Noodle
Chinese Duck with Shiitake Mushrooms and Wide Rice Sticks
You can purchase a whole roast duck at your local Chinese restaurant. Some varieties of noodles suggest soaking them in boiling water instead of cooking them; check your package instructions before preparing them.
Rice Noodles with Chinese Broccoli and Shiitake Mushrooms
Similar greens—such as yow choy, also known as choy sum (which looks almost identical to bok choy but bears small yellow flowers), broccolini, or even regular broccoli—will work well in this dish if you can’t find Chinese broccoli. You can buy wide rice noodles at Asian grocery stores, or use the narrow rice noodles (often labeled “pad thai noodles”) that many supermarkets carry.
Asian Salad Wraps
To julienne the vegetables, cut them into thin matchstick-size pieces using a sharp knife or a mandoline. Refrigerate them in an airtight container until ready to use, up to 3 hours.
Chicken and Shredded Cabbage Salad with Noodles and Peanut Sauce
The broth left over from poaching chicken breasts makes a delicious soup base. Refrigerate it in an airtight container up to 3 days or freeze up to 2 weeks; bring to a boil before using.
Udon Noodles with Shiitake Mushrooms in Ginger Broth
This recipe will serve four as a first course or light lunch. To serve the noodles as a meal, add a few cups of diced firm tofu or cooked chicken breast to the simmering broth in step 3.
Shredded Chicken and Soba Noodle Soup
Look for soba noodles in the Asian section of your supermarket.
Vietnamese Beef Noodle Soup with Ginger
The stock must be refrigerated at least 6 hours; make it 1 day ahead.
Chicken Paprikash
Richly colored with paprika, this traditional Hungarian entrée is full bodied and satisfying. It goes well with Balsamic-Marinated Vegetables (page 78).
Asian Noodle Bowls
No matter how much you like to cook, everyone gets stuck in a rut. When you find yourself making the same old things, it’s time to cook out of your comfort zone. For us, this means a trip to any international market where one step inside we remember how much there still is to learn. The good news is that walking the aisles of the unfamiliar unlocks the secrets to many of the ingredients in our favorite restaurant dishes. The greens in the produce section alone will keep us busy for a year. We can’t shop when we’re hungry, so first we eat. Thankfully, the Vietnamese noodle bowls right next door energize and inspire our international shopping trips. Vietnamese noodle bowls are filled with contradictions in complete agreement—hot and cold, crunchy and soft, sweet and sour, rich and light. The bowls of warm thin noodles, cool leafy lettuce, bean sprouts, and herbs topped with any meat or seafood you like are perfect for leftover cheater meat. The sweet/salty/spicy dressing may appear way too complex for home cooking. It’s not. The international market has everything you need. Cooking out of your comfort zone will help you dissect the components and flavors of unfamiliar foods. Even if cooking Vietnamese at home sounds daunting, give this a try with leftover cheater meat just for the fun of better understanding how opposites get along.
Vermicelli alle Vongole Fujite
This is the poorest of dishes for the days when the seas are as empty as one’s belly, when even the clams have forsaken one. Fashioned from seawater—sometimes bits of seaweed—a tomato or two, some fat, firm garlic, a dried red chile, and a thread of good oil or a spoonful of sweet, rendered pork fat, hoarded from an easier day.
Composed Asian Noodle Platter
This colorful mélange of flavors and textures is easy enough for a weeknight meal, yet gorgeous enough to impress guests.
Hoisin-Flavored Cold Asian Noodles with Crisp Vegetables
Crunchy and colorful, this is an appealing presentation for cold Asian noodles.
Southeast Asian Cold Noodles with Tempeh
This spicy, nutty salad is an amalgam of Indonesian and Thai-influenced ingredients and seasonings.