Recipe | (Easy) Sweet & Sour Chicken with Fried Rice

August 26, 2013

Chinese food close-up
Besides Mexican food, there's one other culinary treat that expats - and speaking from experience, California expats especially - miss terribly: Chinese food. And I don't mean the authentic you-ate-it-in-China stuff, I mean the bastardized, made-for-American's-palate kind. You know the kind you eat out of white cartons because somehow it tastes even better that way? The kind Kramer ordered with extra MSG? Yeah, that's the stuff.

Since discovering Germans have Thai food on every corner, but Chinese is next to non-existent, I decided to take matters into my own hands. These dishes are the perfect thing to satiate those white take-out carton cravings. While all the chopping and the whole chicken-coating process can be a little time-consuming/messy, these are pretty easy recipes for things I could imagine, when done the authentic way, might require boatloads more effort. It's like CliffsNotes for Chinese food. Like us, I'm sure you will keep coming back to these recipes time and again. They're that good.

Sweet and Sour Chicken vegetables Sweet and Sour Chicken in the pan


Sweet & Sour Chicken

3-4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut into chunks
salt & pepper
1 cup cornstarch
2 eggs, beaten
1 medium-sized onion, cut into large pieces
1/4 cup canola oil
whole pre-cut and pre-cored pineapple, cut into chunks
1 red bell pepper, cut into chunks
1 cup store-bought sweet & sour sauce

Preheat oven to 325°F/163°C and grease a 9x13"/22x33cm baking dish. Season chicken with salt and pepper, coat with corn starch and then dip into the egg. Heat the oil in a large skillet and cook chicken until browned, but not cooked through - adding the onions about half-way through to soften. Put chicken and onions into greased baking dish along with pineapple and bell pepper. Pour sweet and sour sauce over and toss very gently to coat. Bake for one hour, turning over contents of dish every 15 minutes.

Sweet and Sour Chicken from oven

Fried Rice

3 cups cooked white rice (day old or leftover rice works best)
3 tbsp roasted sesame oil
1/2 cup frozen peas, thawed
1/2 cup carrots, chopped into small pieces
1 small onion, chopped
2 tsp garlic, minced
4 green onions, thinly sliced (light green part only)
3 eggs, slightly beaten
1/4 cup soy sauce

Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the peas, carrots, onions and garlic, stir fry until tender. Add green onions and push over to one side, lowering the heat to medium. Add egg to other side of skillet and stir fry until scrambled. Break apart the rice (if using cold leftovers) and add to skillet with soy sauce. Blend together well and cook until heated through.

Serves 4, very generously

Fried Rice cooking
Fried Rice finished

adapted from this Life in the Lofthouse recipe

8 comments:

  1. Yay! You posted it! You are so right about Mexican and Chinese food being expat cravings! A least for this Vegas girl living in Germany! I'm so excited to try this out and just hope I can find the roasted sesame oil. Thanks for sharing!

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    1. Roasted sesame oil can be a little harder to find here, but far from impossible. I can usually find it at Hit and I believe Edeka, and of course at the Perfetto in Karstadt. I swear, I go through a bottle every month. It is so worth finding!

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  2. This looks SO good! I am terrible at making Asian food at home, but this looks pretty simple!

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  3. I just pinned the hell out of this (and also copied down the recipe). Looks delicious!

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  4. Anyone who makes fried rice at home is pretty badass!
    -Katherine

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  5. I know exactly what you mean about the Chinese food. I miss the bright red gloopy stuff we get in the UK.

    I make my own sweet and sour sauce - it's pretty easy. Mix ketchup, honey and vinegar until you have the flavour you want.

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    1. The original recipe for this calls for making your own sweet and sour, but I figured with all the chopping and chicken coating and oven turning, I'd save myself the hassle and dump it out of a bottle. I love to cook, but often if there's a short-cut that doesn't skimp of flavor or quality, I'll take it!

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  6. Thanks for posting! I'm sure I will be pulling this out in a few months when I'm tired of German food. :)

    Brittny
    www.awrittenjourney.com

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