Tag Archives: Asian Food

The History Behind Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen New Easy Stir-Fry Sauce Bottle

Article Contributed by Nicole Herman, with Notes from Helen Chen

Helen Chen is a leading Asian culinary expert, cookbook author, cooking instructor and developer of Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® cookware and cooking supplies, in partnership with Harold Import Co. (Scroll to the base of this post to learn more about Helen.) Every great tool has a great story – This is the history behind Helen’s new Easy Stir-Fry Sauce Bottle.

Helen Chen Teaching a Stir-Fry Cooking Class

Helen Chen Teaching a Stir-Fry Cooking Class

A Note From Helen –

It all started with a brilliant idea from my mother, Joyce Chen. In the 1950’s our restaurant was the first to serve authentic Sichuan dishes before Sichuan cuisine was even on the radar in the United States. The two most popular dishes were the ones made in the Kung Pao and Yu Xiang styles.  These dishes quickly became favorites with our restaurant clientele.  Since all of our dishes were cooked to order, our chefs had to cook the most popular ones multiple times each night.  My mother’s creative idea was to make the sauces herself, in advance, and have our chefs cook with them.  This would not only save them time, but also provide consistent quality control so no matter which chef cooked the dish, it would always come out of the kitchen perfectly delicious every time.

Chinese chefs can be just as temperamental as any other professional chef, but it was a testament to the quality of these sauces that our chefs not only agreed to use them, but quickly embraced the idea whole-heartedly when they realized how quick and easy they were to use…and how delicious they tasted.

For my mother, who was always thinking of ways to improve her art, it was a natural progression to take this concept from our restaurant kitchen to home kitchens.  For a time we had our own line of bottled stir-fry sauces.  Although they are no longer in production, people who remember them always tell me how wonderful they were and ask where they can buy more.

Enter, Helen’s Asian Kitchen Easy Stir-Fry Sauce Bottle.  The genesis of my new stir-fry sauce bottle came from my mother’s incredibly innovative idea of making her own stir-fry sauces, and  now you can too! I’ve chosen four of my own delicious and versatile stir-fry sauces that can make the home cook a master chef.  Now stir-frying can be truly quick, easy and always delicious.

Helen Chen Teaching Stir-Fry Cooking Class

Helen Chen Teaching Stir-Fry Cooking Class

My four unique sauces (Mandarin Orange, Canton Oyster, Beijing Hoisin and Sichuan Black Bean) are made with ingredients that can be readily found in most American supermarkets.  And for those people with food allergies, making sauces from scratch allows for substitutions that fit dietary requirements.  To use, simply follow the recipe – ingredients and quantities are printed right on the bottle – shake, and you’re ready to cook.  The sauces are incredibly versatile and may be used with just about any meat, seafood, vegetable, noodles or even as a marinade for kebabs or for barbecuing.  With your own bottled cooking sauces it’s easy to cook for one or for eight.  Plus, once the sauce is made, it will keep in the refrigerator for future use.

I’d like to share with you an easy stir-fry noodles recipe made with my Canton Oyster sauce, the recipe for which is also found right on my Easy Stir-Fry Sauce Bottle.

Recipe: Helen’s Easy Stir-Fry Noodles with Oyster Sauce (made in Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® Easy Stir Fry Sauce Bottle)

Helen Chen's Easy Stir Fry Noodles

Helen Chen’s Easy Stir Fry Noodles with Oyster Sauce

You may vary the type and amount of shredded vegetables in this versatile recipe, or make it vegetarian by omitting the meat.  The stir-fry sauce will provide all the rich flavor you’ll need.

Serves 6

1 pound dry Chinese wheat noodles or thin spaghetti
8 ounces shredded lean pork or chicken breast
2 teaspoons cornstarch
2 teaspoons dry sherry
4 tablespoons canola oil
1 medium onion, thinly sliced
10 ounces shredded napa cabbage
5 medium dried black mushrooms, soaked in hot water 15 mins until soft
2 ounces snow peas, ends snapped off, strings removed and shredded on the diagonal
1 medium carrot, shredded
½ cup canned shredded bamboo shoots, drained
6 tablespoons Canton Oyster Stir Fry Sauce, or more to taste  (Made using the recipe on Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® Easy Stir Fry Sauce Bottle, or you can purchase a pre-made sauce from your local grocer or Asian food specialty store.)

