak mudheng ttg ganti mengganti ginian... Trus laennya lagi Arak Merah bisa diganti apa ya?

    ReplyDelete
  9. ok koq, dulu aku pernah pakai dry sherry buat masak2 dan soal rasa aman2 aja tuh. :D arak merah bukannya = shao xing wine? aku jg suka bingung soal arak2 spt ini... ada lagi arak putih yg dari beras (rice cooking wine) tapi baunya beda dgn si shao xing.

    ReplyDelete
  10. itulah, kliatan culunnya kan, gak tau bedanya arak2an, hahahah... justru rice cooking wine aku punya tuh... buat masak apa ya Reg?

    ReplyDelete
  11. heheh sama dong di sini jg gitu, suka binun. rice cooking wine bisa buat masak spt stir fry daging2an, terus ayam yg direbus itu spt ayam ala hainan. ceritanya si arak buat ngilangin bau amis dan penyedap jg kalo yg baunya rada2 khas spt si shao xing wine itu.

    ReplyDelete