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MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.01
 
      Title: Sweet and Sour Pork (Goo Lo Yuke)
 Categories: Chinese, Pork, Ceideburg 2
      Yield: 1 servings
 
      1 lb Pork butt cut into 1-inch
           -pieces

MMMMM-----------------------MEAT MARINADE----------------------------
      1 tb Sherry
      2 tb Water
      2 tb Kikkoman soy sauce
      4 ts Flour
      4 ts Cornstarch
      1    Green pepper, cut into 1/2
           -inch chunks
      1    Onion, cut into wedges
     12    Maraschino cherries
      1 c  Canned lichee
      1 c  Pineapple chunks

MMMMM-----------------------SAUCE MIXTURE----------------------------
    1/2 c  Brown sugar
    1/2 c  Vinegar
      1 ts Salt
      4 tb Catsup
    3/4 c  Pineapple juice
      4 ts Cornstarch
 
  Had a house guest last week++an old friend who likes my Chinese
  cooking, but tends to prefer the tamer stuff++you know, things
  without tentacles or feet.  So I whipped up a batch of this
  excellent, quick and easy sweet and sour pork.  It's a long time
  favorite that I haven't cooked for a some time.  Been too busy with
  Thai and Vietnamese food to make it. It was just as excellent as I
  remember it being and I actually improved on it with a couple of
  substitutions.
  
  I used 1/2 cup palm sugar instead of 1/2 cup brown sugar.  Palm sugar
  has a rich, complex and addicting taste while being a little less
  cloyingly sweet than regular sugars.  It gives a taste that's
  "exotic" without being obvious.  Where the recipe calls for 3/4 cup
  pineapple juice I used 3/4 cup of the juice from some brandied
  peaches I made.  I made 'em months ago and froze the leftover juice
  specifically to use in a sweet and sour dish. (This is a good thing
  to do with any sweet fruity type juice.)
  
  I left out the maraschino cherries++bleechhhhh!++and substituted a
  red bell pepper for the color contrast.  The only thing even faintly
  exotic in the recipe is the canned lichees (also a good juice to save
  for sweet and sour stuff) and that can be omitted if you can't find
  them++or use canned apricots or whatever instead.  You could also use
  longans or rambutans, which are close relatives of lichee, quite
  successfully.
  
  Yield: 6 servings
  
  PREPARATION:  Drain fruits, prepare sauce mixture.  Marinate pork in
  meat marinade for 1/2 hour.
  
  COOKING:  Deep fry pork cubes in a wok for about 3 to 4 minutes until
  golden brown.  Drain.  Pour all the oil back into the bottle.  Add
  sauce mixture into wok and stir until thickened.  Add green pepper
  and onions and cook for 2 minutes.  Add pork cubes and stir until
  heated through. Add fruits and stir until they're coated with the
  sauce.
  
  DO-AHEAD NOTES:  Cook through making the sauce.  Just before serving,
  add pork, vegetables and fruit according to directions.
  
  From "The Chinese Village Cookbook." A practical guide to Cantonese
  country cooking.  Rhoda Yee, Yerba Buena Press, San Francisco.  1975.
  Posted by Stephen Ceideberg; March 11 1991.
 
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