9 0 0 Step-by-Step Stir-frying... Campus LegendsPt.3: Death and th by Daniel Poux You've got one in each class: that special someone who stole your heart the first day of discussion section. After staring at him or her across the room for weeks, you finally worked up the nerve to say hello. You met for coffee a few times, and kissed in the pale glow of the floodlight of your apartment building after your first date - a movie. Now, you've taken a very big step, and offered to make dinner. But you begin to panic as you stare at your bare kitchen, wondering what exotic dish you can whip up with half a jar of mustard, some olives and a very, very old head of lettuce. Well, I haven't thought of anything you can do with the above ingredients - I'm good, but I'm not that good - but I will let you in on the dinner plan that will win someone's heart forever. It's stir- frying, and it's the best-kept cooking secret on campus. If you're reading this column in class, glance over at that special someone before you read on. I guarantee it will increase your level of interest. Let's go. First, get the right tools. Stir-frying is great because it uses very few utensils. A sharp knife, a wooden stirring spoon, and a wok are about all you'll need. If you don't have a wok, borrow one. If your neighbors are similarly wok-less, a big frying pan will suffice. Next, do your shopping. The main focus of a stir-fry is the vegetables, and the fresher the veggies, the better the stir-fry. I use a great system for selecting my stir-fry components: as I stroll through the produce aisles, I look for vegetables of as many different colors as I can find. This is the first stir-fry secret e mow lors eain tAe blterittooks. This may not sound like a big deal, but studies have shown that food that looks good, tastes good. One of my guiding principles in the kitchen is that "food should be pleasing to the eye as well as to the palate." Onions, garlic, carrots, broccoli, and mushrooms are all essentials. Peppers are great, too, and come in green, red, orange, yellow, even purple. The orange and yellow ones are very sweet, and taste great in this dish. If you want to get exotic, add fresh spinach or zucchini, or ingredients from the Orient, like bamboo shoots or fresh, chopped ginger. Look for some specialty items in the store, that will really impress your significant-other- n-be. The next question you have to ask yourself is, "meat or meatless?" If you are a vegetarian, or you suspect that your guestis, then go with the vegetables alone. The next stir-fry secret can be used in both meatless 9OR THo , . .. ........ Andrew Levy e Daniel Poux "One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well." -- Virginia Woolf; A Room of One's Own (1929) stir-fries and those without. If you're going to include meat, make sure it's good, and be careful; salmonella poisoning can end a romantic evening real quick. Get boneless breasts of chicken, or beef sirloin tips. Stew beef, if cut up into small chunks and marinated for a while, is also very good, and a little less, expensive. [Jere is stir-fry secret number two: hip up a tasty marinade, andsoakthe meatforatleasthaf an hour. Experiment with sauces and spices in a bowl until you get a taste you like, and then throw in the chunks of meat. Experiment with vinegar, lemon juice, soy sauce or tamari - a kind of "organic" soy sauce, without any sugar or MSG - tabasco sauce, thyme, ginger, garlic salt or fresh garlic, and salt and pepper. A mustard, lemon juice and thyme sauce is great, and will get rid of that jar of mustard in the fridge. Add a little of this and a little of that, until you get a really zesty combination, and toss the chunks until they are coated. Do this first, so that the meat will be soaking while you prepare the vegetables. Vegetarians can get in on the marinade madness, and toss in cubes of tofu. This mysterious soy product is fairly tasteless by itself, but will pick up the flavor of the marinade excellently. Now, the rice. This is where many great stir-fries fall apart. Unfortunately, this author has yet to figure out the proper technique for making the perfect rice. The main problem is that there are so many different kinds of rice, each with its own guidelines for water and cooking time. Those unadventurous neo-chefs can play it safe by using the "instant" or "quick" converted rice that comes in a box, or in a "handy microwave pouch." If you're looking for a challenge, use white or brown rice. The preparation is not as precise and takes longer, but I think it tastes better. Whatever rice you choose, make sure you read the directions before you prepare any other components of the meal. You want to try to synchronize the cooking of the rice with the cooking of the stir-fry. Nothing is worse than watching all of those delicious vegetables tum to greenish-brown mush because you forgot to put the rice on until it was too late. Or you might want to forget the rice altogether, and go with noodles. Specialty food shops --like the coops, and Meijer's - sell very thin oriental noodles that are a great alternative. Some are boiled, and some go right in the wok with the veggies. Either way, make sure you read the directions, and know when to start the cooking process, so the noodles will be ready when the stir-fry is ready. On to veggie preparation. Carrots are the only thing to watch out for, they take a long time to cook, so cut them