Fried Rice that comes with egg, shrimp and THIS MYSTERIOUS VEGETABLE which I am sharing with Weekend Herb Blogging over at Amy and Jonny of We Are Never Full this week.
A hiatus from Weekend Herb Blogging ever since some of my last WHB sessions. That's because I have been using the common vegetables and herbs in my cooking and have not seen any interesting that I could tell you about. But now, I'm ready to.
Egg and Shrimp Fried Rice with Basella Alba (Emperor Vegetable)
Ingredients:
Basella Alba, shrimps, eggs, red chili, ginger, oyster sauce, soy sauce, leftover cold rice
Directions:
Fry the Basella Alba
1. In lightly oiled pan, fry ginger and red chili, then add in the vegetable, add ~1tsp oyster sauce
2. When vegetable is cooked to tender (yet not overcooked to limpy), set aside.
Fry the other ingredients and rice
3. In the same pan, add in some oil, then add in eggs to scramble it. Before the eggs are cooked, add in shrimps and rice and fry the rice (make sure mixed well with eggs and shrimps) at medium heat (Note: at low heat, the rice tends to stick to the pan).
4. Add in soy sauce, and pepper to taste
5. When fried rice is ready, you can add in the vegetables (and mix well). Note: Make sure you don't add all the gravy of the vegetables in there. Add in some gravy but not all. The rice will just absorb some moisture and flavor of the vegetable, yet not turn wet and soggy
Want some ?
Tag: vegetable, Basella Alba,fried rice
It's Malabar Spinach. We call it Mong Toi in Vietnamese. My grandma used to grow it and we'd eat it in soups because of the sliminess.
ReplyDeletehmm..i dont think i've ever come across it! or maybe i have but have just blindly eaten it without realizing. lol. your fried rice looks fantastic..i really shd have a rice cooker. x
ReplyDeletegive me fried rice anytime! i can have tht for breakfast, lunch and dinner! lol.
ReplyDeleteUm, yes please!!
ReplyDeleteYour fried rice looks delicious! Yum Yum.
ReplyDeleteWhat a gorgeous dish! I haven't tried this vegetable...I'll be on the lookout.
ReplyDeleteI wish my mother had this little tutorial when I was a kid--her fried rice was always a little too wet or dry or something. And overcooked meat. Blech!
ReplyDeleteYours, on the other hand, looks mahvelous!
yummy...... another must try. how do you get the shrimps to twirl so nicely?
ReplyDeleteLeftover rice is always good because you can use it to make fried rice. This one looks good with those juicy shrimp in it. This is the first that I have heard of Basella Alba and it sounds interesting.
ReplyDeleteoh this fry rice is so awesome . . . such a huge prawns! lovely!yummy too!
ReplyDeleteoh! I love fried rice,can eat everyday!never hear of that vegetable but did see asian store sell it..glad to learn something new today!
ReplyDeleteThis looks lovely and easy.
ReplyDeleteI think I will try this this weekend!
Thanks!
Lunch is coming and i will have a share of ur fried rice. Dun be surprised later if u see an empty plate in ur photos cos i might have finished them. And yes, not even a grain left. Ha ha ha. ;p
ReplyDeleteSome people do not like malabar spinach because well... it is a bit slimy. :) But it is very nutritious. Shrimps in fried rice is always welcome! :)
ReplyDeleteYUM YUM! Can I order 1 plate for my "Emperor" and "Prince"? What a "Royalty" flavour dish!
ReplyDeleteWhat an excellent version of fried rice! I'm not a fan of this vegetable, but this looks too good to NOT try! Will keep this in mind, cheers!
ReplyDeleteThis dish looks appealing to me even though nowadays I don't quite like fried rice. It's simply because it's cooked with Emperor Vegetable. That's a good idea, isn't it? Fried rice with vegetables. Ah, a healthier choice.
ReplyDeleteI always make double the amount of rice I need when I'm using the rice cooker too -- it's so easy to have leftover, and you need to have cold leftover rice to make really good fried rice!
ReplyDeleteThe food looks really good. I like that fresh green veggie. Pretty.
ReplyDeleteGosh, I am getting hungry now ... and tempted to call for room service ... lol.
oh my, it's almost 1am here and i want your fried rice!!! awesome... :)
ReplyDeleteaiyoh... make me hungry at this time in the morning... 2.23 am!
ReplyDeleteei... tigerfish, you dun check your email and FB ah? Read my new post on how to be a part of my family. Change your email izzit?
Cooking twice the amount of rice — why do I never do this? I cook the usual amount in the rice cooker, hoping there's some leftover so that I can make fried rice the next day. Haha!
ReplyDeleteAs usual, I like this dish of yours...because it's got shrimp in it!
lovely fried rice!! send me a plate too please hehe
ReplyDeleteI don't think I've had this vegetable before, but definitely looks yummy in your fried rice :)
I know it must be my imagination but, are you sure you aren't in my kitchen? The aroma is so tantalizing I'm headed to the fish store this afternoon. Oh, I always make a double batch of rice (not in a cooker though:) so I have some from the night before last that's just crying to be fried and shrimped. GREAT! post...
ReplyDeleteAhhhh, finally the English name for this vegetable! I've been wondering what it's called all this while! Thanks, tigerfish! Great-looking fried rice too! Mine never looks so good!
ReplyDeleteThe close up looks so good, I'm so hungry :D di wang miao is something I've always heard but yet to cook :P What a great addition to fried rice!
ReplyDeleteThat shrimp looks really delicious! Recently I've been craving nice bursty shrimp and those photos are terrific!
ReplyDeleteHow tasty looking,and how fun discovering a new type of vegetable (new to me at least!)
ReplyDeleteEmperor vegetables sound so interesting. Thanks for the info!
ReplyDeleteI never knew: I did think that those big "to miao" were just grown version of the little ones. I find them quite hard to cook though: ours never turn out the way they do in Chinese restaurants. I'll try this vegetable with fried rice soon. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteFried rice looks really good!! I am hungry
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