Tag: Hmong
Hmong Smoked Pork with Ginger and Lemongrass
Hmong Smoked Pork with Ginger and Lemongrass
Earlier I did a Hmong recipe for smoked beef. You can do the same smoking process with pork. I used pork sirloin since it is minimally fatty and inexpensive. The pork is cured overnight and smoked for 90 minutes over mesquite wood. The pork gets shredded in a food processor, then mixed with ginger, lemongrass, chilies, cilantro, and green onions. This flavorful, porky mix gets topped over steamed rice. The heat from the rice melts any fat in the meat as it permeates the ginger and lemongrass. FYI, this is also one of the best pork jerky recipes that you’ll ever eat.
Equipment
- Electric Smoker
- meat hooks
- food processor
Ingredients
- 4 lbs pork sirloin sliced 1/4” thick
- 1 tbsp pink curing salts
- 1 tsp mushroom seasoning
- 1/2 cup ginger minced
- 1/2 cup lemongrass finely chopped
- 1 cup cilantro chopped
- 1 cup green onions chopped
- 5 Thai chilies finely chopped
- 1 tbsp fish sauce
- 1 tsp salt
Wood Chips
- mesquite wood chips
Instructions
- Mix together the curing salts and mushroom seasoning.
- Marinate the pork with the cure seasoning overnight.
- Put the pork slices on a meat hooks.
- Preheat your smoker to 250 degrees. Hang the pork on the top rack in your smoker.
- Smoke for 90 minutes. Remove from the smoker.
- Place the pork on a baking sheet. Bake in a 400 degree preheated oven for 8 minutes a side to further dry out the pork.
- Place the pork in a food and pulse until chopped. Place the pork in a large bowl.
- Place the ginger, lemongrass, and chilies in the food processor and pulse a few times.
- Mix together the pork, lemongrass/ginger blend, cilantro, green onions, fish sauce, and salt.
Spam and Egg Fried Rice
Spam and Egg Fried Rice
SPAM and egg fried rice is commonly eaten in many Asian cultures. It’s inexpensive and quick and easy to make; giving you your bang for your buck.
Ingredients
- 2 cups day old cooked white rice
- 1/2 can SPAM diced into small cubes
- 4 large eggs beaten
- 1 small onion diced
- 4 green onions chopped
- 2 tsp light soy sauce
- 1 tsp fish sauce
- 2 tsp sugar
- 1/4 cup vegetable oil
- sesame oil
Instructions
- Heat 1 tbsp of the cooking oil in a large sauté pan or wok over medium high heat. Add the beaten eggs to the pan. Allow to set for a minute.
- Scramble the eggs. Cook for another minute and remove from the pan.
- Add the rest of the cooking oil to the pan. Add in the spam and onion. Cook for 4 minutes.
- Add in the rice. Break up all of the clumps. Fry for 4 minutes.
- Season the rice with soy sauce, fish sauce, and sugar.
- Add the eggs back into the rice along with the green onions. Cook for 2 more minutes.
Peev Choj
Peev Choj
Peev choj, pronounced “peng chaw”, is the Hmong equivalent of the famed Korean noodle dish japchae. This dish uses sweet potato noodles, also known as glass noodles. The noodles are stir fried with pork, bamboo shoots, carrots, and mushrooms and tossed with a savory soy/oyster/fish sauce.
Ingredients
Sauce
- 1/3 cup light soy sauce
- 1/3 cup oyster sauce
- 1/4 cup fish sauce
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
Stir Fry
- 1 lb ground pork
- 1 medium carrot julienned
- 4 oz oyster mushrooms sliced
- 1 cup red cabbage or bamboo shoots; chopped
- 4 green onions chopped
- 14 oz dried sweet potato noodles
- 1/2 bunch cilantro chopped
Instructions
- Mix the sauce ingredients together. Set aside.
- Bring a pot of water to boil. Cook the sweet potato noodles according to package directions. Drain and rinse under cold water. Set aside.
- In a large wok or sauté pan, brown the pork over medium high heat for 6 minutes.
- Add in the cabbage and mushrooms. Cook for 5 minutes.
- Add in the noodles and carrots.
- Pour in the sauce. Cook for 2 minutes.
- Turn off the heat. Stir in the green onions and cilantro.