fairly thin. If you want to get fancy, slice them diagonally instead of straight across (this is called sliing on a bias). Try to get all your vegetables sliced and separated before you start. Preparing the ingredients is most of the work in stir-frying the actual stirring and frying are over before you know it. That's why you have to be on your toes. It's a good idea to separate your veggies into bowls, to be thrown into the wok at different times. Your choice of oils to use in the wok is very important as well. Vegetable oil -com, sunflower, or "canola" - work fine and are fairly inexpensive. Sesame oil, while slightly more expensive, has a distinctive flavor, and has been used extensively in Oriental cooking for centuries. Whatever your choice, be sure not to overdo it. Woks are made to cook with a minimum of "lubrication," so a tablespoon or two is all you need. Spread the oil around the wok, and fire it up. After a minute, test it by dropping a piece of onion or garlic into the oil; if it sizzles, you're ready to go. Add the chopped onion, ginger and garlic to thehot oil. Let these items sizzle for a minute or two as they season the oil. Then add the meat or tofu, followed by the carrots. Next, proceed by adding ingredients in the order prescribed on this page. This is the third secret to stir- frying addingehlins in apraie onder, Arai uponhow long they nxdto ook. With a little common sense, you can coordinate the amount of cooking each item needs, so that everything is cooked to perfection, without any soggy disappointments. The chart on this page gives step- by-step instructions on when to add each item. Learn it, know it, live it. Many people love to show off their stir-fry expertise by dramatically shoving the vegetables around and around. This may look cool, but it is actually slowing down the cooking process. If the ingredients are constantly moving around, they are not in direct contact with the wok and are not getting very hot. Remember that "stir" is only half the name. Give it a stir about once every minute, as well as when you add new ingredients. Otherwise, leave it alone. The vegetables and meat release liquids as they cook, and these juices prevent anything from burning, There is one final secret I must share with those faithful readers who have made it through this column. This extra effort is what separates good stir-fries from great stir-fries. Just fowe mlis m&a,prepare a saue. If you added meat, use the leftover marinade. If you didn't make a marinade, prepare one now using the technique I described above. For every quarter cup to half cup of sauce, add one tablespoon of comstarch. Stir it well, and then throw it into the wok. The comstarch acts as a thickening agent and will tun the juices from the ingredients into a nice sauce that holds the stir-fry together. If you don't have any comstarch, flour is a good substitute, but be sure to stir it well, or else it will get lumpy very fast. Well, there you have it. With this easy-to-follow dinner plan, a nice six- dollar bottle of wine, and a little luck, you'll be all set. Let me know how it turns out. PRE-STIR-FRY CHECKLIST Q Prepare marinade and meat or tofu 0 Soak meat/tofu in marinade for at least a half-hour (while you prepare the vegetables). Q Check directions on rice; it it requires a lengthy cooking time, be sure put it on while preparing vegetables. VEGETABLE PREPARATION D Peel 1-2 cloves garlic, 1 medium onion, 1 srnall piece fresh ginger (if desired) and 2-3 carrots. Chop the garlic and ginger into very small pieces, the onion into somewhat small pieces, and thinly slice carrots on a diagonal bias. Place garlic, ginger and onions into a owl, and carrots into a separate bowl. Q Wash and chop all other desired vegetables. Cut broccoli into fairly small pieces, so it cooks well; peppers, mushrooms, zucchini cook very fast, and can be cut into fairly large pieces. Spinach should be washed very well to remove sand and destemmed. This will go in last. D Add 1-2 tbsp. of your choice of oil to the wok, and heat. When onion piece sizzles upon contact, wok is ready. Q Add garlic, ginger and onion; stir for roug h)y1minute, to :season oil. Add carrots. C1 Add meat or tofu. Use a fork or a slotted spoon, so that too much marinade does not go into wok. Set remaining marinade aside for later. 0 Remove a piece of meat, and see if it is cooked. Do not add remaining vegetables, until meat appears at least half-cooked. Tofu users can add the vegetables whenever they are ready. tIAdd diced peppers and brocolli; let cook roughly 2 minutes, stirring occasionaoly LiAdd mushrooms, zucchini, snow peas, bamboo shoots.' Let cook another 2 minutes.. Add spinach. "O Add 1 tbsp. comstarch or flour to remaining marinade. Stir well, then mix into wok. Cook for another 2 minutes, or until sauce is sufficiently thick. Do not overcook: U Place small portion of rice or noodles onto a plate. Top with larger portion of stir-fry. O You might want to sprinkle on some soy sauce or tamari depending on how spicy you made the marinade. O Enjoy! by Antonio Roque I was playing an intellectual game: in one corner would be a student jogger preparing to run across the Diag and within minutes he would be dead. Sal, my opponent, criticizes me for making too dramatic an opening move. But now he makes his move, and says that there are great invisible forces at work around the Diag. This is because of its central