Three-Cup
Chicken is a common dish served at Taiwanese beer houses, which usually
open late and don’t close until dawn. Because most Taiwanese people
don’t like to drink without having something to eat, beer houses are
popular gathering places where you can get cheap and delicious xiah jio
tsai, which are stir-fried dishes that go well with beer. But Three-Cup
Chicken isn’t just a popular dish at the beer house. It’s also a common
home-cooked staple. This week I’d like to share with you my own recipe
for the yummy, spicy, gingery chicken dish.
You will Need:
Ingredients:
Serves 4 people
2-inch chunks ginger (about 2 Tbsp.), sliced
8 cloves garlic, sliced
4 hot peppers, sliced
2 scallions, cut in half
1 Tbsp. vegetable oil
1⁄3 cup cooking wine
2 Tbsp. plus 1 tsp. soy sauce
4 Tbsp. sesame oil
2½ tsp. raw sugar
big handful of fresh Thai basil
Directions:
Roughly
cut up all the chicken thighs. In a large cast iron skillet bring 1/2
Tbsp up to high heat. Sear the chicken thighs for two minutes until it's
coated in golden brown and set it aside. Cast iron skillet is obviously
not a traditional Chinese kitchen ware but it's a great tool that I've
adapted from Maine cooking.
Now in a separate large wok or a nonstick skillet on medium high heat,
toss in the remaining ½ Tbsp. vegetable oil, scallions, hot peppers,
garlic and ginger. Cook for 30 seconds to one minute until you can smell
the spicy aroma in the air. De-glaze the pan with the cooking wine and
place the chicken thighs in the wok along with the sesame oil, soy sauce
and raw sugar. Three-Cup Chicken got its name because traditionally it
calls for the same quantity of cooking wine, sesame oil and soy sauce.
But I’ve found that sometimes the sesame oil can be overpowering, and it
can also end up a little too salty.
Cook it until all the liquid has been cooked down, which will take you about 10 to 12 minutes. After the chicken is cooked, remove from the heat and throw in a big handful of fresh basil. Cover it up and allow the basil to infuse in the chicken for 1 minute. If you can’t find Thai basil, regular basil will do as well.
Serve it with a bowl of rice or a glass of beer and enjoy this delicious chicken dish!
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