**Savor the Delightful Symphony of Flavors: Explore Madame Wong's Hot and Sour Soup and Other Culinary Treasures**
Indulge in a tantalizing culinary journey with Madame Wong's Hot and Sour Soup, a delectable symphony of flavors that dances on your palate. This classic Chinese dish, with its perfect balance of spicy, sour, and savory notes, is a true testament to the art of culinary craftsmanship. As you embark on this gastronomic adventure, you'll also discover a treasure trove of other enticing recipes hidden within this article, each promising a unique taste experience. From the aromatic Kung Pao Chicken to the comforting Egg Drop Soup, and the refreshing Cucumber Salad, this culinary collection offers a diverse array of dishes that will satisfy every palate.
AUTHENTIC CHINESE HOT AND SOUR SOUP
Jam-packed with flavor, this thoroughly authentic Hot and Sour Soup rivals your very favorite restaurant version!
Provided by Kimberly Killebrew
Categories Soup
Time 30m
Number Of Ingredients 20
Steps:
- Place the shiitake and wood ear mushrooms in a glass bowl and pour boiling water over them. Soak for 20 minutes. Reserve 1 cup of the mushroom liquid, discard the rest. Squeeze the liquid from the mushrooms. Slice the shiitakes and chop the wood ear mushrooms.
- While the mushrooms are soaking, quickly rinse the dried day lilies and soak them in hot water for 20 minutes. Discard the liquid, squeezing any excess from the lilies, cut the hard tips off the bottoms, slice the lilies lengthwise and chop into 1 inch lengths.
- While the mushrooms and day lilies are soaking, place the pork in a small bowl and combine it with the ginger and teaspoon soy sauce. Set aside while you're preparing the other ingredients.
- Bring the chicken broth and the reserved cup of mushroom liquid to a boil in a stock pot. Add the soy sauce, vinegar, sugar, chile oil, hot sauce (adding more according to desired level of heat), and pepper.
- Add the pork, stirring to prevent the pork from sticking together, the bamboo shoots, and mushrooms. Simmer for 2 minutes.
- Add the day lilies and the cornstarch mixture. Return to a boil and simmer for another minute until slightly thickened. Add the tofu and simmer for another minute.
- Pour the egg mixture in a steady stream into the simmering soup, remove from heat, and let sit for 20 seconds to let set in fine strands. Stir gently.
- Add the sesame oil and green onions.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 148 kcal, Carbohydrate 7 g, Protein 14 g, Fat 8 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, Cholesterol 67 mg, Sodium 398 mg, Fiber 1 g, Sugar 2 g, ServingSize 1 serving
HOT AND SOUR DUMPLING SOUP
A Chinese take-out staple, hot and sour soup is super easy to create at home - and comes together in just 15 minutes. This weeknight version bolsters the traditional mushrooms and tofu with the addition of store-bought pork dumplings, but you could just as easily use chicken or vegetable dumplings, depending on your preference. Cornstarch gives the broth its velvety texture, vinegar adds verve, and white pepper adds subtle complexity, though black pepper is a perfectly fine substitute. Adjust the seasoning with extra soy sauce, ginger and vinegar for a more assertive soup.
Provided by Kay Chun
Categories dinner, easy, quick, weeknight, dumplings, soups and stews, main course
Time 15m
Yield 4 servings
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- In a large saucepan, heat oil over medium. Add mushrooms and ginger and season with salt and pepper. Cook until softened, stirring occasionally, about 3 minutes. Stir in broth, tofu, soy sauce, bamboo shoots and white pepper, if using, and bring to a boil over high. Add dumplings and simmer over medium heat until dumplings are cooked through, about 5 minutes.
- In a small bowl, whisk cornstarch with 1/4 cup water to form a slurry. Add slurry and vinegar to saucepan and simmer until slightly thickened, about 2 minutes. Season with salt and more white pepper, if desired.
- Divide soup among bowls and garnish with scallions and chiles. Serve hot.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 392, UnsaturatedFat 18 grams, Carbohydrate 22 grams, Fat 23 grams, Fiber 3 grams, Protein 29 grams, SaturatedFat 4 grams, Sodium 1626 milligrams, Sugar 2 grams, TransFat 0 grams
HOT AND SOUR SOUP
Make Chinese at home with Tyler Florence's Hot and Sour Soup recipe from Food Network à mushrooms, ginger and chile paste add flavor and heat.
