Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Takeout with the Tos #15

Officially, this is the second takeout post for this summer. We've survived our jet lag and are back on a normal schedule. I'm excited to bring some new dishes this week from our takeout menu.  If you're new joining in, don't forget to check out the first post which explains where this series came from. We're not actually order takeout....

1. Pressed Tofu, Snow Pea, Fried Dace Stir-Fry: $21.99

2. Chinese Broccoli: $16.99

3. Pork with Garlic Sauce: $20.99

4. Pan Fried Pork: $9.99

5. Beef Noodle Soup (calculated from 6+ adult-sized portions): $59.99

Take Out Total: $129.95

Tax: $10.72

Grand Total: $140.67

1. Pressed Tofu, Snow Pea, Fried Dace Stir-Fry

I was inspired to cook with fried dace because Woks of Life posted a recipe earlier this year. I always thought I grew up eating sardines. This statement is true. However, we also grew up eating this canned fish and black beans. I incorrectly associated this fish as sardines as well. Now, I know what it was. It's deliciously salty straight from the can. I'd eat it with plain rice if I could, but being a reasonable and healthy person, I can't let myself do that. I haven't read the nutrition on the can. I probably won't to save myself some sanity because I want to keep eating it. 




I didn't use their recipe but I wanted to try stir-frying this canned fish and black beans. I decided to mix tofu and snow peas instead. I've done stir fry with these two ingredients before, but it was my first time adding this fried fish and black beans to the mix. I was cautious not to over-season the dish because I knew the fish was salty. At the end of cooking I tasted one tofu and one snow pea. They still needed a little more umami in my opinion so I did add some sugar and salt to bring out the flavor. I think it was a very successful dish. 



2. Chinese Broccoli (bottom left) 

It was nice to cook my own vegetables again. We didn't order a lot of side dishes which is where the majority of vegetables come from overseas. It would have been too much food so whatever vegetables came inside the dishes we ate were what we got for two weeks. This was nice. I boil them quickly in salted water and then pull them out. I include the stems but peel the outside off to make it more tender. 


3. Pork with Garlic Sauce 鱼香肉丝 (top right) 

I've always loved this dish at the restaurants. It's saucy with this mix of savory and sour. I've made it many times before, but it has never been the same or even close to what I've tasted in restaurants. In my recipe binder, I had two different recipes. There was one I ended up throwing out because every time I made it, I didn't like it. I printed it five years ago and I've never enjoyed the result. This time, I followed the recipe from Woks of Life.  I will say my ingredient proportions are probably double their recipe which is why I personally doubled the sauce portion of the recipe. Mine never looks like their photo on the recipe because somehow I always end up short on the sauce. One of these days...I'll try to get it right.

Honestly, I haven't tasted it yet because since I've made this dish, we've been eating other things or leftovers from the previous week. So, ironically, I can't tell you if this version of the recipe is any more authentic in my opinion. You'll have to ask me personally about this one. It looks nice from the photo? I liked the smell of it when I finished cooking....

4. Pan Fried Pork

This turned out amazing. I wish I had more actually. The irony is I can't even actually tell you how I made it. I thawed a frozen pack of 18 oz of pork. Half of it I used in the previous recipe above. The other half I cut into boneless chops and marinaded before throwing it on a nonstick and pan-frying. I added a mixture of corn starch, rice wine, soy sauce, and sugar. It sat in the bowl for about a half hour on the counter and then I threw it in the pan. 

It's really delicious. I will need to attempt to recreate this another time. I wish I had more descriptive instructions to share with you but I really don't. This was one of those cooking improvisations which resulted in very tasty food. 



5. Beef Noodle Soup

We came back from Taiwan and were missing the food there. On one of my grocery trips, I saw stew beef on sale and decided to buy a pack with the intention of making beef noodle soup. It's not the most ideal cut of beef but it was quick and easy. (In all honesty, it was too lean. You need a fattier cut of beef for this to be at its richest flavor.) I did an overnight broth in the Instant Pot. My recipe inspiration was from Woks of Life again. I don't actually have all the ingredients so I didn't follow it to a tee, but what I made wasn't half bad. 

The next day, I threw in the beef and the carrots and slow cooked everything in the broth on low for about 6 hours. We boiled some noodles on the stove and the dish came together pretty easily. The amount of soup I made ended up lasting 6+ adult-sized portions of soup.  

The original batch I made did not include the quintessential bok choy. We used boiled carrots instead. I'm a little surprised I've never tried to make this before in the past. It's such a warming meal, perfect for a cold winter night. 

I'm surprising myself right now with what I'm cooking. Hoping to include some new recipes soon. Will need to brainstorm with my family what everyone wants to eat/try this summer. 

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Saving Seeds

My son loves to help. But, he's a little too helpful for his own good sometimes. One afternoon about a month ago, our doorbell rang. Immediately, he was at the front door opening it faster than I could open the doorbell camera to see who it was. I was asking myself in my head what kind of white lies am I going to have to tell to get rid of this door to door salesman. 

Fortunately for both of us, it was our neighbor from down the street. She was holding a big box which turned out to be bluebonnet seeds. She had asked if we wanted some and I elatedly accepted. We had seen this neighbor grow bluebonnets before and she had told me about one of the houses across from our side of the street which used to have bluebonnets blooming in the spring. She was inspired to buy bluebonnet seeds and plant them. Since the transferring of ownership multiple times, that house no longer has bluebonnets, but hers does! 