1.  In a large pot of boiling water, cook the noodles until a little softer than al dente.  Drain, rinse in cold water, and drain again.  Set aside.

2. In a small bowl mix meat with cornstarch and sherry. Drain the mushrooms and squeeze dry.  Cut off the stems with scissors and discard. Shred caps.

3.  In a wok, heat cooking oil over medium-high heat, add the well-stirred meat mixture and stir-fry about two minutes or until it separates and changes color, about 1 minute. Add the onion, cabbage, mushrooms, carrot and bamboo shoots and stir until the cabbage begins to wilt, about 2 minutes.

4.  Sprinkle the noodles with a few tablespoons of water to loosen them up, drain, then add them to the pan.  Pour the Canton Oyster Stir Fry Sauce over the noodles and add in the snow peas. Continue tossing and stirring until well mixed and evenly colored, about 1 minute.  Taste and add more sauce, if desired. Transfer the noodles to a serving platter and serve immediately.

Biography of Helen Chen

Helen Chen

Helen Chen

HIC, Harold Import Co. is proud to call Helen Chen a partner in Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® made by HIC Harold Import Co.

Helen Chen is a leading Asian culinary expert, cookbook author, cooking instructor and developer of Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® cookware and cooking supplies.  Helen learned to cook from her mother and has combined the comfort of home-style dishes with an updated incorporation of heart-healthy oils and readily available supermarket ingredients—making cooking great Asian food easier for everyone.

Helen Chen’s unique line of Asian cooking supplies was developed through many years of culinary experience and provides the kind of high-quality standards that you can expect from HIC, Harold Import Co. Some of the products available in the Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® innovative line of Asian cooking utensils include steaming accessories, cutlery, cookware, tea & sake, tabletop, utensils and housewares.

*Not affiliated with Joyce Chen products

Carbon Steel Wok Meets Non-Stick Wok. An Interview with Helen Chen.

Non-Stick Wok

Non-Stick Wok

Carbon Steel Wok

Carbon Steel Wok

Article contributed by Nicole Herman, of HIC

Not once in the time that I’ve had the privilege of knowing renowned Asian Chef Helen Chen, have I engaged in conversation with her and walked away without wishing I’d captured her lesson on audio tape. The consummate educator, she’s candid, personable, speaking in a delightfully up-tempo, animated voice. I recently had the pleasure of talking with Helen a bit about her heritage, which is covered in the first part of this post, and discussing the pinnacle of her kitchen from childhood to present day — the quintessential wok. We address the question often asked, “Which is best? A carbon steel wok or a non-stick wok?”

Helen Chen with her mother, Joyce.

Helen Chen with her mother, Joyce.

Nicole Herman: Helen, your mother Joyce Chen was a well-known Asian chef, so you must have been exposed to a lot of great food and cooking equipment while you were growing up. Is that true?

Helen: Absolutely. In terms of food, when I wrote my first cookbook I made a list of all the dishes I remember my mother cooking at home. I came up with 100 dishes! In terms of being exposed to food, I was. My mother was a fabulous cook, mostly Chinese food. I can’t remember all 100 dishes now; many were specialties from Shanghai where she grew up, and Chinese comfort food, festival foods enjoyed during the dragon boat fest or Chinese New Year. Many times a year we had celebratory food.

Growing up we never had a round-bottom wok, mother didn’t believe in them because she felt it didn’t fit properly on the American stove even with the ring which is used to support the wok when  on a regular range, helping direct heat to the bottom of the wok and provide stability. Mother used a heavy duty pressure cooker pot. This way there were no hot spots; high sides enable stirring without food falling out. Thinking about the traditional Chinese kitchen, it tends to be a spartan place. Mother used the pressure cooker pot and wooden spoons. She wanted a round edge to get into the pan corners and she liked cooking to be quiet. Good knives, both Chinese style and western style, and chopsticks were also important. She used bamboo chopsticks in cooking, for stirring and picking up pieces. Gadgets were at a minimum as not many were on the market. This was in the 50’s – the pressure cooker was aluminum, as I recall. We were living in Cambridge at this time, where I grew up.