Provided by Tyler Florence
Categories appetizer
Time 2h20m
Yield 4 to 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 23
Steps:
- Put the wood ears in a small bowl and cover with boiling water. Let stand for 30 minutes to reconstitute. Drain and rinse the wood ears; discard any hard clusters in the centers.
- Heat the oil in a wok or large pot over medium-high flame. Add the ginger, chili paste, wood ears, bamboo shoots, and pork; cook and stir for 1 minute to infuse the flavor. Combine the soy sauce, vinegar, salt, pepper, and sugar in a small bowl, pour it into the wok and toss everything together - it should smell really fragrant. Pour in the Chinese Chicken Stock, bring the soup to a boil, and simmer for 10 minutes. Add the tofu and cook for 3 minutes.
- Dissolve the cornstarch in the water and stir until smooth. Mix the slurry into the soup and continue to simmer until the soup thickens. Remove the soup from the heat and stir in 1 direction to get a current going, then stop stirring. Slowly pour in the beaten eggs in a steady stream and watch it spin around and feather in the broth (it should be cooked almost immediately.) Garnish the hot and sour soup with chopped green onions and cilantro before serving.
- Put the chicken in a large stockpot and place over medium heat. Toss in the green onions, garlic, ginger, onion, and peppercorns. Pour about 3 quarts of cold water into the pot to cover the chicken by 1-inch. Simmer gently for 1 hour, uncovered, skimming off the foam on the surface periodically.
- Carefully remove the chicken from the pot and pass the stock through a strainer lined with cheesecloth to remove the solids and excess fat. Cool the chicken stock to room temperature before storing in the refrigerator, or chill it down over ice first.
- Yield: About 2 quarts
MADAME WONG'S HOT AND SOUR SOUP
I love Madame Wong's Long-Life Chinese Cookbook and this is another one of her great recipes. The work is all in the beginning...getting the ingredients sliced and diced, but it's all worth the effort. I think you'll like this soup. Serve it on a cold, winter night, early or late, your family will love you.
Provided by Hey Jude
Categories Pork
Time 1h15m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- Put mushrooms and fungus into separate bowls.
- Cover each with boiling water.
- Let soak 3-4 hours, or overnight (to be honest, I let them soak about 15 minutes but I'm writing the recipe the way Madame Wong wrote it).
- Remove stems from mushrooms.
- Remove woody parts from fungus.
- Separately cut mushroms, fungus, pork and bamboo shoots to fine julienne.
- Mix pork with salt and cornstarch in a bowl.
- Heat wok and add a dash of oil, stir-fry pork until color changes.
- Bring chicken stock to a boil in a large pot.
- Add mushrooms, fungus, pork and bamboo shoots.
- Stir constantly.
- Add soy sauce, pepper, and vinegar.
- Thicken with dissolved cornstarch, stirring constantly over moderate heat.
- Add bean curd, bring to a boil.
- Turn off heat.
- Add beaten eggs.
- Stir quickly 30 seconds.
- Add sesame oil.
- Garnish with scallions and serve hot.
- Note: add more vinegar and pepper if a spicier taste is desired.
- Note#2: This can be prepared in advanced up to adding the bamboo shoots, or frozen after adding the soy sauce, pepper, vineagar and thickening with the cornstarch.
- Bring to room temperature and complete.
HOT AND SOUR SOUP (酸辣汤)
Chinese restaurant-style hot and sour soup made easy! The hearty, spicy, sour broth is loaded with mushrooms, silky eggs, and tofu. I've included lots of notes so you can tweak the recipe with the ingredients you have on hand, plus how to make this dish vegetarian. {Vegetarian adaptable}
Provided by Maggie Zhu
Categories Soup
Time 30m
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- Gently rinse dried shiitake mushrooms, dried wood ear mushrooms, and lily flowers with tap water. Soak each of them with 1.5 to 2 cups warm water in three big bowls. Rehydrate for 30 minutes to 1 hour, until tender. Slice mushrooms into strips. Snip off the tough ends of lily flowers and discard. Remove tough ends of wood ear mushrooms, then chop into bite-sized pieces. Reserve the marinating water from lily flower and shiitake mushrooms, 2 cups in total
- Combine pork, Shaoxing wine, salt and cornstarch in a bowl. Mix well by hand. Marinate for 10 - 15 minutes.
- Add Chinkiang vinegar and white pepper into a small bowl. Mix well until the white pepper is completely dissolved.
- Add water or chicken stock, ginger, and green onion into a pot and heat over medium-high heat. If you reserved the marinating liquid from step one, you can add it plus 4 cups water or chicken stock.
- Add rehydrated wood ear mushrooms, shiitake mushrooms, lily flowers, and tofu to the pot. Cook until bringing to a simmer. Add soy sauce and turn to medium-low heat.
- Mix the cornstarch with 1/4 cup of water in a bowl until cornstarch is fully dissolved. Slowly swirl the cornstarch slurry into the soup. Stir to thicken the soup.
- Add the pork from step one into the soup, stirring several times to prevent the pork strips from sticking together. Add the salt. Slowly swirl in the beaten egg and stir well. The egg should be scattered and not clotted.
- Remove the pot from stove. Add the vinegar and pepper mixture and stir to mix well.
- Garnish with cilantro and drizzle with sesame oil. Give it a final stir. Taste the soup and add more salt if needed.
- Serve hot.
Nutrition Facts : ServingSize 1 serving, Calories 216 kcal, Carbohydrate 9.1 g, Protein 19.9 g, Fat 11.1 g, SaturatedFat 3.3 g, Cholesterol 112 mg, Sodium 883 mg, Fiber 1.3 g, Sugar 1.6 g
CHINESE HOT AND SOUR SOUP SZECHWAN HOUSE
There is a local Chinese place that makes the best Hot and Sour Soup. I saw a similar recipe but it lacked some of the ingredients that they have. Here it is all combined together. Like many Asian dishes it is all in the timing.
Provided by sifuz
Categories Szechuan
Time 40m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Mix the pork with 1 tablespoons of soy sauce. Let it sit for 30 minute.
- As that sits reconstitute the dried black mushrooms and black fungus.
- Take a small sauce pan and put the dried mushrooms and fungus into it. Pour enough water over them to cover them. If you have extra chicken broth you can use it. If not water will do fine.
- Let the mushrooms and fungus hydrate for about 20-30 min over a low boil.
- Combine the vinegar, 1 tablespoon of soy sauce, salt, and sugar in a small bowl.
- If you have not mixed the corn starch and water do so in a small bowl.
- Using a large sauce pan heat up the peanut oil on high heat and saute the pork (do not overcook it).
- Add in the bamboo shoots and mushrooms and fungus (do not pour in the liquid that they were hydrating in). I have sometimes found some grit in the liquid and you do not want that in your soup. Saute briefly.
- Add in the 4 cups of chicken broth and bring to a boil.
- Add in the tofu.
- Add in the vinegar mixture.
- Stir up the cornstarch and water mixture to make sure it hasn't settled and add that.
- Lower the heat.
- Stir in one direction and slowly stir in 2 beaten eggs in a thin stream.
- Add in the chile and garlic paste.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 200.6, Fat 11.6, SaturatedFat 2.5, Cholesterol 105.8, Sodium 2177.6, Carbohydrate 13.1, Fiber 1.5, Sugar 4.4, Protein 11.8
Tips:
- Use a variety of mushrooms: This will give your soup a more complex flavor. Shiitake, oyster, and wood ear mushrooms are all good choices.
- Don't overcook the vegetables: They should still have a bit of crunch to them.
- Use a good quality chicken stock: This will make a big difference in the flavor of your soup.
- To make the soup vegetarian, use vegetable broth instead of chicken stock and omit the chicken. You can also add tofu or tempeh for protein.
- Serve the soup with rice or noodles: This will make it a more filling meal.
- Top the soup with your favorite toppings: Some good options include green onions, cilantro, crispy wontons, and hot sauce.
Conclusion:
Madame Wong's Hot and Sour Soup is a delicious and easy-to-make soup that is perfect for a quick and healthy meal. With its combination of spicy, sour, and savory flavors, this soup is sure to please everyone at your table. So next time you're looking for a new soup recipe to try, give Madame Wong's Hot and Sour Soup a try. You won't be disappointed!
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