She scooped up a bunch of seed pods, gave them to me, and told me how to grow them from her experience. The first step needed was to dry them. I was thinking, "Great, we're going to be gone for two weeks. Let's let them sit outside under the patio to dry and when we get back, I will deal with them."

I set them outside to dry and our trip came and went. When we got back, I had seen some of the seed pods outside burst open by themselves to release seeds. For the rest of them, we manually opened them and removed the seeds. 


These are what bluebonnet seed pods look like. My children and I sat outside on the patio one morning and opened a lot of them. These were the pods we couldn't finish before we got tired of the chore. I'll finish them another day. My neighbor said to scatter them in the summer, let them grow and die away in the winter, and then they will come back naturally in the spring after the rains. 

This is actually the second time my children and I have removed seeds for a plant. The first time was when we plucked coriander seeds off my plant. I realize they naturally dry and fall off when they're ready. However, we were going on a trip and it was going to coincide with when most of them would naturally dry and fall. As a result, I manually removed the majority of them before our trip so I could save them instead of having them fall all over our patio or blow away and start growing in random locations around our yard. 

Coriander seed is on the left and bluebonnet seed is on the right.

I'm not sure how much of my outdoor hobbies my children will pick up on, but they've sure experienced a glimpse of what it's like to be a farmer/grower. If anyone local wants coriander or bluebonnet seeds, let me know and I'd be happy to share some with you! I can't guarantee the efficacy of growth, but nature hasn't disappointed me too badly with all my growing experiments. I don't recommend this coriander for eating because I've handled it with outside/dirt-ridden hands, but if you'd like to use it for cooking purposes, you're on your own 😅. 

Please note coriander is a cool weather plant so please don't plop it in the soil and expect it to grow well right now. I don't think I planted mine last season until September or October. 

Monday, June 2, 2025

Takeout with the Tos #14 : Post-Jet lag Edition

As I stated in my previous post, I wasn't sure how summer cooking was going to go or how it was going to align with the original parameters I set when I started this series. I still don't have all the answers thought out, but this post was inspired from post-trip food necessity as well as being awake at random hours of the night. 

After coming back, we did one grocery store run at an American grocery store. We picked up milk, eggs, bread, rotisserie chicken, broccoli, and green beans. Basic enough to get by but not enough to make complete meals with only these ingredients. This is where my freezer stash came in handy. I had ground pork at home and pre cut beef strips for stir fry in my freezer already as well as some containers of tofu in my refrigerator. This is how this week's food was inspired.

Teriyaki Tofu: $11.99

Stir Fry Green Beans: $14.99

Green Beans and Ground Pork: $14.99

Beef and Broccoli: $18.99

Chinese Beef and Eggs: $18.99

Chicken Karage (2.5 pounds): $29.99

Take-Out Total: $109.94

Tax: $9.07

Grand Total: $119.01


I want to take a minute to talk about my tofu first. Someone posted about a tofu press on my local Buy Nothing group. I thought about it for a while and wondered what I was going to do with a tofu press or if I even wanted it. My mind instantly went to homemade tofu, but that wasn't what I wanted to do. I did a quick search online and found that it could be used to press out water from other things as well such as shredded potatoes or homemade cheeses. Now this started to get my mind churning. I messaged the person giving it away and went to pick it up. It looked basically brand new and unused. 



I've not used it for anything other than pressing tofu yet, but I press a lot of tofu in this. I already buy firm tofu from the store, but when I use my tofu press, it removes even more water out of the tofu which makes pan-frying so much easier and faster. Who knew? 



I doubled up on my ingredients for the next four dishes. Each one was integrated in two different dishes. I cut my green beans two different ways and cooked them slightly differently. The first green bean dish I cut on a bias and made a stir fry with garlic. I could have slightly steamed them more during the process but my jet lag brain wasn't functioning at 100% so they came out more on the crunchy side. Oh well, variations in cooking happens. 

The second was a dish I've always made with green beans and ground pork. However, this time I cut the green beans into half inch dices and did not parboil them. It actually worked out great and I still ended up with a very nice texture of green bean and made the whole entire dish easier to eat because of the uniformity of sizes. 



Beef was the next ingredient I doubled up on. The first dish I made was my beef and broccoli. I still parboiled my broccoli as these are larger pieces and I want to make sure my children will eat them so I need them on the softer side. The second dish was a first-time dish for me. While on my trip, I had seen Woks of Life post a Chinese beef and egg recipe. These ingredients seemed simple enough so I wanted to give it a try. My portion of beef I defrosted was twice as much as I needed for one recipe so it worked out I could make a second recipe with the remainder. It turned out really well. I hope to include this recipe in my meal rotation because the ingredients are basically and it's simple enough to pull together quickly. I still dislike cooking eggs in my wok unless it is a freshly washed, clean wok because a layer, no matter how thin, always ends up sticking. I'm still a one-pot-cooking kind of person and if I have to clean my wok in between every dish I make, it becomes impractical and lengthens my cooking time immensely. It may just be a pitfall of having a stainless steel wok instead of carbon steel. That dilemma is to be pondered another time. 


Karage was the last item on my cooking list to get us through some more days of food. After coming back, my homemade chicken nuggets made a meal. They were not, however, the most tasty chicken nuggets. I'm pretty sure I'm the only member of our family who will eat food because it's there and not because it's tasty. The other three members are much pickier. I didn't follow a recipe this time for my karage but I've read recipes before for inspiration. I love making karage because it's such a convenient freezer food to have and pull out during times when I need an extra protein boost in the weekly rotation. I've done minor experimenting with seasonings and coatings, but honestly, potato starch and a good marinade goes a long way.