Chicken and Hokkien noodles

Hello readers,

I hope you’ve enjoyed your week. This week’s post is quick and easy because I don’t have much time. 

Recipe

Equipment

  • Water heater circulator
  • Water bath
  • Wok

Ingredients

  • Chicken thigh
  • Red onion
  • Shallot
  • Ginger
  • Shiitake mushrooms [1, 2]
  • Laksa paste [3]
  • Coconut milk
  • Chillies
  • Carrot
  • Fennel
  • Hokkien noodles

Instructions

Chicken thigh

  1. Seal a chicken thigh with the skin attached and seasoned with salt in a plastic bag.
  2. Heat a water bath to 76 °C and then cook the chicken in the water for 2 hours.
  3. Refrigerate the chicken after it has cooked.
  4. Pull the meat from the bones and break up the muscle bundles. Place the pulled chicken thigh aside in a bowl and gnaw the bones to avoid wasting meat.
  5. Place the cooking liquor into a small saucepan.

Mushrooms

  1. Remove the mushrooms from the packaging and place them into a bowl.
  2. Add a cup of water to the small saucepan with the cooking liquor from the chicken.
  3. Boil the contents of the saucepan and then turn off the heat.
  4. Pour the liquid over the mushrooms and let the mushrooms steep for about half an hour.
  5. Remove the mushrooms and set them aside.

Noodles

  1. Remove the noodles from the packaging and place them into a bowl.
  2. Boil the saucepan with the mushroom and chicken juices and pour over the noodles.
  3. With wooden tongs or chopsticks, break up the noodles and drain them when they feel soft.
  4. Keep the cooking liquor aside.

Soup

  1. Finely chop a shallot and red onion.
  2. Mince some ginger.
  3. Slice a chilli.
  4. Slice the fennel.
  5. Julienne the carrot.
  6. Slice the spring onion.
  7. Shake the tin of coconut cream and open it.
  8. Heat the wok and then add some oil.
  9. Sauté the onions, shallot, and ginger.
  10. Add a tablespoon of laksa paste (more or less depending on how you like it).
  11. Add the mushrooms and slowly add the cooking liquor used for the noodles, mushrooms, and chicken.
  12. Allow the liquid to reduce a little to concentrate the flavours.
  13. Toss in the chicken meat and stir it around.
  14. Pour in the coconut cream and turn down the heat.
  15. Bring the cream to a gentle simmer, and then add in the carrot and some of the firmer slices of spring onion.
  16. Add the noodles and mix everything with a pair of chopsticks or wooden tongs.
  17. Turn the heat off and mix through chilli and more spring onions.
  18. Transfer everything to a bowl and garnish with the remaining spring onions.
  19. Give thanks to the Lord.
  20. Eat with chopsticks and a spoon.

Thoughts on the meal

This meal was enough for two people, so I refrigerated half of it, and the next day I heated the remaining soup in a saucepan and served it the same way I had the night before.

I didn’t want to label this meal anything other than chicken and Hokkien noodles. You could make this with any sort of Asian style flavouring you have around. I know many people would add garlic. I didn’t have any, and I’m not fussed about garlic in my food. If I have garlic, I’ll use it, but it’s not a big deal to omit it. 

I know that I use some techniques not readily available to everyone. You can substitute different approaches.

For example, you could cook the chicken any way you like so long as you achieve the correct temperature and duration[4]. Not everyone will get sick with inadequately cooked food. However, I commonly see reports of incapacitated people because of poor attention to food safety. You could use a supermarket rotisserie chicken if time is short and your budget permits. Break down the chicken, store it safely, and use it how you want.

I like the idea of using dried foods like mushrooms. I can use a few from a packet in this soup and the rest in other meals. The steeping liquor is also suitable for flavouring other aspects of the cooking process.

Feel free to make modifications and share them.

On food safety, I now have the pleasure of working with someone on a committee I have admired for decades. When I was in my final year of speciality training, this colleague wrote a magnificent review article on the pathogenic forms of Escherichia coli. I read it and memorised it; it was so good. One of my final exam questions was to compare and contrast the pathogenic forms of Escherichia coli. This colleague is now retired but working in an emeritus capacity. 

Final thoughts

  1. How has your week been?
  2. Do you like using dried foods?

Photographs

References

  • 1.         Kim, S.H., et al., Ecofriendly shiitake authentication using bulk and amino acid-specific stable isotope models. Food Chem, 2022. 397: p. 133819.
  • 2.         Berger, R.G., et al., Mycelium vs. Fruiting Bodies of Edible Fungi-A Comparison of Metabolites.Microorganisms, 2022. 10(7).
  • 3.         Peng, Z.F., et al., Antioxidant flavonoids from leaves of Polygonum hydropiper L.Phytochemistry, 2003. 62(2): p. 219-28.
  • 4.         Yang, R., et al., Thermal death kinetics of Salmonella Enteritidis PT30 in peanut butter as influenced by water activity. Food Res Int, 2022. 157: p. 111288.

13 Responses

  1. looks lovely Gary – I really like how shiitake mushrooms rehydrate so well, they’re one food I’m very happy to use dried, and the soaking water has a great flavour too.

    1. I agree, Beck. I have some vacuum sealed in small portions in a drawer for when I want them.

  2. Escherichia coli was Alex’s safety speaking contest topic in 4-H when he was in the 6th grade. He was so fascinated by that topic. He won first place. I don’t think he’s revisited that topic since, but we have good memories of it.

  3. smile Methinks we all have variations of this dish when in a hurry – as I work from home it usually gets prepared at lunchtime ! Healthier !!! I use deboned and skinless thighs marinated, pan-fried and shoved in the oven for a few minutes. Prefer Japanese or Korean buckwheat-type noodles without the excess salt and fat of the Hokkien . . . and, early autumn to mid-spring always have cartons of both white and brown mushrooms growing at home ! Whether I pick them thumb-nail size for raw salads or allow them yo grow saucer-size to make a ‘living’ plate, they are heavy and delightful picked and eaten five minutes later !! Oh, heaps of herbs from windowsill pots naturally . . . And, I do have dried mushrooms for an extra if so desired and currently it is truffle season in Australia naturally . . .

    1. Hi Eha,
      Thanks for the insight into your food preparation.
      I’ve attended a couple of truffle events in Canberra. I enjoyed learning about the history and development of the industry in the Canberra region. When I’ve eaten truffle dishes prepared by experts, I’ve enjoyed them; however, I personally don’t value the taste of truffles enough to make them a feature of my cooking.

    2. Gary – Truffles are perfect with very simple but perfect foods . . . just carefully prepared scrambled eggs or homemade pasta . . . all the most knowledgeable chefs love to use them with chicken . . . that is he reason for my addendum. As you are extremely careful with your foods . . . could it be their origin in soil and found by dogs or pigs does not feel comfortable for you . . . ?

      1. Hi Eha,

        Thanks. I’ve had scrambled eggs and pasta dishes with truffles prepared in restaurants for truffle season events here. The reason I’m not that enamoured isn’t because of the growth habitat or the animals used to find them; it’s more that the flavour added by truffles isn’t worth the fuss. I can discern the difference that truffles make to a meal, but I don’t think it is that special.

        Have a great Sunday evening.

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