Tagged: Asian inspired salad

Weeknight dinner – charred Chinese sausage

Some nights I am content to spend a couple hours in the kitchen, challenging myself with new recipes or ingredients. Other nights, I want something interesting, but simple. This is that kind of a meal. Chinese sausages are charred in the oven and served with soba noodles and a crisp salad. These sausages were not something that I typically buy. I have seen a number of cooking shows making use of them, so when I came across them in the grocery, I decided to give them a go and create an easy charred Chinese sausage meal.

Ingredients

5 Store bought Chinese sausages, such as these pork sausages found at the local Hannaford. I am guessing there are many brands of varied qualities out there, but this is what was at hand

2.5 – 3 ounce of Soba noodles, such as these, found in our local Hannaford

Mixed green salad of your choice. Do include radishes in your salad! The crisp and spicy kick they give, goes incredibly well with the sweet sausage

2 scallions, chopped – green and whites

For the dressing:

6 Tbsp. grapeseed oil (or olive, if you prefer)

3 Tbsp. rice vinegar

1 Tbsp. honey (substitute in sugar, if no honey on hand)

1 Tbsp. mirin

3 Tsp. low sodium soy sauce

Instruction

The glory of this recipe is the simplicity and how quickly it comes together. Heat oven to 350 F. Put sausages in greased oven safe pan (preferably cast iron) and put into oven. After 15-20 mins, turn sausages. They should be charring nicely, with a crisp outer skin. Bake another 15-20 mins until cooked through (160 F for internal temp). Cooking sausage in the oven was a revelation for me some years ago. I love the charred exterior that you get, as well as the fact that the cook top evades the typical splatter factor!

While the sausages are cooking away, follow instructions on Soba package. Drain and set aside noodles. Assemble salad. Plate both salad and noodles. Put all dressing ingredients in a jar and shake vigorously. Taste and adjust to your liking. I prefer a little less vinegar and a bit salty sweet, but tinker until it is perfect for your taste. Dress the noodles and salad and add sausages over the noodles.

Why I loved this recipe

I knew to expect these Chinese sausages to be on the sweet side. The sweetness paired perfectly with the crunch of the salad and the punch of the Asian dressing. It literally hit all notes…sweet, salty, spicy, sour! The soba adds that last perfect bit of nutty, earthy flavor.

This recipe could be tweaked to use crunchy cabbage and carrots for a slaw, rather than salad, or Udon, rice or other noodles to mix it up. So many options! This one will be on my easy weeknight meal repertoire from here on out!

If you like this recipe, you might also like my recipe for Asian inspired veggie salad feast with pork

Asian inspired veggie salad feast

Crispy Asian pork with mixed greens, crunchy radishes, spicy Fresno chili, shaved carrot and squash. This recipe is pumped up with soba and rice vermicelli noodles. Soy/ginger dressing adds just the right amount of ZING!

The inspiration

I found a recipe in the Jamie Oliver “Everyday Super Food” cookbook, that beautifully combined brown rice noodles with any variety of greens and veg and crispy fried ginger beef. I have gone back to this recipe dozens of times, mainly because I love ground meat (I swap in pork) as a protein, but also because it is amazingly balanced. Protein, veggies, and carbs combine for a meal that you feel good about eating.

Check out the book here If you prefer online recipes, there are loads of free recipes from all of his books on the Jamie Oliver website. It is a great source for menu ideas. https://www.jamieoliver.com/

Recipe tweaks

The original recipe leaves the choice of salad vegetables to you, so the sky is the limit. I chose butter lettuce and red gem lettuce. As far as veggies, shaved carrots and summer squash worked out nicely. Rather than brown rice noodles, swapped in some soba and vermicelli rice noodles. I also use half the indicated sesame oil and sub in grapeseed to temper the taste.

The fun of this recipe is the absolute flexibility to make it as you want it!

Asian inspired veggie salad feast

Recipe by kristenCourse: Kristen CooksCuisine: Salad, Noodle SaladDifficulty: Easy
Servings

5

servings
Prep time

30

minutes
Cooking time

20

minutes
Calories

470

kcal

Note: calorie content is auto generated and may not be accurate

Ingredients

  • Half head of red gem lettuce

  • Half head of butter lettuce

  • 2 carrots, shaved

  • 1 summer squash shaved (do not include seeds)

  • 4 radishes, sliced

  • 2 green onions, chopped, green and white included

  • 1 hot chili of your choice, deseeded and sliced into rings (optional)

  • For the Pork
  • 1 lb. ground pork

  • 1 tbsp. sesame oil

  • 1 tbsp. grapeseed oil

  • 2 tsp. honey

  • 3 inch piece of whole gingerroot, rough chopped

  • 4 cloves garlic

  • 4 star anise

  • 6 oz. combination of rice, Soba, Udon, or other noodles

  • For the dressing
  • 2 tsp. fish sauce

  • 2 tsp. sugar

  • Juice of one lime

Directions

  • In small food processor add garlic and ginger and pulse until finely chopped
  • Cook the noodles according to package. Set aside
  • Heat oil in large frying pan on medium-high heat. Add star anise, and half of the garlic/ginger from the processor
  • When garlic is fragrant, but not browning, add in the pork and continually break up as it cooks. Once the pork is beginning to brown, add in the honey. Note: if there is too much liquid or oil in the pan, drain off most and then continue to brown until crispy
  • Add the soy sauce, fish sauce and lime juice to the garlic and ginger mixture in processor. Whir until consistency of a dressing. Test and adjust. The original recipe called for far more lime juice, and no sugar. I adjusted here for my taste.
  • Arrange lettuce, veggies and noodles on tray. Add pork and sprinkle the green onion and chili pepper over. Dressing can be set to side to dress each individual plate, or over the tray to dress it family style

Notes

  • If you do not have a food processor, ginger and garlic can be mashed using a mortar and pestle