Helen's Mother's Wooden Spoon.

Helen’s Mother’s Wooden Spoon.

N: What cookware and gadgets were essentials for your mom, and are they the same products that are essentials for you?

Helen: Mom was the first person to develop a flat-bottom wok, which is my number one go-to tool still today. In China, they had a stove with a hole and the round-bottom wok sat in the hole, with the base close to the heat source. Since we had flat stoves in the US, mother developed a wok for this type of stove. Today it’s called a stir fry pan. In the early days no one understood it because they hadn’t seen one. They thought woks had a round-bottom. It took years to educate people on the benefits of a flat-bottom wok.

N: What are the benefits of a flat-bottom wok?

Helen: A Flat-bottom fits securely on a burner; it’s safer, and more stable. Mother added a skillet type handle instead of the two short wire handles that were common on the round-bottom wok; the latter was impractical as it meant you needed two hands to pick it up, and another person to help you get ingredients out.

Everyone now understands the importance of a flat-bottom wok. In China today, more people use propane and have stoves with flat burners in urban areas and most people there also now use a flat-bottom wok instead of the round-bottom style.

With the Helen’s Asian Kitchen line, we have taken the flat-bottom wok design and made it into a quality piece- added nonstick coating, made with a carbon steel of a heavier gauge, the handles are riveted and not just spot welded. We have good pricing and higher quality. It stems from the original design from my mom, but higher quality.

N: What piece of cookware or kitchen gadget has been the most helpful for you, or made a dish you make easier to create?

Helen: The flat-bottom 14” wok or the 12” stir fry pan.

N: Given today’s modern cookware and gadgets, do you find that creating great Asian cuisine is any easier for the home chef than it would have been, say, 50 years ago?

Helen: Yes. Better equipment has made the preparation easier. A good peeler that’s sharp and doesn’t cut into your hand helps, a good garlic press helps, I find there’s more comfort in today’s tools. Better materials and better designs are safer, easier, and easier to clean. Some of the mandolines out of Japan are very useful for julienne ingredients.

N: Many home chefs enjoy stir fry, but may be intimidated by the idea of using a wok at home. Do you have words of advice to ease the mind of a timid first time wok user or potential purchaser?

Helen: In general, everyone should use a flat-bottom wok or stir fry pan. Don’t bother with a round-bottom unless you have a high end stove with a wok ring built in. For most people, a flat-bottom is best. Look for one with a nice weight. Cast iron conducts heat well, but it’s heavy and hard to move and pick up. Also cast iron isn’t ideal for stir frying because it isn’t responsive to heat changes; it holds heat a long time.

N: What’s the difference between an uncoated carbon steel wok and a non-stick wok?

Helen: The uncoated is carbon steel without any coating except perhaps oil or a clear lacquer to help the pan from getting rusty during the time it would sit on a store shelf.

Carbon steel must be seasoned. This sounds like it might make food taste better but it doesn’t, it just keeps the pan from rusting. Takes a good 6 months of almost daily use for a wok to get really seasoned. If you like to season, get carbon steel. If you don’t plan to use your wok more than 3x a week, the oil you use to season it will eventually get tacky, attract dust, and it may rust. When people see rust, they may think they need a new one. Nope! All you need to do is clean the rust off and re-season. In a Chinese kitchen the wok is used daily, and often sits on the burner just waiting for the next meal to be made in it, so seasoning is not a problem.  If you live near the ocean a carbon steel wok may rust more easily due to the high moisture content in the air.

A non-stick wok comes in many varieties. High end, inexpensive, Teflon or not, plus there is non-stick for different purposes. A skillet has a different nonstick coating than a cake pan or stir fry pan. In a stir fry pan, food is stirred, unlike a skillet where things might just be turned a few times. The nonstick coating must be strong. For stir frying we also tend to use a higher heat and the pan must be able to take a higher temperature. For the woks from Helen’s Asian Kitchen we use the Excalibur® process, developed by Whitford, known as reinforced nonstick and it can take higher temperatures.

N: What do you use at home?

Helen: The 14″ and 12″ non-stick woks from the Helen’s Asian Kitchen line, depending on the food volume that I’m preparing. When cooking for a dinner party, or using a high volume ingredient like noodles, I use the 14” but when cooking for myself I use the 12.” It’s about personal preference.  There’s nothing wrong with carbon steel as long as your know it needs extra care.

