laikom wrote:Also, I'd like to request the recipe for the XO sauce, it was great in some soup i had last night!
Laikom - thanks for posting those recipes. I really like both.
The XO sauce is from David Chang's Momofuku. The recipe makes 2 cups:
2 oz (about a 1/2 cup) dried scallops (apparently you can buy whole dried scallops or dried pieces. The pieces are cheaper, though I don't know if the quality is any different. I bought them at Tai Nam on Broadway and they only had whole pieces. If you can find dried pieces, that may be the way to go since you are going to mince the scallops anyways).
2 oz (about 3/4 cup) dried shrimp.
1/2 cup peeled garlic cloves
1/2 cup sliced peeled ginger
1 cup chopped country ham, ham scraps, or chinese sausage (You can buy excellent county ham scraps at Publican Quality Meats for $5/lb, which is what I used. I bought some Chinese sausage at Tai Nam and would not recommend it. The Chinese sausage that I bought was really sweet and had no smokiness.)
1/2 cup grapeseed, canola, or other neutral oil
1 tablespoon crushed dried red chiles (I pulsed dried chiles in a food processor to break them up. I probably used a bit more than a tablespoon.)
1. Combine the dried scallops and shrimp in a bowl, cover with water by 1/2 inch. Cover the bowl and let them sit out overnight. Drain. I strained the liquid and froze it for future use.
2. Next day: Pulse the garlic and ginger in a food processor until finely chopped. Set aside. Do the same thing with the drained scallops and shrimp. Set aside (or combine with the garlic and ginger). Pulse the ham in the food processor and set aside (do not combine with the other ingredients).
3. Heat the oil in a large saute pan over medium-high heat (I made a double recipe and used a dutch oven.) Add the ham to the oil. Cook for 3-4 minutes, stirring, until the meat starts to brown. Add the chiles and cook another 2-3 minutes. At this point it will look like you are deep frying the ham.
4. Turn the heat as low as possible and the dried seafood, garlic, and ginger. Stir to combine and stew until the mixture is fairly dry and the garlic and ginger are a dirty blonde. Chang's recipe says it will take about 45 minutes. I cooked mine for at least an hour, perhaps 75 minutes. The key is not to let the garlic burn but to cook long enough so that it isn't a wet mixture.
You can use it immediately.
Store in the fridge. According to Chang, it will keep for "months if not years".
Chang says it pairs especially well with seafood that have a high sugar content, such as shellfish, but is also good on just about everything else. He has a few recipes where you quick-cook vegetables, then toss in some butter, soy sauce, and a couple of tablespoons of XO sauce. He also has a kimchi consomme recipe where you can substitute XO sauce for the kimchi.
I made a nice bok choy dish the other night with the XO: I browned a sliced chinese sausage and then set it aside. Then browned two quartered bok choys, added a little water, butter, soy sauce, and XO sauce, and tossed to combine and covered the pan to let this steam for a couple of minutes. Then I added the sausage back in and tossed it together. The water, butter, soy, and XO made an amazing sauce.