Harts of Stur Kitchen Issue 4, autumn 2017 | Page 16

Harts Kitchen Menu à la Harts Wok Star 1. Remove any rind or fat from the steak, then slice the meat into roughly 3mm thick rectangles. Tenderise by bashing them with a cleaver or meat hammer, creating a large surface area for quick cooking. 2. Finely chop the ginger and garlic. Place in a bowl, adding the remaining marinade ingredients. Massage the marinade into the meat, then tip into a food bag, seal tightly and marinate in the fridge overnight. 3. When ready to cook, peel the potato and sweet potato and cut into 2–3cm cubes. 4. Put the potatoes into a pan of Black Pepper Beef & cold, salted water, and bring to boil on a high heat. Lower Potatoes Hong Kong the the heat to a simmer and cook Style for about 5 minutes, until the potatoes start to soften. Drain in Serves 3–4 a colander, giving the potatoes Ingredients a little bash around the sides to 300g (10½oz) rib-eye steak roughen the edges and allow to 1 large Maris Piper or King cool (do not cover). Edward potato 5. Roughly dice the onion and 1 white sweet potato cut the spring onion into rough 1 small red onion chunks. Roughly chop the red 1 spring onion and green chillies. Run your 1 large fresh green chilli fingers along the stick of the 1 large fresh red chilli green peppercorns to separate 1 stick of fresh green them. Mix the sauce ingredients Peppercorns (optional) together in a small bowl. Vegetable oil, for deep-frying 6. Now build your wok clock: 5–6 sprigs of fresh coriander place the marinated meat at 12 followed by the diced The steak marinade o’clock, onion, spring onion and chillies, Ingredients and lastly the sauce bowl, ¼ of a thumb-size piece of ginger clockwise around the plate. 1 clove of garlic 7. If you have a deep-fat fryer, ¼ teaspoon white pepper set the temperature of the oil ½ teaspoon sugar to 180°C (350°F). Otherwise, a pinch of salt you can use a wok or large ½ teaspoon pure sesame oil saucepan, filled one-third with ½ tablespoon cornflour vegetable oil, to deep-fry, testing (cornstarch) the oil with a wooden chopstick for heat (the end will fizz when The sauce the oil is hot enough for deep- Ingredients frying). Once your oil is hot ¼ teaspoon salt enough, deep-fry the potatoes for ½ teaspoon sugar 7–8 minutes, until golden brown ½ teaspoon cracked black and crispy. Then remove from the pepper fryer or wok and drain on a plate 1 tablespoon Lee Kum Kee black covered with kitchen paper. pepper sauce 8. Heat 5 tablespoons of 50ml (2fl oz) fresh chicken stock vegetable oil in a wok on a high 1 tablespoon light soy sauce heat until smoking hot, then lay When it comes to authentic Chinese food, it’s time to go back to the classroom with Jeremy Pang and his School of Wok F or an ancient Chinese cooking vessel, the wok is a surprisingly common sight in most British kitchens. The big, round bottomed frying pans first became a fixture in the 80s, where influential chefs like Ken Hom stir fried their way into the nation’s heart on TV and showed us how quick and healthy this style of cooking could be. So we know how useful woks can be in the kitchen, but we still don’t make anything as reliably delicious as our local Chinese take away’s number 32. Or number 64, for that matter. Enter Jeremy Pang, one of a new generation of Chinese-influenced chefs looking to take our understanding of Eastern cuisine to the next level. Coming from three generations of Chinese chefs, after several career changes, Jeremy decided to bring the world of Asian cookery to fellow food lovers. He started by taking them on a walking tour of London’s Chinatown before setting up the School of Wok in Covent Garden in 2012. This cookery school offers award-winning courses in Asian and oriental cuisine and a range of woks and utensils designed by Jeremy himself. If you can’t make it to London for a lesson, Jeremy will be coming to Sturminster Newton for the Cheese Festival on the 9th – 10th September 2017. As well as appearing in the Mousetrap Food Theatre, don’t miss him demoing in our store on Saturday 9th. In the meantime, try this recipe, which also introduces the concept of the Wok Clock. It’s an ingenious way of getting your ingredients in the wok in the right order when in the heat of a stir frying session. Method 16 www.hartsofstur.com