Hey everyone, it is Brad, welcome to our recipe page. Today, I’m gonna show you how to prepare a distinctive dish, shrimp in chili sauce (low-calorie chinese). One of my favorites. This time, I will make it a little bit unique. This will be really delicious.
I use my homemade chili garlic sauce, though you can use store-bought if you can't find what you need to make the homemade sauce. If using frozen shrimp, thaw the shrimp thoroughly before using. A wide variety of chili shrimp sauce options are available to you, such as.
Shrimp In Chili Sauce (Low-Calorie Chinese) is one of the most favored of recent trending meals in the world. It is appreciated by millions daily. It’s simple, it is quick, it tastes yummy. Shrimp In Chili Sauce (Low-Calorie Chinese) is something which I have loved my entire life. They’re fine and they look wonderful.
To begin with this particular recipe, we must prepare a few ingredients. You can have shrimp in chili sauce (low-calorie chinese) using 17 ingredients and 13 steps. Here is how you cook that.
The ingredients needed to make Shrimp In Chili Sauce (Low-Calorie Chinese):
- Make ready 200 to 250 grams Peeled shrimp
- Take 1/3 Japanese leek (roughly chopped)
- Make ready 1 clove Garlic (finely chopped)
- Prepare 1 dash Ginger, finely chopped
- Get 1 to 1 1/2 tablespoons Katakuriko (to coat the shrimp)
- Get 1 tbsp Doubanjiang
- Get 2 tbsp Ketchup
- Get Combined seasoning ingredients:
- Take 1 tbsp ● Sake
- Take 2 to 3 teaspoons ● Sugar
- Make ready 1 dash ● Pepper
- Prepare 1/2 tsp ● Chinese soup stock (granules)
- Prepare 1 tsp ● Katakuriko
- Make ready 120 ml ● Water
- Get 1 dash Salt (for boiling)
- Make ready 1 to 2 teaspoons Vinegar (for finish)
- Make ready 1 tsp Vegetable oil (for frying)
This low-calorie, deliciously filling chili you are sure to enjoy as a main dish! The flavor drowned out the other ingredients. I tried to fix it with Italian bread crumbs and hot sauce. Learn how to make Chinese chili oil (Chinese chili sauce), the essential seasoning for lots of Chinese chili oil is also called red oil in China.
Instructions to make Shrimp In Chili Sauce (Low-Calorie Chinese):
- Make narrow cuts in the leek about halfway through. Make cuts halfway through on the other side too.
- Chop it up after making the cuts and you'll end up with very finely minced leek. With this method, the cut end of the leek doesn't spread out so it's really easy to chop.
- Combine the doubanjiang and ketchup. Adjust the amount of doubanjiang to taste!
- Combine the ● flavoring ingredients. Taste to make sure the flavor is right before adding the katakuriko. If it's not salty enough, add a little soy sauce.
- Sprinkle the peeled shrimp with a little sake and salt (neither are listed in the ingredient list), then rinse them well under running water. This removes any fishy smell or dirt.
- Pat the shrimp dry carefully with paper towels. Put the katakuriko for the coating and the shrimp in a plastic bag, close it up and shake it to coat the shrimp.
- Bring water to a boil and add some salt to it. Boil the shrimp in the salted water. They'll be cooked further when mixed with the sauce, so they only need to be cooked about 80%!
- Put a little vegetable oil in a frying pan, add the garlic and ginger, and turn the heat on.
- When the garlic and ginger have changed color slightly and are fragrant, add the doubanjiang and ketchup. It will splatter so be careful!
- When you stir fry ketchup, the umami and flavor becomes intensified and really delicious. Stir fry it over low heat so that it doesn't burn, then add the chopped leek.
- When the leek has cooked through, stir up the combined flavoring ingredients (the katakuriko will have sunk to the bottom) and add it to the frying pan.
- When the sauce is bubbling and slightly thickened, add the boiled shrimp. When the shrimp have warmed through, optionally drizzle in some vinegar.
- If you stir it too vigorously the coating on the shrimp may fall off, so stir the pan gently up from the bottom. Transfer to serving plates with plenty of sauce, and enjoy.
It is a combined seasoning using red pepper High temperature oil can simulate the strong aroma while lower temperature oil brings us the bright red color. You know that stuff in the glass bottle you love to buy, well it's. Shrimp in Chili Sauce, often called "Ebi Chili" in Japanese, is stir-fried shrimp in a flavorful ginger-garlic chili sauce. This is not a traditional Japanese dish, but Ebi Chili is almost guaranteed to be on the menu of any Chinese restaurant in Japan. Based on Szechwan Shrimp, and the spicy chili paste.
So that’s going to wrap this up for this special food shrimp in chili sauce (low-calorie chinese) recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I’m confident you can make this at home. There is gonna be more interesting food in home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to save this page on your browser, and share it to your loved ones, friends and colleague. Thanks again for reading. Go on get cooking!