Read Nom Nom Paleo: Food for Humans Online
Authors: Michelle Tam,Henry Fong
Tags: #Cookbooks; Food & Wine, #Cooking by Ingredient, #Natural Foods, #Special Diet, #Allergies, #Gluten Free, #Paleo, #Food Allergies, #Gluten-Free, #Healthy
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orget to add herbs to your egg mixture? Don't worry your pretty little head. just use 'em to garnish your finished omelet!
CHINESE EGG FOO YOUNG
For decades, my in-laws owned a Chinese restaurant in the San Francisco Bay Area, serving up the Westernized dishes that many Americans know so well: pot stickers, chow mein, deep-fried wontons, sweet-and-sour pork. My husband grew up in the restaurant’s kitchen, and egg foo young was a childhood favorite.
I didn’t encounter egg foo young until after I met Henry in college and he took me to visit his family’s restaurant. But as soon as I took my first bite of these savory egg patties, I knew I had to have the recipe.
Egg foo young, which means “lotus flower egg,” is enduringly popular and infinitely flexible; one Japanese-Chinese variant called
kani-tama
is stuffed with crab meat, and in parts of Missouri, folks slather egg foo young with mayonnaise and sandwich it between slices of white bread. (It’s called a
St. Paul sandwich
, named after the Chinese-American inventor’s hometown in Minnesota.)
Not surprisingly, my version of egg foo young isn’t served with bread or the traditional accompaniment of soy-based brown gravy—but as a finishing touch, I can never resist a spicy squirt of Paleo Sriracha.
Makes 6 patties |
Hands-on time: 30 minutes |
Total time: 30 minutes |
GET:
6
large
eggs
¼
cup
coconut flour
1
teaspoon Paleo-friendly
fish sauce
(or kosher salt to taste)
½
teaspoon
apple cider vinegar
1
cup diced
ham
or cooked meat of choice
10
ounces frozen
spinach
, thawed and squeezed dry
2
scallions
, thinly sliced
1
tablespoon minced fresh
cilantro
½
teaspoon
baking soda
Freshly ground
black pepper
Ghee
, for frying
Paleo Sriracha
(optional)
DO THIS:
EGGPLANT “RICOTTA” STACKS
When I’m busy prepping for a dinner party, I don’t have the time or energy to straighten up the house before guests arrive. Instead, I conscript my husband to put away the avalanche of laundry and accumulated clutter that threaten to bury us in our own home. (But don’t feel
too
sorry for him; I still do all the dishes.)
Thankfully (for Henry), I’ve found ways to prep fanciful, Paleo-friendly dishes by quickly assembling premade components. These Eggplant Ricotta Stacks, for example, require minimal effort but deliver maximum flavor. Punctuated with the penetrating tang of a balsamic reduction, these “cheesy” vegetable stacks will excite your palate like nothing else
...
and free up some time so you can help with the laundry.
Makes 3 servings | 1 cup balsamic vinegar |
Hands-on time: 30 minutes | 1 medium shallot , minced (about ¼ cup) |
Total time: 30 minutes | 2 tablespoons melted ghee or fat of choice |
2 globe eggplants (approximately 1 pound each), sliced crosswise into ½-inch rounds | |
Kosher salt | |
Freshly ground black pepper | |
1 ½ cup Macadamia Nut “Ricotta” | |
2 tablespoons minced fresh basil , plus more for garnish | |
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil | |
2 large heirloom tomatoes , sliced into 1 -inch rounds |
DO THIS: