Timi’s vegetable fried rice…
Sunday, November 9th, 2008I’ve been planning to post some of my recipes online for quite sometime now but I end up too lazy to take pictures of the dishes I had made (BOO TIMI!!!!). Anyway, because of the fact that all veg fried rice looks the same (I just cook it differently…), I figured I don’t need my own picture for that and just get on with posting the recipe….
Timi’s Veg Fried Rice
Ingredients:
For the rice:
1 cup of uncooked long grain rice
1/2 tbsp of salt
water
For for the garlic oil:
approximately 1/4 cup of cooking oil (or less)
6 minced big garlic pods
For the veggies to be mixed:
1 medium carrot cut into small cubes
1/3 cup of green peas
string beans sliced into 1/2″ pieces
1 big onion, sliced
Others:
soy sauce
3 eggs
Directions:
1. Wash the rice thoroughly and let it soak for about half an hour. Let the water boil and then put the rice. When the rice is half-done, put in the salt. Just check on your rice as often as you can because you have to take it out of the fire and drain it just when it is just about to be fully cooked. You can do this earlier and let the rice cool, mixing it lightly with a for. The whole process prevents the rice from sticking together.
2. Take about 3/4 of the oil and fry the garlic on it until the garlic is medium brown. Take the whole thing out and set it aside.
3. Slightly boil the veggies together until they are partially cooked. Drain the veggies. Pour in the remaining oil in the pan and then saute the onions along with the veggies and set this aside.
4. Beat the eggs and also set it aside.
5. It is much better to do the following procedure in batches of two cups of rice so the fried rice is cooked properly and everything is mixed evenly. Make sure that your wok (or frying pan) is hot enough. Take some of your garlic oil (with ample amount of the fried garlic) and let it heat up a bit too, then put your rice, continuously stirring but careful not to break the grains apart and let the rice cook.
6. Add in the veg, and the eggs and approximately a tablespoon of soy sauce. Keep on stirring the rice until the soy sauce is mixed evenly and the eggs had coated almost each and every grain. Add more eggs if you want some egg bits on your fried rice.
Actually, people might say that this is too much of work for just fried rice but it really does make a lot of difference on the taste. The secret of a good fried rice is a half cooked (or frozen rice), very hot wok, and the soy sauce and egg mixed evenly into the rice. The garlic oil not only gives it more of a Filipino twist (sinangag, anyone?) but it gives the dish more of an “oomph!”.