N: Helen, for those that choose a carbon steel wok, how would you suggest they season the wok?

Helen: Wash in warm soapy water and scrub to remove any coating or food safe lacquer.  Then use vegetable oil, corn oil, but not butter or olive oil. Heat the pan and add a few tablespoons of oil. Heat it until the oil smokes. Then remove from heat, wipe off excess oil and allow to cool. Repeat.

N: What type of wok is best for a home chef that’s just exploring using a wok for the first time? And what type is best for an experienced chef, looking to invest in a high quality wok?

Helen: I would recommend a high quality non-stick pan coated with a premium non-stick coating like Excalibur. It’s not that expensive, but performs well. If someone prefers to season a pan, then go with carbon steel.

N: How long should a cook expect to keep a well-cared-for wok?

Helen: The pan I started with 7 years ago I still use today. For a well-cared for wok, it should last many years. Don’t put it in the dishwasher and don’t use metal tools that would scratch it.

N: Is there any special recipe that you like to cook in a wok that might surprise?

Helen: I make Italian bolognese sauce in my wok but instead of beef I use turkey. I make a large batch in the 14” wok. I sauté the meat, and brown onions in it. I use the 12” for risotto and also use it for French sautéing. For dessert I make Almond Brittle it the 12” wok.  I hang it on my pot rack and it’s one of the top 2 pieces of cookware I use in my kitchen at home.

N: What’s something that you remember watching your mom make in a wok? And do you make that same dish today?

Helen: Anything stir fry.

To learn more about Helen Chen’s cookbooks and recipes, visit http://www.helensasiankitchen.com/
See the Helen’s Asian Kitchen kitchenware line at:  http://www.hickitchen.com/helen-chens-asian-kitchen.aspx
Where to buy? http://www.hickitchen.com/where-to-buy.aspx
Interested in meeting Helen?  See Helen Chen’s Cooking class schedule

*Not affiliated with Joyce Chen Products

Biography of Helen Chen

Helen Chen

Helen Chen

Helen Chen is a widely acknowledged expert in Chinese cooking. Besides her role as an educator and cookbook author, she also is a product and business consultant to the housewares industry. In 2007 she created and developed a new line of Asian kitchenware under the brand name, “Helen’s Asian Kitchen,” expressly for Harold Import Company in New Jersey.

Having been born in China, and raised and educated in the United States, Helen brings the best of both worlds to her approach to the art of Chinese cuisine. She understands the needs of the American cook as only a native can, yet she is intimately knowledgeable with the culinary practices and philosophy of China.

Helen is the author of Helen Chen’s Chinese Home Cooking (Hearst Books,1994), Peking Cuisine (Orion Books,1997), Helen’s Asian Kitchen: Easy Chinese Stir-Fries (John Wiley & Sons, 2009) and Helen’s Asian Kitchen: Easy Asian Noodles (John Wiley & Sons, 2010). For more information, visit http://www.helensasiankitchen.com/

Asparagus Salad with an Asian Twist – A Recipe to Celebrate Spring from Helen Chen

Article contributed by leading Asian culinary expert, cookbook author, cooking instructor, and developer of Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® cookware and cooking supplies, Helen Chen.

Asparagus Salad

Asparagus Salad

I so look forward to spring.  Not only for the promise of warm weather and longer days, but also for the anticipation of fresh local produce.  What better harbinger of the coming seasonal bounty than asparagus.

In New England, we have a number of farms that grow this delectable vegetable, but in Western Massachusetts, the town of Hadley, crowned “The Asparagus Capital of the World,” is famous for it.  I don’t know if that moniker is still actually true, but here in Massachusetts we are used to hyperbole.  To us, Boston is “The Hub of the Universe!”

Asparagus fits beautifully into Asian cuisine where it is most commonly parboiled or stir fried.  One of my favorite (and easiest) asparagus recipes is a salad I learned from my mother.   She always made it when asparagus were in season.  It’s quick, incredibly easy and pairs deliciously with Asian or Western foods.  I make it all the time and have converted many friends with this recipe.

asparagus

When buying asparagus, look for bright green spears with tight crowns.  Anything limp, yellowed or wrinkled should be passed by.  I prefer spears that are at least ½” in diameter because I think the thicker spears are more tender and better tasting.   Be careful not to overcook the spears and remember to immediately plunge them into cold water after cooking to maintain that spring green color and tender-crisp texture.

