Battling the Winter Blues

Tsk...tsk...my oh my. I don't know what to say. Has it really been 2 months since I lasted blogged? Sometimes we get so busy with life that we completely forget why we are busy in the first place. It all starts with timelines and goals, but before we know it things change and our tracks get derailed. Yup, that's how I feel. An off tracked train stuck and immobile in the middle of nowhere.



What makes a dish become comfort food? The memory it connects to? Of course! Is it the ingredients? Grains and butter are definitely prevalent in some of the most popular comfort food here in America (Macaroni and Cheese, Spaghetti, Chicken Noodle Soup), or is it knowing it's always there for you when you need and crave it. I have to admit. A Jr. Bacon Cheeseburger from Wendy's is on my comfort food list. I never said comfort food is suppose to be good for you now! Higher up on that list is Watercress Soup with Pork and Ginger, and somewhere in between Chicken Congee and Mentaiko Spaghetti lies Salt and Oil Rice. What is Salt and Oil Rice? Salt + Oil + Egg + Pork = the way to my heart. It is simple and quick. Mix salt, oil, and uncooked rice together. Place rice in a rice cooker. When it's almost done, stir in marinated slices of pork (usually marinated with salt, oil, sugar, and soy sauce) and cook until pork is done. When that is done mix in whisked eggs. My mom would sometimes make it just with eggs, or instead of eggs and pork she would add in dried scallops and dried shrimps. Whatever the variation was, it had all the characteristics of being a comfort food. Grains? Checked. Quick? Checked. Simple? Checked. Delicious? Checked, checked, and double checked.

I was set on making Salt and Oil Rice, but was there a way to make it even better? What could be better than comfort food. Of course! Comfort food times two!!! Say hello to Claypot Rice. What is Claypot Rice? Rice that's cook in a claypot silly! The rice is first cooked inside the claypot and then topped with ingredients such as chicken or beef. All the flavors mingle and merge together as it slowly cooks inside the pot. In this variation of Claypot Chicken Rice, the rice is first mixed with oil, salt, dried shrimp and dried scallop. Slice marinated chicken meat along with mushrooms and two different types of Chinese sausages are then place on top of the rice to cook along inside the claypot.

Claypot Rice with Dried Seafood Topped with Chicken, Chinese Mushrooms, and Chinese Sausages
Ingredients:
2 cups of rice
1.5 ounces of dried scallop
0.5 ounces of dried shrimp
4 to 5 stripes of chicken tenders
3 pieces of wood ear mushrooms
4 shitaki mushrooms
1 regular Chinese sausage
1 Chinese liver sausage
2 slices of ginger julienne
scallion
salt
oil
sesame oil
oyster sauce
soy sauce
corn starch
sugar
rice wine
white pepper
Directions:
If you are using an unglazed claypot, you must soak it in water for at least 30 minutes before you use it. This is to prevent cracking. If your claypot is the glazed variety, you can omit this step.
Soak dried scallops and dried shrimp in a small bowl with just enough water to cover it. You will be reserving the soaking liquid. If you are using the dried variety of shitaki mushroom, soak that along with the wood ear mushroom.
Clean 2 cups of rice and set aside in a bowl. Mix in 4 tablespoons of oil and a little less than 1 teaspoon of salt. Once the dried scallops and dried shrimp has rehydrated, tear the shrimp into small pieces and shred the scallops with your fingers. Place ingredients in the rice mixture. Make sure everything is well combine. Place the rice mixture in the claypot with water and the soaking liquid from the dried scallop and dried shrimp.
Slice chicken tenders, wood ear mushrooms, shitaki mushrooms, and green onions. Set aside in a bowl. Add in 1/2 tablespoon of soy sauce, 1 tablespoon of oyster sauce, a little less than 1 tablespoon of cornstarch, 1 tablespoon of sesame oil, less than 1/2 tablespoon of sugar, 1/2 tablespoon of rice wine, ginger, and a pinch of salt and white pepper. Note that these are all estimates. Mix well. Add in slice pieces of Chinese sausage. Marinate for at least 15 minutes or over night if desire.
Place claypot on medium high heat until the water and rice starts to bubble. Once that happens, turn it to low heat and cook until rice is about 80% done. The rice should be fluffy, but has just a small bite to it.
When the rice is ready, add in chicken mixture on top. Cook on low medium heat until chicken is done.
When done, drizzle soy sauce and chopped scallions on top if desire.

The only problem I ran into when making this dish was that I added too much water when cooking my rice. It turned out a little mushy, but nevertheless it was still good. Serve along with a simple watercress soup or a side of steam Chinese greens and you will have one of the most satisfying winter dinner.

Have you had Claypot Rice before? What's your definition of comfort food and what are some of your favorites?