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---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.02
 
      Title: See You Gai (Red Cooked Chicken)
 Categories: Chinese, Chicken
      Yield: 6 servings
 
  3 1/2 lb Roasting chicken
  1 1/2 c  Cold water
  1 1/2 c  Dark soy sauce
    1/4 c  Chinese wine or dry sherry
      2    Inch piece fresh ginger,
           -peeled and sliced
      1    Clove garlic
     10    Sections star anise
  1 1/2 tb Sugar
      2 ts Sesame oil
 
  Here is the second chicken recipe from a really
  comprehensive and beautiful cookbook, THE COMPLETE
  ASIAN COOKBOOK by Charmaine Solomon.
  
  "Red cooking" is the term applied to cooking in dark
  soy sauce.  The liquid that remains after cooking is
  called a "master sauce", and can be frozen or
  refrigerated for future use.  It should be used to
  cook meat or poultry at least once a week to keep it
  "alive." Cook chicken drumsticks this way for taking
  on picnics or serving at buffet parties.  Fragrant
  with ginger and anise, red-cooked chicken will surely
  become one of your favorites.
  
  Serves: 8 to 10 as part of a large menu, 4-5 as a main
  meal with rice
  
  Wash chicken well.  Choose a saucepan into which
  chicken will just fit so that the soy liquid covers as
  much of the bird as possible.  Put chicken into
  saucepan, breast down, then add all the ingredients
  except sesame oil. Bring slowly to the boil, then
  reduce heat, cover and simmer very gently for 15
  minutes.  Using tongs, turn chicken over, replace lid
  and simmer 20 minutes, basting breast with liquid
  every 5 minutes.
  
  Remove from heat and leave covered in the saucepan
  until cool.  Lift chicken out of sauce, put on a
  serving platter and brush with sesame oil. This gives
  the chicken a glistening appearance as well as some
  extra flavor.
  
  Traditionally the chicken is put on a chopping board
  and cut in two lengthways with a sharp cleaver.  Each
  half is chopped into 1 1/2 inch strips and reassembled
  in the original shape.  If this proves too much of an
  undertaking, simply carve the chicken into joints.
  Serve at room temperature with some of the cooking
  liquid as a dipping sauce.
 
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