Welcome spring to your table with this tasty asparagus salad.  Happy Spring!

Helen Chen

ASPARAGUS SALAD RECIPE

1 pound fresh asparagus

3 tablespoons soy sauce

1 teaspoon Asian sesame oil

1.  Cut or snap off the tough ends of the asparagus.  Wash well and cut on the diagonal into 1½-inch lengths.  (I like to use my incredibly sharp Ceramic Paring Knife)

2.  Bring 6 cups of water to a boil in a saucepan over high heat.  Add the asparagus pieces and as soon as the water returns to a boil, drain and quickly cool in cold water to stop the cooking.  Drain well.  (The asparagus may be cooked a day ahead and refrigerated)

3. Just before serving, place the asparagus in a serving dish and toss with the soy sauce and sesame oil.  Serve at room temperature.

COOL TOOL TIP: 

Among my (and just about every professional chef’s) favorite and frequently used tools for straining are my “Spider” skimmers and basket.  They are affectionately called “spiders” because of the “web” of hand-woven stainless steel wire that make up the basket.  They drain incredibly fast and thoroughly.  Even better than a colander!

Spider Strainer Basket

Spider Strainer Basket

With the Spider Strainer Basket, simply fill it with the asparagus pieces and place the whole basket into the boiling water. Convenient hooks on the handle allow the basket to be attached to the side of the pot.  When the asparagus are done just lift the basket out of the hot water and rinse under cold water in the sink. See where to find a Spider Strainer Basket near you.

Would you like to meet Helen? See Helen Chen’s Cooking class schedule.

Copyright © 1994 and 2013 by Helen Chen.  All rights reserved.

Biography of the Author, Helen Chen

Helen Chen

Helen Chen

Helen Chen is a widely acknowledged expert in Chinese cooking. Besides her role as an educator and cookbook author, she also is a product and business consultant to the housewares industry. In 2007 she created and developed a new line of Asian kitchenware under the brand name, “Helen’s Asian Kitchen,” expressly for Harold Import Company in New Jersey.

Having been born in China, and raised and educated in the United States, Helen brings the best of both worlds to her approach to the art of Chinese cuisine. She understands the needs of the American cook as only a native can, yet she is intimately knowledgeable with the culinary practices and philosophy of China.

Helen is the author of Helen Chen’s Chinese Home Cooking (Hearst Books,1994), Peking Cuisine (Orion Books,1997), Helen’s Asian Kitchen: Easy Chinese Stir-Fries (John Wiley & Sons, 2009) and Helen’s Asian Kitchen: Easy Asian Noodles (John Wiley & Sons, 2010). For more information, visit http://www.helensasiankitchen.com/

*Not affiliated with Joyce Chen Products

Clams in Black Bean Sauce – A Recipe to Celebrate Chinese New Year, 2013… Year of the Snake

Article written by leading Asian culinary expert, cookbook author, cooking instructor, and developer of Helen Chen’s Asian Kitchen® cookware and cooking supplies, Helen Chen. For full Bio, please see below…

Clams in black bean sauce

Clams in black bean sauce

February 10, 2013 ushers in the new Year of the Snake. The exact date of Chinese New Year, or Spring Festival, as it is commonly known in China, is determined by the phases of the moon. The Chinese lunar calendar is one of the oldest chronological records in history.

Chinese New Year is a time for grand celebrations and in China almost one billion people are on the move. It’s the one time in the year that everyone tries to journey to their respective hometowns for family reunions and banquets. I always suggest to tourists not to even think about visiting China during the New Year festivities. You won’t be able to buy a train, plane or boat ticket. It will be that busy and chaotic.

In the days preceding New Year the house must be cleaned, all debts settled and the house decorated with good luck symbols and signs. It’s considered unlucky to sweep or cut your hair during Chinese New Year because you’d sweep away good fortune and since the Chinese word for “hair” is a homonym for prosperity, the last thing you want to do is to cut your wealth in half.

