We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

A little faith will bring your soul to heaven; a great faith will bring heaven to your soul.
C.H. Spurgeon

Since we can’t see Jesus for the day-to-day living, God has provided in our lives godly men and women whom we can watch, question and follow within the church. Let’s remember, this is a team race. We need examples to imitate. Mavericks in the church only hurt themselves and others. To say you don’t need human examples is prideful and clearly unbiblical (1 Cor. 4:16; 1:11; Phil. 3:17; 4:9; Heb. 13:7; 1 Pet. 5:2).
Randy Smith

Chinese Fried Rice

0
(0)
CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Eggs, Meats Chinese Chinese1 1 servings

INGREDIENTS

2 c Cooked rice
1 Egg cooked rice
1/4 c Rice wine or dry pale sherry
1/4 c Diced onion; see note 1
1/2 c Diced cooked meat; see note 2
1/4 c Fresh or frozen peas
Salt and pepper to taste
Oil; (try 2 Tbsp the first time)

INSTRUCTIONS

Note 1 - (I use a combination of red onion and green onion) Note 2 -
chinese bbq pork if you have it, otherwise cooked chicken or ham work
well
This recipe is similar to the homestyle fried rice in Joyce Chen's
cookbook, but was actually taught to me by the Chinese mother of my
best friend in high school.
This is not exactly like restaurant fried rice, but I like it much
better. The key is not making it until the rice has been sitting
around for at least 24 hours after cooking.
In a bowl, combine all ingredients except salt and peas. Stir them
around until the rice and vegetables and meat are completely coated
with egg and wine. Heat the oil to smoking (use refined peanut oil
for this; if you use ordinary vegetable oil, heat until it runs
around on the bottom of the pan or wok). Dump in the rice. Stir
around with a wooden spoon or a wooden spatula until the egg is
completely cooked. This take less than five minutes over high heat.
Toss in the peas (they will cook enough from the heat of the rice).
Taste this stuff and add salt until you are happy with it.
This has *no* soy sauce in it, and if you add it, it will make the
rice soggy (there are ways to make brown fried rice, but this isn't
one of them :-). The rice will be white with flecks of yellow egg,
green onion and peas, pink onion, and whatever the meat is. Bery
pretty stuff and quite tasty.
I tried this once with egg beaters, and it worked pretty well.
Recipe by: marcy@sqwest.wimsey.bc.ca (Marcy Thompson)
Posted to CHILE-HEADS DIGEST V3 #, converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.

A Message from our Provider:

“You’re never too young for God”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?