location. Thee University is like an amoeba that spread out cancer- Es like from the - exact middle of the campus, the "M." The Med School was a growth, North Campus was an asexual replication. It is these Diag forces that pull in the crazies during the day, and send them off at night. After two in the morning the only creatures on the Diag are the bats that fly around the brilliantly-lit American flag, and the occasional security person with a walkie- talkie. On the bench that Sal and I are sitting on is the faint outline of a chessboard. I tell Sal about how in the beginning of the summer someone spray-painted a stencil chessboard on the bench. Faculty members and town residents and students came to play on it but because it was spray-painted it was considered vandalism. So late one evening when no-one was around it was sandblasted off. Sal agrees: there had been a lot of cleaning up done on the Diag over the summer, and he did miss the chessboard. Sal dropped out of college to work in a convenience store, and he had played chess on his break. But this all has to do with those strange invisible forces around the Diag he was talking about. Like this: first they came for the chalkers and he didn't speak up. because he wasn't a chalker. Then they came for the shanties and he didn't speak up because he wasn't for the shanties. Then they banned the skateboarders and he didn't speak up because he wasn't a skateboarder. Then they erased the chessboard and by that time there was no-one left to speak up for him. So now instead of chess we play abstract intellectual games. In this particular game the winner would be determined when my .hypothetical jogger ran. One day, I tell him, security will be given Uzi submachine I guns. Sal says that this is good because Uzi rounds move fast, and we have a tendency to admire things that move fast. He also tells me that the official rumor goes that it is bad luck to step on the "M" in the middle of the Diag, because then you fail your next exam. The truth is that it's bad luck to step on the "M" because then it gets dirty, and the University has to paint it over and that's expensive. Official rumor is that it's the worst tend luck of all to step ____ on the "M" just after it has been av painted over. - Official rumor is that it's bad luck to tape or spray anything on the "M," but unofficial rumor is that some students have gone to the extent of slitting their wrists over the "M." The red of blood staining the maize and blue of the "M" is said to be a particularly effective expression of dissatisfaction. But now I postulate that my student jogger would begin running across the Diag. I would have a camera, and security would have their Uzis. The jogger would run five meters at a speed of ten miles and hour; he would reach two inches from the "M" in four seconds. The Uzi rounds would fly at the speed of 1300 feet per second. Bullets would hit the jogger in the femur (thighbone), patella (kneecap) and tibia (shinbone), popping the femoral artery and snapping the sciatic nerve. My camera frames would be exposed at the speed of two every five seconds. Snap. Snap. The jogger is shot to pieces, and if the pictures turn out good they'll make the front page of the Daily. But now Sal tells me that he is giving up intellectual games because his head aches when he thinks too much. His concluding statement is that we have a tendency to move towards death. The way we rehabilitate rapists is to send them off to jail where they themselves will be raped; the way we rehabilitate murderers is to murder them. Sal had been raised during the early Forties, during World War Two, when the entire world had gone to war against the Nazis. After the War he followed the Nuremburg trials, and after the trials he listened to an account of the hangings. The prisoners were hanged one by one, he remembered. But the gallows were poorly constructed, and it sometimes took up to half an hour for the prisoners to be strangled to death. After, Sal collected the official pictures of the Nazi corpses and hung them on his wall. He always feels an graild 0 OpllU odd sickly thrill when he sees them: their blackened eyes, their popped veins and bleeding mouths, of Jodl and Ribbentrop and Strei Kalt< and c ' 0L75 shop Paris, Rome and Milan- now on campus The fashion capitals of the world are showing their most-wanted eyewear now at UHS Optical Shop inside University Health Service. Our collection includes the best of Armani, Polo, Matsuda, Kansai, Robert LaRoche, Oakley, Serengeti and many, many more. See them all without ever leaving campus. 15% discount A 15% discount off the total price of any pair of prescription eyeglasses is offered to the stud and staff of the Univ Michigan every day a Shop. With our wor selection, you'll find just right for you an exceptional qu fine workmans Every pair of eyeglass at a state-of-the-art I using the best lens r treatments available Express Service is av UHS Optical Shop. Tell us what you think! Send correspondence via MTS to "Food for Thought" or mail it to: FOOD FOR THOUGHT c/o WEEKEND 420 MAYNARD ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 Discount cannot be used in conjunction with some insurance and vision Licensing agreements prohibit the discounting of some frame University Health Service * 2nd Floor " Open Monday thru Friday 8 to 4:30 9 Major credit cards honc . s October 4, 1991 WEEKEND Page 8 Page 5 WEEKEND Octo