Good luck couplets are written on scrolls of red paper and hung on either side of the front door. Flowers also play an important part in the New Year celebration. It’s traditional to have a bowl of fragrant narcissi that have been forced to bloom just in time for Chinese New Year. Paper whites or narcissi are symbolic of good fortune and prosperity. I have my narcissi in bloom right now!

With any Chinese festival, especially one as old and significant as the Chinese New Year, food always plays a large part in the celebration. For the Chinese, they are either eating or talking about food!

Lucky foods are prepared and served throughout Chinese New Year especially on New Year’s Eve when the whole family congregates for their new year banquet. Sticky rice to symbolize the “sticking together” of family and friends; whole fish to symbolize abundance; deep-fried spring rolls that resemble golden bars of gold; stir-fried clams in their shells look like silver ingots of old China; long noodles for long life; juicy Mandarin oranges to signify good luck; red apples not only for their lucky red color, but also because the word for apple, “ping guo” sounds like the word “ping” for peace; peaches for longevity; and peanuts, known as the long life nut. The list goes on and on.

Let me be the first to wish you all a very happy, healthy and prosperous New Year!

Helen Chen

A Chinese New Year Recipe- Clams in Black Bean Sauce

Serves 2, or 4 as part of a multicourse meal
12 littleneck or cherrystone clams (about 2 pounds)
2 garlic cloves, lightly crushed and peeled
2 slices unpeeled gingerroot
1 scallion, green and white parts, cut into 1-inch lengths, bulb split
3 tablespoons fermented black beans, coarsely chopped
1 fresh Thai chili, thinly sliced, optional
2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
1 tablespoon dry sherry
2 teaspoons sugar
2 tablespoons canola oil
2 teaspoons cornstarch, dissolved in 1 tablespoon water
Cilantro springs, for garnish

1. Cover the clams with fresh cold water and soak for about 30 minutes. Scrub the
shells with a stiff brush and rinse thoroughly to remove all sand and grit. (Here’s an in-depth clam cleaning guide for more tips and pictures)
Remember the shells and all will cook in the sauce and you don’t want it to
become gritty. Drain. Set aside. If not cooking right away, place in the
refrigerator.

2. Combine the garlic, gingerroot, scallion, black beans and chili, if using in a small dish. Set aside. Combine the soy sauce, sherry sugar and ½ cup water in another dish. Stir until the sugar is dissolved. Set aside.

3. Pour the oil into a wok or stir fry pan (you might try Helen’s 14″ Carbon Steel Flat-Bottom Wok if you haven’t settled on a wok yet) and place over high heat. Add the black bean mixture to the pan and stir until fragrant. Add the clams and stir for about 30 seconds. Add the soy sauce mixture, stir to mix, and cover the pan. Cook over medium heat for about 5 minutes, or until the clams just open. Stir occasionally for even cooking.

4. Remove the lid and thicken the sauce with the cornstarch slurry. When the sauce has thickened, transfer the clams to a serving platter and garnish with cilantro. Serve immediately.

Copyright © 2005 and 1994 by Helen Chen. All rights reserved. Reprinted from Helen Chen’s Chinese Home Cooking, New York, William Morrow & Co., 1994.

Biography of the Author, Helen Chen

Helen ChenHelen Chen is a widely acknowledged expert in Chinese cooking. Besides her role as an educator and cookbook author, she also is a product and business consultant to the housewares industry. In 2007 she created and developed a new line of Asian kitchenware under the brand name, “Helen’s Asian Kitchen,” expressly for Harold Import Company in New Jersey.

Having been born in China, and raised and educated in the United States, Helen brings the best of both worlds to her approach to the art of Chinese cuisine. She understands the needs of the American cook as only a native can, yet she is intimately knowledgeable with the culinary practices and philosophy of China.

Helen is the author of Helen Chen’s Chinese Home Cooking (Hearst Books,1994), Peking Cuisine (Orion Books,1997), Helen’s Asian Kitchen: Easy Chinese Stir-Fries (John Wiley & Sons, 2009) and Helen’s Asian Kitchen: Easy Asian Noodles (John Wiley & Sons, 2010). For more information, visit http://www.helensasiankitchen.com/

*Not affiliated with Joyce Chen Products