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Home Made Chinese Chow Mein |
Years ago, my husband had a Roofing business in the city of Oakland, California, and if he had a job in China Town Oakland , I would often meet him for
lunch. He had three favorite Chinese
restaurants; one was called the Economy Café.
The food was excellent, and reasonable, but the place was very
small. So small in fact that there was a
need to SHARE tables with other customers.
Regular patrons were okay with this, and they expected to have company
join with them at their table.
Another restaurant was owned by a family, and you could watch
their children in the back room playing, while their parents worked the front. I remember seeing a play pen with a small
baby on one occasion.
The third restaurant was very different. There was no menu, because the waiter would
come by with a cart loaded with delicious looking foods, and you could select
the dish you wanted. Each entrée was
added to your bill and everything was so inviting it was difficult to choose.
I decided to create my own recipe for Chow Mein.
I often used a can of Spam sliced into small pieces to make Pork Chow
Mien. Naturally you can use beef or chicken
either of which makes a lovely dish.
This recipe is simple and easy to make.
Chinese Chow Mein
1 small bunch Bok Choy chopped
1 small chopped onion
1 small chopped onion
3 Ribs fresh celery
(sliced)
1 tablespoon olive
oil or 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 cup fresh bean
sprouts
1 (4 ounce)
can mushroom pieces, drained
1 (7 ounce)
can sliced
water chestnuts, drained
2 cups cut up
cooked chicken
3 tablespoons cornstarch
1/4 pound cooked vermicelli noodles
(I used the Chinese thin noodles - - boiled
until tender)
Directions:
Directions:
In a large pot, sauté celery, onion
and Bok Choy in oil for about 5 minutes or until crisp-tender. Add bean sprouts, mushrooms, water chestnuts,
and chicken.
In a large bowl, blend cornstarch with
water. When smooth, add chicken broth and soy sauce to bowl. Mix well and pour over meat and vegetables. Bring to a boil, stirring until sauce
thickens. Reduce heat to low. Cover and
simmer 5 to 10 minutes. Serve over hot, boiled
Chinese noodles, cooked rice, or Crisp chow mien noodles.
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3 comments:
I like the name "Economy Cafe" because it says a lot! That must have been fun to choose an entree off the cart. My girlfriend and I did that in Sedona recently. We chose the veggies and meat and gave it to the cook to prepare it for us! Thank you for your recipe; looks very good!
Thanks for this fun story! The recipe looks like one I will try! Thanks, Hazel!!
So amazing how memories never fade in color from our mind. What a gift.
We go to a Chinese place that has pre made dishes on a revolving conveyer belt that circles the little restaurant like a model train set… minus the train…
Love your stories, they always inspire some of my own!
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